Champions of the Flyway!

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Holy Island, the Highlands & Hogmanay - the end of '25 and the beginning of '26

A room with a view
The view 

We've been back the best part of a week (including some entertaining guiding and surveying - see last posts), but for the post-Christmas and New Year period, we headed north for a lovely trip split between Lindisfarne and the Highlands.
The ruined abbey and our hotel
For the first two days and nights, Holy Island was our home, with long walks, dinners, and drinking / rummy sessions (and a couple of lovely runs) the order of the day (and night). A cheap deal on a hotel overlooking the castle and south bay was well worth it, and while we've been here many times, this was the first time we'd actually stayed on the island, but likely not the last.
Bar-tailed Godwits, Sanderlings, Ringed Plovers, Turnstones and Purple Sandpipers - Lindisfarne's beaches were loaded with 'em
Next up, the Highlands for Hogmanay - specifically Grantown-on-Spey, and more specifically the Grant Arms Hotel, who kindly invited us up for a few nights in return for some guiding / speaking / quiz-hosting.
Brent Geese (the best geese), Holy Island 

As regular readers will know I (we) have been regular visitors to hotel for many years now; as guest speaker and guide for most years from 2017, and over the last few years, multiple times a year to host of School of Birding.
So it's familar and very welcome territory (and almost like a second home these days); but this was our first Hogmanay up there, and my first time officially co-hosting with our dear friend, Mike (Dilger). Better still, Mike was up with his family - Christina, Zachary and Bramble the dog - and we had a great time with them over the course of our stay.

Aberbethy's Coal Tits are the BEST tits

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— Mark James Pearson (@markthebirder.bsky.social) 30 December 2025 at 12:49
One of many Cresties

Mike and I split guiding and speaking duties for the guests but were able to come together for a fabulous day down our favourite valley, Strathdearn - skillfully assisted by Amity (what an accidentally brilliant co-guide she is) and Zach (who absolutely wiped the floor with us oldies in the eagle-finding stakes). A fine day with fifteen or more guests enjoying no fewer than seven (!) Golden Eagles, three White-tailed Eagles, Mountain Hares and much more.

 

A word re: Hogmanay in Grantown - joyous! Despite shitty weather, thousands of people crowded the square, many of whom were traditional dancing (and at least half cut) to great live music coming from the turned-over articulated lorry that doubled up as a road block. It was a late, and memorable, night... 
White-tailed Eagle

The timing of our guiding days was excellent, as not long afterwards, the weather turned - and over the course of the next day or so went from howling gales and cold rain to almost constant, thick, heavy, snow....
... which was, of course, wholly beautiful and seasonally evocative. To a point, that is - the point being trying to get out and get home in time for Amity to restart school and me to get back to work. As it turned out we were effectively snowed in and had to stay another day and night (thankfully we'd one 'in reserve'), which was a lovely bonus - a long walk in the silent, deeply covered forest with Am, a long run in the forest afterwards, and then a very fun evening with friends and guests at the hotel.
Heading out the next morning was a bit spicy, but we followed a snow plough out of the worst of the conditions, and eight and half hours later, made it back to Yorvik. A fine festive period in every sense.

Happy New Year from the heart of the Highlands! We spent the last day of '25 guiding with our dear friend Mike (Dilger) for the good folk up for Hogmanay at the Grant Arms Hotel - a cracking day including seven Golden Eagles, three White-tailed Eagles, Mountain Hares & lots of other local wildlife.

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— Mark James Pearson (@markthebirder.bsky.social) 31 December 2025 at 17:24


Saturday, January 10, 2026

Winter Warmers - early January, '26

Great Northern Diver, Scarborough harbour 

After returning from Scotland a few days ago (and surveying in the interim), I was back guiding this week - over on the coast, at Scarborough and Filey.
The harbour (on ice)

Three days were planned, and while unfortunately only two were possible (Friday's big storm sadly putting paid to that day), my respective teams for each day had plenty to enjoy.
Kingfisher (video screengrab) 

Starting in Scarborough and with the tide high, both mornings were excellent - highlights included a fabulously tame and showy Kingfisher, Great Northern and Red-throated Divers and a Common Seal in the harbour, and along the Marine Drive / South Bay, another Great Northern and many more Red-throats, Grey Seals, Harbour Porpoises and plenty of seabirds.
Filey seafront 

As the tide ebbed and the promontory became accessible, each day we spent the afternoon in the (somewhat familiar) surroundings of Filey - specifically the beach, Bay Corner and Brigg. Always a joy, and never disappointing - with another four Great Northern Divers in the bay, lots of waders to enjoy (including good numbers of very accommodating Purple Sandpipers) and the wild, beautiful coastling pretty much to ourselves.
Great Northern Diver, South Bay
Kingfisher, harbour
Weasel, Filey

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

North Killingholme, 5th Jan '26

Black Redstart 

After a particularly lovely festive period (more of that to follow), back to work yesterday. Minus five in the Yorvik 'burbs, 90 minutes later I was back on the (very) familiar territory of the industrial south bank of the Humber, specifically North Killingholme and its corridor of seawall and estuary sandwiched between factories and ferries.
An icy wind, snow showers, a deep frozen Haven and sunny intervals all figured on the day's counts, and it was fantastically birdy - big numbers of Teal (1300!), Lapwings, Curlews, Redshanks, Dunlins, plus lots of other action along the river and unfrozen sanctuary, and both Peregrine and Marsh Harrier tempted by the opportunities.
Additionally, the 'shoreline' of the riverbank - a strip of saltmarsh and detritus below the seawall - was a magnet for feeding passerines, which were mostly in one busy, roving flock: 10 Rock Pipits, six Meadow Pipits, five Robins, four Pied Wagtails, and a beautiful, sooty, tail-quivering Black Redstart were a joy to watch as they eked out a living along the strandline.
Locally scarce wildfowl including Gadwall and Shovelers, plus a tight flock of Reed Buntings and a procession of gulls upriver were also entertaining, with a bonus at the end of the day of a Jack Snipe (see below) skulking in the saltmarsh. A pleasingly birdy way to land softly back into the working year.
Rock (above) and Meadow (below) Pipits
Robins and Rock Pipits
Meadow Pipits (above), Peregrine attacking Dunlin (below)

Reed Buntings (above), Redshank (below)
Jack Snipe
Marsh Harrier
Peregrine