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Post Info TOPIC: Mossley


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RE: Mossley


David Walsh wrote:

Steve Suttill wrote:

Heron Lane:

WILLOW TIT refound after an absence of 6 weeks

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Despite all the hoohah going on 5 minutes up the road, this is the best news of the weekend for me!! biggrin

I saw mine again this morning - all we need to do now is join the dots along the woods of the Tame Valley, and we'll have ourselves a breeding population biggrinbiggrin







OK David. You start a trail of sunflower seeds at your end and I'll do the same here ...
... but they're probably both male or both female - any good Willow Tit sexers on the forum? smile

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Steve Suttill wrote:

Heron Lane:

WILLOW TIT refound after an absence of 6 weeks

-----------------------------------------

Despite all the hoohah going on 5 minutes up the road, this is the best news of the weekend for me!! biggrin

I saw mine again this morning - all we need to do now is join the dots along the woods of the Tame Valley, and we'll have ourselves a breeding population biggrinbiggrin



-- Edited by David Walsh on Sunday 2nd of November 2014 05:44:10 PM

-- Edited by David Walsh on Sunday 2nd of November 2014 05:44:46 PM

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Heron Lane:

WILLOW TIT refound after an absence of 6 weeks smile. Located in flight as it descended from the Oldham border on Midge Hill. Followed it to a hawthorn by the railway bridge over the lane where it was feeding on the ripest berries. Good views as it flitted from one hawthorn to the next, only losing it when it descended into the brambles.

Also, c80 Pinkfeet over heading E/NE. Redwings and Fieldfares over in dribs and drabs heading SW and good numbers of Woodpigeon heading the same way.

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Roger Baker 3 wrote:

28th Oct. 14.45 - 16.00 hrs.

Heyheads (Kershaw Hey).

Not actually sure if I was in Mossley or Stalybridge, very borderline ?





Right on the border, Roger. Whichever, you were definitely in the Watsonian Vice-County of Cheshire smile

There's a great map feature on the Grey to Green website
http://www.gmwildlife.org.uk/grey_to_green/index.php?map=1view4
where you can superimpose a variety of boundaries.

-- Edited by Steve Suttill on Wednesday 29th of October 2014 09:39:41 AM

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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28th Oct. 14.45 - 16.00 hrs.

Heyheads (Kershaw Hey).

Not actually sure if I was in Mossley or Stalybridge, very borderline ?

Picked out a couple of Goldcrest mixed in with the roving tit flocks.

Roger.


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Proper birding Steve ...... none of that "sat in the hide" stuff for us !

Had a double dose of that hill ....... I had to get back up it !
My legs not been right since.

Roger (The Tameside Ninja)

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Following a suggestion by Roger Baker, tried out a new route this morning.

From Top Mossley over Luzley Road: 200+ Pinkfeet over heading SE and a Little Owl found while scanning a small clump of trees for thrushes smile

Then down an extremely steep, wet and muddy path (thanks Roger - will get even sometime!) along the Mossley boundary to the edge of the Cliffs SBI:
Sparrowhawk and Kestrel, about 10 Redwing, Gt Spotted Woodpecker, Jay, pair Bullfinch, wandering tit flock, etc.

Back along the canal (very quiet).

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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40 Redwing flying SW down the Tame valley this morning at 07.30

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Two Dippers on River Tame behind Woodend Mill at 16:30.

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On the river by the old Queen St. Mill this morning:

5 redhead Goosander
3 Dipper (at least two were unringed)
Grey Wagtail
Heron

A little later on Heron Lane:

Heron (naturally!)
Kingfisher
2 Swallows over heading South

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Ashley Edwards wrote:

Where abouts is Heron Lane? I can't seem to find it on any maps?





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If you head out of Bottom Mossley along Manchester Road, towards Greenfield, Heron Lane is on the left, before the river, and Roaches Lock. Good luck wink

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Where abouts is Heron Lane? I can't seem to find it on any maps?

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Heron Lane:

No sign of the Willow Tit since the 18th.

Chiffchaffs have been present on every visit for the past 3 weeks or so, though they don't actually breed at this site. This morning two were present - one singing and one just making contact calls.

A flock of 12 Swallows which has been present, hawking for insects, for the past few days had gone this morning. Presumably last night's frost has made them see sense...

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Thanks for the info on the Jack Snipe dates, Steve - seems I missed the earliest record for the 21st Century by one day!

