Champions of the Flyway!

Thursday, January 9, 2020

Early January Back On The Coast


Starting the new year as I intend to continue (we'll see how long that lasts, eh), here's a quick round-up of the first ten days or so of 2020.


After getting back from the States, we'd the pleasure of guests until the 3rd, later on which was the first chance I had to nip out for a quick session locally here in Filey. It was a pleasure also to catch up with the Firecrests in Church Ravine - annual here in small (but increasing) numbers, but a rare bird in winter - and then a quick pre-dusk check of East Lea produced eight Barnacle Geese with the ferals; up to two Barnacles are regular, but with the influx of geese in recent days (including this species), this is as good as it gets for wild ones locally, and so were notable.


Then, finally, an opportunity to catch up with the long-staying, now-legit-wintering Yellow-browed (type?) Warbler. Found by Dan back in November while I was in Israel, it's a very interesting bird, and while it's apparently been confirmed as a Yellow-brow (the silver bullet apparently coming from sonograms), it's an education to say the least... Approaching it as unbiasedly as possible, it would immediately set the alarm bells ringing without prior knowledge re: its apparent ID -


I watched the bird in relatively dull, flat light (hey, it's January in Filey) and morphologically, while there are arguably pro-inornatus features on closer / longer / alternatively-lit inspection, its overall olive-grey, washed-out tones, creamy-buff supercilium and - from certain angles - uncontrasting wing coverts strongly suggest Hume's, to my eyes at least. Good luck with one like this for thirty seconds in a dark November canopy....


Oddly counter-intuitive, and bringing to mind a Hume's in the bay at Flamborough a few years ago which I also wanted to get to grips with for educational purposes - which, largely because of its bright, green, contrasting tones, I can't say I did.... throw in the call, which to my (clearly still untrained) ear was inseperable from Yellow-brow, and it's fair to say there's still a lot I can learn from these late autumn birds.....


Further afield, I'd two more Humber wader surveys this week, on both North and South banks, with impressive numbers assembled along the inter-tidal zone at both sites. They may not be the most aesthetically pleasing locations I've surveyed, but the abundance of shorebirds is a treat nonetheless. Lapwings well into four figures were a particular joy -




A small diversion on the way to one of them via Hornsea Mere was very productive - masses of wildfowl out on the water from Kirkholme Point, which included a redhead Smew, Greater Scaup and two Long-tailed Ducks (below); must remember to drop in on this excellent site and check through the duck flocks more often.


Sunday, January 5, 2020

Massachusetts, Christmas 2019


White throated Sparrows - abundant and ubiquitous
 
Tufted Titmouse - another common garden stalwart
 
After arriving back from Israel, a couple of day's fieldwork and catching up followed before the next and last trip of the year - a fortnight in Massachusetts with the American family. Although we try and make it over there annually, before this year we'd never made it back over the festive period, and so it was a long overdue, family-focused fortnight, and it was as special as we'd hoped. Birding was confined to a couple of brief sessions in the snow with brother Ned and regular, bone-chilling forays into the snowy garden (the latter being the source of most of these photos), but still, there's always stuff to enjoy....

Freedom isn't free
 
Sharp-shinned Hawk eyeing up a Junco brunch
 
Red-bellied Woodpecker proving there's juicy morsels in the bark even in minus fifteen temperatures
 
Male Northern Cardinal
 
White-breasted Nuthatch - inkeeping with their various congeners, they're as characterful, noisy and entertaining as you'd expect
 


Black-capped Chickadeedeedee
 
New England in winter = Dark-eyed Juncos, and thank the gods for that
 

What's your subspecies...? Ah ok, ta



Saturday, January 4, 2020

Northern Israel, Winter 2019 - Odds and Ends

A visit to Ma'agan Michael with Sheli - another fantastic network of fishponds on the Med coast, crammed with birds - produced some special opportunities to photograph incoming great White Pelicans among other species

Tame Hoopoe from another surveying session with Yoav at Ashdod (also on the Med coast) 

A few hours at the wonderful Jerusalem Bird Observatory catching up with friends and few decent birds, including accommodating Hawfinches feeding by the pond



Another showy Clamorous Reed Warbler, this one at Ma'agsn Michael

Great Bittern, Ma'agan Michael

Glossy Ibises coming into roost at Ma'agan Michael



Black Redstart, Ashdod

Calandra Larks and Skylarks


More shape-shifting Pelicans

Friday, January 3, 2020

Northern Israel, Winter 2019 - Hula Valley Cranes


The Hula Valley is a special place for many reasons (see last post), but it's perhaps most famous for its incredible numbers of Common Cranes. They're everywhere, as evidenced not just by their visual presence but by their constant squeaky-toy beeping and honking, which soundtracked our day in the valley.


We also took the dusk tour (via a tractor with a viewing trailor attached) to experience the roost flights and also to get within a few metres of many, but while it was well worth it (especially for the close-up Jungle Cat), we'd spent the day getting close to them in various places just by birding the area. We saw many thousands, but still probably only a percentage of the 50,000+ that are present in the area at this time of year. Magical.





Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Northern Israel, Winter 2019 - Hula Valley Raptorama

Eastern Imperial Eagle
 
One of the many good reasons for staying at the Jordan Valley Birding Center is its strategic location for sites not only on its doorstep but across northern Israel - with, for example, all the famous northern valleys within an hour or so of the JVBC. One such site needs little introduction, and is famous for its diversity and abundance of birdlife - the mighty Hula Valley.

Eastern Imperial Eagle
 
Eastern Imperial Eagle
 
I had the pleasure of travelling up with my friend Alen (Director of the Jerusalem Bird Observatory) who had joined me the previous day at the JVBC, and on the way we meandered north via picturesque New Testament country, with the Sea of Gallilee centre stage. We hooked up with Birdlife Israel's director of site operations for the Northern section Nadav, another fine friend I've had the pleasure of making over recent years, and sharp young birder (and Champions of the Flyway winner) Nitay, and the four of us headed into the valley for a very productive and memorable day.

Eastern Imperial Eagle
 
Pallid Harrier
 
Getting the special treatment thanks to Nadav meant getting even better and closer views of the abundant birdlife, although to be honest, there's so much to go at it'd be hard to leave the area disappointed. Waterbirds on the wetlands, passerines in the fields, Cranes and raptors everywhere - with the latter the focus of this post (Cranes to follow shortly).

Pallid Harrier
 
Pallid Harrier
 
And where raptors were concerned, it was frankly mind-blowing. The numbers and range of species wintering in the valley - a mix of agricultural land, marsh and wetlands, woodlands, plains and mountains - is understandably lauded and for eagles alone it's like nowhere else I've had a pleasure of birding. Great Spotted Eagles were scattered across the area, and would've been quite enough (we'd upwards of 15 different birds), but the stars were the Eastern Imperial Eagles - huge, majestic, ridiculously close beasts drifting by and over us, landing in nearby trees (with the GSEs) and dropping into the fields within flocks of cranes; we'd at least six birds, all of which were showy and impossible to miss.

Black-winged Kite
 

 
Black-winged Kite
 
It wasn't all about about the eagles, with lots of other species to enjoy - Hen, Marsh and Pallid Harriers (plenty of the latter), Common and Long-legged Buzzards (plenty of both), Eurasian Kestrels & Sparrohawks, Peregrine, Merlin, Black-winged Kites and of course numerous Black Kites

Long-legged Buzzard
 
Long-legged Buzzard
 
Long-legged Buzzard
 
Great Spotted Eagles
 
Great Spotted Eagles