RBS - hopped over back of quarry mid afternoon and hadn't returned an hour later when I left 2 Hobbies 2 Kestrels 2 Buzzards 1 Sparrowhawk 1 Raven 80+ Goldfinches
Arrived early morning for really good views of the Juvenile Red-Backed Shrike which was moving from post to post in a general circuit and catching insects and also at one point a Small Tortoiseshell.
Also, on arrival had good views of a Barn Owl quartering a nearby field and 9 Snipe and 7 Curlew overhead.
A few Swallows were still about together with singles of Chiffchaff and Whitethroat.
I thought it was rude not to go and see it later on this afternoon as I had a work appointment over that way! Showing really well despite the windy conditions and there are a couple of shots on their way to Ian for out of county :) Really friendly crowd when I was there [about twelve people or so] the shrike had dropped out of sight for 30 minutes but then when it showed it preferred the wire sticking out of the concrete blocks or the barbed wire fences, if anyone else is going for a look.
Must have just missed you Alan, I was there at about 14.00 with John Barber - smashing little bird. We watched it taking insects, one rather large butterfly, but always staying within 30 or so meters of the same perching spot. A liftime first for JB and myself
-- Edited by sid ashton on Friday 10th of September 2010 05:48:49 PM
Just been to see the Red Backed Shrike at Frodsham on No 1 bed. There were about a dozen birdwatchers present when I arrived and the bird had been showing well. Phil Woolen had taken some great shots with his camera which he was was able to show me, but I only had to wait for about 15 minutes to see it fly on to a nearby bush.. It must have sat for 5 minutes on a branch before dropping out of view, but the bird kept re apearing and had been very close indeed.
The bird was down past the parking space where you walk to the Weaver bend, down towards the farm, and there were several places to park your car.
12.30- 15.30 2 Avocets, both quite far away from the 2 chicks who were feeding quite happily. 5 Ringed Plover, many Shelduck & Tuffties. Reed Warbler singing so hard and long almost drowned out 2 reeling Groppers. Lots of Whitethroat, Goldfinch, Willow Warbler and Chiffchaff. Buzzard overhead on 3 separate occasions. 1 Kestrel. 2 Song Thrush with mouthfulls of insects/grubs. Plenty of Swifts and Swallows. Sedge Warbler and House Sparrow on long walk back to car which I left on the far side of the bridge over the motorway. Rick.
Hi everybody. just joined manchester birding. my main patches are frodsham marshes, chester, moore nature reserve. spent a few early mornins on frodsham marsh. flock of sand martins nr canal.pair avocets with 2 young on no 6. ruddy duck.loadsa whitethroat, warblers, cuckoo(male) and a huge infestation of ermin moths webs and all.swallows swifts buzzards and a couple am not sure of. wher can i post pix.?
Of note this morning were a male marsh harrier quartering fields above Weaver Bend around 6.30am. Avocet on the new pool on Tank No. 6. Three wheatear on sheep fields near Marsh Farm, two grasshopper warblers (one chasing the other) along the path down to Weaver Bend and two yellow wags in the arable fields by Lordship Lane.
Great description of area to see Yellow Wagtails, Sid, I've never seen them here, the grassy area on top of the bank over the logbook is where I 've seen then at Frodsham Marsh in previous years.
One Yellow Wagtail showing v well 4.00pm today exactly where you indicated, so thanks for that !!
A trip to Frodsham after a couple of hours on the Wirral, this afternoon.
Couldn't find area where Yellow Wags were meant to have been, but did see one flying over
Karen to reach the "new" area with scrapes you need to drive along the top of No. 6 tank to the point where there is a squiggle in the road down a bit of a hill then go along for another couple of hundred yards and stand on the grass bank to view the new scrapes. It's where it looks like the bank has been reinforced. The Yellow and White wags were in that area when I was there last week - hope that helps for future reference.