With regard to Willow Tits, I've just had a look in Breeding Birds in Greater Manchester which has a probable breeding record for the tetrad adjacent to where I found "my" bird. BBGM gives an estimate of 300 breeding pairs in the county and expresses the hope that replanting of the Mersey Valley would lead to an expansion in the breeding range. Sadly, not the case.

It's good to get some reward for working these local patches for the last 20 years, though neither bird could be found this morning.

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Well done Steve on two excellent local patch finds. You are right,Sept 18th is an early date for Jack Snipe in GM. In fact there are only 20 September records in the database going back to 1993. Unfortunately, you can't claim the prize for the earliest ever, there are a few records that beat yours.

  • Hope Carr NR - 1st to 13th Sep 1999
  • Doffcocker Lodge - 8th Sep 1993
  • Worthington Lakes 14th and 16th Sep 1996
  • Castleshaw Resrs - 17th Sept 2005


The Willow Tit is intriguing and makes you wonder about the status of this species in the east of the county, given other sightings in Tameside and Oldham this year. In the early 1980's there was of course a significant population extending from Stockport north into Tameside and Oldham. We had assumed these birds had long since disappeared and none were recorded for Bird Atlas 2007-11 in the east, apart from a single at Hollingworth Lake in 2008 and 2009. However, perhaps there are still one or two pairs waiting to be discovered in the area.

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JACK SNIPE - second Mossley first of the week smilesmile

With the intention of looking for dragonflies and butterflies, I decided to have a look at the SBI below the new school. Thought I'd check the pool first as I'd flushed a Common Snipe there last week. I could see a resting wader on the mud but it was too small for Common and didn't flush as I approached closer. In fact it sat there, occasionally bobbing like a Dipper, while I managed a rough sketch. Having checked a few recent county reports, this seems like a rather early record for the species.

Willow Tit was still present, though secretive, on Heron Lane this morning.

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WILLOW TIT - a Mossley first for me smile

Searching the trees along Heron Lane this morning in the hope of a migrant flycatcher or similar, I found very little of interest apart from a flyover Raven. Turning back, resigned to a count of the resident Bullfinches, there it was feeding on a bramble amongst the Rowans. After allowing a good, close up, view, it disappeared into the undergrowth and I could only follow it by its two note call. It re-emerged briefly at the top of a Rowan before once again hiding away.

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Buzzard over Micklehurst Road at 6.0 pm.

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Late visit to BBS square (Top Mossley/Hartshead Pike) this morning:

Willow Warbler numbers have picked up and one was seen carrying food to a nest - Whitethroats also.

What few Lapwings there were on the early visit have all gone - surely any young can't have fledged by now, or can they?

Jackdaws still outnumbering all other species added together!

Little Owl seen on walk home.


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5 Swifts screaming around Woodend Mill (a regular breeding site) this morning.

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Grey wagtail, Dipper along canal between New Bridge and Woodend Mill. Second sighting of Dipper on this stretch.

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Early visit to BBS square (Top Mossley/Hartshead Pike) this morning:

Just 1 singing Willow Warbler and my first Wheatear of the year.

Meadow Pipit numbers down this year and no sign of recovery for the Lapwings.

Jackdaws probably outnumbering all other species added together!

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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along the Greenfield end of the old railway bridleway: my first Blackcap of the year + 2 singing Chiffchaffs.

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Forced out of my home today - couldn't stand the sight of my neighbour destroying the last vestiges of wildlife habitat - or the sound of his JCB furious

Old railway bridleway:
2 singing Chiffchaffs
1 pair of Brambling and one pair of Siskin in the same tree.
1 pair Bullfinch

Shadworth Lane and Noonsun Hill:
3 pairs Lapwing nesting
2 Skylarks
surprisingly few Meadow Pipits, no Curlew and, amazingly, no Grouse.

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Slightly better results for this morning's Winter Thrush Survey:

7 Fieldfare perched on overhead wires.
4 Blackbirds (all male)
2 Mistle Thrush (male of the pair singing very loudly)

Also, 2 escaped Guineafowl in the dentist's car park on Stockport Road!

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Yesterday's Winter Thrush Survey:

2 Redwing and 2 Mistle Thrush perched in the same Birch tree - and that was it cry

How can you do an hour's walk and not see or hear a single Blackbird confuse

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This morning's Winter Thrush Survey: 12 Fieldfare perched on overhead wires. 5 Blackbirds - most feeding on the few remaining Hawthorn berries.

Also seen: pair Bullfinch, Dipper and Kingfisher.

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Two Peregrines above my house at 08.50 this morning. A pair judging by the disparity in their sizes. Unusual to see a pair together outside the breeding season.

Seasons' Greetings!

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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John,

I assume you are referring to Stamford Golf Course in Stalybridge? If so, I also flushed a woodcock, from our garden in Huddersfield Road, half a mile from the golf course, yesterday morning. Definitely a garden first!

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A woodcock was flushed out by a stray golf ball this morning on Stamford Golf Course (not mine may I add). A first for me on the course.
Sadly a tawny owl had managed to fly into a barbed wire fence and had not survived.

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2 buzzards, 1 sparrowhawk, about 70 fieldfare and a green woodpecker heard for the first time this year on Stamford Golf course.

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This morning's Winter Thrush Survey around Mossley/Greenfieeld border:

7 Fieldfare, 3 Redwing, 3 Blackbird and 2 Mistle Thrush

also 6 Bullfinches - this year's young now almost completely in adult plumage.

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c 120 Pink-footed Geese over Mossley at 0820 this morning heading S/SE

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skein of c90 Pink-footed Geese over Mossley heading E/SE at 0825 this morning

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Gull noises above Mossley station this morning made me look up to see a Black-headed Gull doing battle with a medium-sized bird of prey. No bins but it was almost certainly a Hobby smile

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One Dipper on river near Woodend Mill yesterday afternoon.

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0805-0830 Two laps of Mossley cemetary produced no wryneck :(

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Many thanks for the info, I will keep an eye out for your posts.

Cheers,
Ashley

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The guy who found the bird had to go out to work and didn't find it on returning home. He will phone me if it is refound and I'll post here. The golf course might be worth checking.

In 2006 a Wryneck hung around Shell, Carrington, for five days and the previous year one spent three days in Horwich...

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Is there any more information available with the wryneck sighting like whether it lingered or flew off? I only live in Carrbrook and between Queensway and us is the golf course so wondering if its likely to be in that area with all the short grass etc?

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WRYNECK reported from a BTO member's garden in Queensway, Mossley at 09.45 this morning.

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Late visit Breeding Bird Survey square (Top Mossley/Hartshead Pike) this morning:

Meadow Pipits and Whitethroats gathering lots of fat juicy caterpillars bodes well for a good breeding season.

The two small Lapwing colonies seem to have suffered mixed fortunes. One field has been completely abandoned but the other has good numbers with a couple of well-grown chicks present. One bird still sitting - presumably on a replacement clutch. Plenty of corvids hanging around looking for an easy meal though...

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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At least 3 Willow Warblers singing on Heron Lane.

First Swallow of year for me.

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Early visit Breeding Bird Survey square this morning:

No Willow (or any other) Warblers this year, nor any hirundines. Lapwing numbers down this year.
3 Wheatears - first of the year for me smile

After the survey continued my walk round the back of Hartshead Pike and found a pair of Little Owls sitting cosily together in their favourite tree.

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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3 Waxwings in ash tree on Manchester Road (nr Warmco) this morning at 8.00

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Pleasant stroll around my BBS square at Hartshead Pike with Tom Willis. Sun shining, blue sky, icy cold!

Meadow Pipits everywhere. In the heather they all seemed to be paired up and/or displaying. Elsewhere in the fields there were small flocks, presumably having retreated from the higher moors.
Skylark heard singing briefly.
Half a dozen Lapwing on territory.
Two male Pheasants having a good scrap.
Kestrel in combat with a Crow.
Pretty quiet otherwise - no Wheatears yet.


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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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This month's Winter Thrush Survey visit:

Just 4 Blackbirds and 1 singing Mistle Thrush.

The Buzzard is back It was being harassed by a Crow by Midge Hill and flew off over Royal George Mill.

Dipper activity suggests that they may be on eggs.



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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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Tawny owl on telegraph pole just after you go under railway bridge between Heyrod and Mossley. Heron hunting on the river just next to Egerton Park, always nice to see them at night.

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That's a great spot for Dippers, Roger.

I used to do a Waterways survey there every year and the cascade under the bridge seems to mark the boundary of two Dipper territories, so fights are regular.

Also a cracking spot for Grey Wagtails in the breeding season.

Have replied to your message about the colour ring - if it is blue it's a well-travelled bird!

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Steve "Make your birdwatching count!"


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18th Feb. 16.00 hrs.

Scout Green.

Heard a singing male Dipper in the fast water just upsream of the metal bridge, by the time I had scrambled down there were 3 ........ one chasing another up and down the river while her ladyship just sat fluttering her eyelashes.

Think the singing male had blue and white rings on right leg but the light was awkward so could be wrong.

Roger.

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