A trip to Frodsham after a couple of hours on the Wirral, this afternoon
1 cracking male Whinchat on the field opposite No 6 2 Groppers reeling on bank below No 6, couldn't see them though Couldn't find area where Yellow Wags were meant to have been, but did see one flying over Lots of Sedge Warblers and Whitethroats around
A couple of scroats on quad bikes and motorbikes on no 6 itself at the dry end, putting the few birds (mainly Lapwings) that were there up How I wished the ground had opened up
-- Edited by Karen Foulkes on Sunday 25th of April 2010 06:59:20 PM
Got the morning off to a good start at 06.45 with approximately 200 Golden Plover in summer plumage on No 5 tank. Then things went downhill, even the Weaver Bend produced nothing but vast quantities of those mozzy type biting jobies and too much water in the river
However things took a turn for the better when I met Steve & Gill Barber (nice to meet you folks) - we found on the new pools on No 6 - 3 White and 2 possibly 3 Yellow Wagtails, 10 - 12 Ringed Plover. a Dunlin, a Black tailed Godwit and a Snipe. But best of all Steve spotted a raptor that eventually turned out to be an immature Marsh Harrier that gave us a good display before heading off west
No sign of the Red-crested Pochard or Water Pipit and couldn't get onto the Little Stint before it flew. Saw all of the other species on Mike's list plus a biggish flock of Pink feet over going west and a Water Rail heard - a good soaking of my bins and scope didn't help - lovely weather, lovely place on a day like today.
-- Edited by sid ashton on Sunday 24th of January 2010 06:59:04 PM
He's often there! Yesterday No 6 had 1 BN grebe, several ruddys, and bizzarely, a pair of Cape shelduck. Also one solitary wader - wood sand or juv redshank, too far away to be sure.
We'll have to post marks out of ten for his practise sessions then Ann!
I saw the Ruddys but didn't know whether to mentioned them - mind you I know they've culled them there before so I suppose its on a list of places the contractors visit... they'd have to be a good shot with a high powered rifle to get them in the centre of that tank mind. Does explain why the entire flock of tufties, ruddies and mallard moved out to the centre when I appeared on the horizon. There was a Redshank on the shore near the eastern end on Sunday pm. Missed the cape Shelduck but have seen an un-ringed and free flying pair at Knowsley so maybe they're on the move? Peter
He's often there! Yesterday No 6 had 1 BN grebe, several ruddys, and bizzarely, a pair of Cape shelduck. Also one solitary wader - wood sand or juv redshank, too far away to be sure.
Whoops sorry both, Sid it is indeed the tank with the water and the silt beds at the western end. Didn't try and drive round this time after the time when I hit the 2ft pothole... Rather randomly I thought there was a bloke parked up playing a saxophone at the eastern end!
Have a look here, you can download a pdf of a Frodsham Marsh map showing the different bed No.s - though it's not very clear!
http://www.ukbis.net/cawos/frodshammarsh.htm
I was there a week ago last Saturday and had 6+ yellow wags, then 9+ last Wednesday evening. We also saw 50+ruddy duck on the Saturday but this number had plummeted to just half a dozen on Wednesday. A guy I bumped into said there'd been DEFRA guys there in the morning culling them?
Is the tank you refer as no 4 the big tank, up the hill, still in use with water in it that you can drive all the way round? If so I have always thought that was No 6 tank. Cheers Sid
-- Edited by sid ashton on Monday 14th of September 2009 08:29:49 AM
Tank no 4 this afternoon - variety of ducks plus an immature Black Necked Grebe - presumably spreading out from the eyes? Kestrels hunting, redshank in the margins and still some yellow wags at the far end.
Today Weaver Bend 6 Ring Plover 5 Common Sandpipers Pr Shelduck with 8 small ducklings 1 Greenshank 3 Dunlin Lots of Bl T Godwits No 6 Tank 6 Dunlin Bl T Godwits 6 Common Gulls Lapwings
but work was going on in this area so a lot of disturbance
Thanks all - this site is excellent for hints, tips and encouragement - I found the Welsh chaps report last night which made me even more annoyed with myself - maybe if I'd hung back a bit and watched whatever it was would have emerged from cover! Anyway there's three days now to go for another look! I've had a pm which suggests someone else from here has seen something there too!
Its all part of the learning - last time I did any birding in the 1980s Avocets weren't seen outside Suffolk and an Egret would have been amazing plus I'm now seeing species such as Sedge Warblers, Black caps and Whitethroats that I just didn't see when I was younger and which are a joy to watch.
I'm finding some of the fringe stuff interesting as well - got some shots of Med Gulls in a BH Gull colony and on reviewing the rest of the shots I appear to have got some hybrids or maybe Leutistic BHs - all good stuff.
Pete, dont be gutted put it down to excellent experience, we have all had such birds in the past, and proberly will have them in the future.
The ones that got away,most birders have that list.
It,s all part of birding and make you a better birder because you question what you have seen, Ian has always mentioned notebooks, and the failure of some birders to keep notes, the same with photos! never delete the( What the bloody hell is that) photo, until you are sure what it is,
How gutted am I - 20th March this year I flushed a bird at a Frodsham location and it flew very low and sort of glided into cover then repeated the same twice more until I lost it properly - at the time I got a poor shot, long since deleted and debated asking for help on here - my impression was skinny partridge - brown wings slightly lighter underneath... after much searching reference books and looking at photos there's an outside chance it was a Corncrake... anyway if anyone is going to be in the Frodsham area and wants to have a look I know exactly where it was in March - as its a sensitive bird I won't describe the location or where at that location it was in open forum but if any bona fide Manchester birders are interested I'll discuss via pm. It'd be nice if someone could confirm - and of course I'll be going back for another look this weekend now that I've done the research - course could just be a skinny partridge!
-- Edited by Pete Welch on Thursday 21st of May 2009 11:46:09 PM
We seem to have two Frodham threads going again so as per Ian Mc's email I revert to this one.
However not too much to report from Frodsham that's very exciting probably because of a late start today. We watched a Peregrine "flying with Swallows" they didn't seem in the slightest concerned. On the Weaver still lots of Shelduck, Redshank (10) Gadwall (pair), Yellow Wags (5) on the river edges and adjoining meadows. Number 6 tank yielded Ringed Plover (2), Wheater (2) and Linnets (6) on the dry bits and Shoveler on the water - very little else. In the surrounding bushes singing Chiffchaff, Willow Warbler and Whitethroat.
We nipped up to Bradley but no sign of the Cattle Egret - then picked up a chippy and went back to the Marsh to eat them where we met four birders returning from the Weaver Bend where they reported having seen a Wood Sandpiper - by then too late to go back for a look-see
So Henry and Mrs O you both did well to avoid my company today
I also called in this morning on the way to the Wirral, great views fom the farm then as it flew east towards the rough paddock area. Left about 10:00 with it showing well if distantly.
Me and my dad went to see the Cattle Egret this morning, which was stood out on view, and had apparently flown from near the cattle on the other side near the farm.
A party of shooters arrived as we were leaving
Nice bird though
Called in at No 6 and had Chiffchaff, very quiet though otherwise, although knowing our luck someone'll find something really good later.
-- Edited by Karen Foulkes on Sunday 29th of March 2009 12:42:03 PM
-- Edited by Karen Foulkes on Sunday 29th of March 2009 12:42:30 PM
Egret in the middle of the far field [in the elbow of the public footpath] with four mute swans and about ten Shelduck this morning - about 10.30am. Slightly better views by walking 750m round footpath to North East of farm. Farmer still very helpful [gave permission to use his yard where I found three other friendly birders!]. Looks like people are remaining courteous and not causing any problems.
I was there about 12:00 and all I saw was a quad bike Grand Prix type event with bikers zooming around.
I carried on to Inner Marsh Farm - very quiet - couple of Avocets, a few Ruff and Curlew and Chiffchaff. Then to Parkgate and saw a ringtail Harrier in the mist so not a totally wasted journey.
Thanks to all for the info, all really helpful, this forum is fantastic for stuff like this. Went this a.m. with Peter Johnson, small number of birders present but more importantly, so was the Cattle Egret. It was in the location expected and the farmer is still very friendly, apparently its been about for approx a month but the farmer didn't know what it was. Cheers Ian