Champions of the Flyway!

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Guiding at Flamborough, Oct '24 (1)

Pink-footed Geese passing the lighthouse
A Common Buzzard which we watched arriving in off the sea
Yellow-browed Warbler in the lighthouse grasslands
Deep into the throes of peak guiding season here on the Yorkshire coast, with October and November set to be much busier than September (which was busy in of itself) - no complaints, there of course, and it's always a joy to share the wonders of migration and birds in general with our clients, whether returnees or first-timers.
Whooper Swans arriving in off the sea
More Pinks, these touching down at Bempton

Every day is genuinely completely different, as you'd expect with so many variables at play, and my three days guiding at Flamborough and Bempton this last week were indeed contrasting and unique. Each had plenty of migration to enjoy, in differing circumstances - from unseasonally mild to cold, blustery to perfectly calm, dark and showery to bright and sunny; and of course, each delivered different birds and experiences. In no particular order, some of the highlights included: an extremely showy Daurian (Isabelline) Shrike; a fresh-in Yellow-browed Warbler on the clifftop; Chaffinches, Skylarks, thrushes, Starlings and angelic Whooper Swans arriving in off the sea (and a Common Buzzard doing likewise); Arctic Skuas, Manx Shearwaters various seaducks and Brent Geese moving over the waves;
Olive-backed Pipit at Thornwick
Goldcrests, Chiffchaffs and Blackcaps busily gleaning insects from wilting leaves; thousands of yapping Pink-footed Geese; a close-up Olive-backed Pipit crawling among the leaf-litter; a Merlin pursuing Meadow Pipits with typical speed and skill; and, feeding just beneath us as we braved the northerly blow on the cliff top at Bempton, a very active, accommodating Humpback Whale, putting on an incredible show among the white horses (followed soon after by a close-in pod of Bottlenose Dolphins).
You never quite know what you're going to get on my Migration Specials, but more often than not, there are moments that you won't forget in a hurry, and that's one of the things that makes them such a pleasure to deliver.

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Two Quality Phylloscs - early Oct '24

More from last week, and our four-day guiding trip in the Spurn / Kilnsea / Humber area... did we want to swing by the Pale-legged Leaf Warbler at Bempton on our way down the coast, and did I want to leave the car at home for the duration? was an offer I couldn't refuse from young Mr Baines, and so off we headed in the pre-dawn half-light....
... not expecting much (except, well, a good few other hopeful early risers on site), a couple of hours later and we'd had great views, dealt with the circumstances with good humour (unlikely if I was there on my own, which I likely wouldn't have been), and maintained our annual one-twitch-a-year success rate at a heady 100%.
A great bird which I was quietly keen to catch up with, especially for research purposes (visual and aural); it's been a long time since I've seen one - actually 12 years, in the Thai forests - and really glad we made the effort.
Down at Spurn, meanwhile, and a significantly less rare but just as alluring Phylloscopus cousin - an Arctic Warbler - was present in the bushes by the Discovery Centre while we were there; conditions were challenging to say the least, but a quick break on the final day coincided with the bird feeding effectively at our feet, low down (and even on the ground) and barely a couple of metres away, unperturbed.....
I've never had decent views of Arctic Warbler in the UK (having not gone out of my way to twitch one, and still waiting to find one..), and these were, well, outrageously good. Two more great birds from an already great autumn.
All above pics - Arctic Warbler; all below - Pale-legged Leaf Warbler

Monday, October 7, 2024

Pallid Harrier, Welwick / Kilnsea - early Oct '24

At the beginning of the month, Rich and I were back in the far south-easterly corner of YYorkshire, this time to guide our friends from the Cambridge U3A birding group for four days in the Humber / Kilnsea / Spurn area.
We've had the pleasure of guiding them before, and despite the challenging conditions, we were able to share some great birding experiences with them - one of which was this gorgeous juvenile Pallid Harrier that seemed to follow us around.
We had close-up fly-bys on the three of the four days, at Welwick and Kilnsea - absent only on the fourth day, when it was replaced at the former site by a ringtail Hen Harrier. Class.

Saturday, October 5, 2024

Filey & Flamborough, 3rd & 4th Oct '24

Pallas's Leaf Warbler, Filey, 3rd Oct '24

3rd
After four days guiding in the Spurn area (more on that to follow), I had a window of opportunity on Thursday (til mid-afternoon, when guests were arriving) to catch up with office and domestic stuff back in York. But, the weather looked very promising - calm and sunny after more rain and north-easterlies - and I just couldn't resist the coast again....
As regular readers can probably tell I've been making the most of any opportunity to soak up migration of late, in what has been an especially fruitful autumn so far - and whether guiding, surveying or hitting my favourite spots on the coast purely for pleasure (a regular occurrence recently), it's been particularly productive and enjoyable. After all, the winds could swing west for the rest of the season, and I'd only regret not making hay while the sun shines...
So, Filey it was, with the sun shining and barely a breath of wind on arrival. For the next seven hours or so, I enjoyed a wonderful, vitamin D-fuelled day patrolling the northern coastal area (mainly the Country Park). Rarely do such ideal viewing conditions conicide with so many migrants, but when they do, there's nothing like getting in the zone and methodically sifting through the by-now-slightly-wilting leafy edges and canopies; Goldcrests, Blackcaps and Robins everywhere, enough in their own right, but also providing the defaults by which to try and isolate something a little more unusual.
Willow Warbler

With such arrivals along the coast either side of me inspiring even closer attentions, after a couple of hours it was a thrill to focus on a gleaming, almost neon Pallas's Leaf Warbler skillfully picking off spiders while hovering below a sycamore leaf - a bit of a surprise (given the early date for a traditionally later-in-the-season species), but very much the right kind of surprise, and one that causes an involuntary gasp and then very satisfied exhalation.
Of all the scarce and rare species from Siberia I've been lucky enough to find on the Yorkshire coast, if I'm absolutely honest, for pure charisma and aesthetic beauty, Pallas's Warblers are, er, top of the tree: as dinky and buzzy as Goldcrests, but with with an underside of silver and an upperside of vibrant greens and yellows, converging on a multi-striped, oversized Kawaii-style head. Unbeatable.
In fact, the only thing better than a Pallas's is two Pallas's, which, a couple of hours later, is exactly what happened (and I was able to confirm thanks to visiting birders watching the first simultaneously - thank the gods for visiting birders here, eh?!); most rewardingly, the second bird appeared as a fresh wave of migrants swept through in the early afternoon, having materialised from (literally) out of the blue. A beautiful day, in all respects. 

4th
Back home for mid-afternoon to hook up with our dear friends the Perlmans, over from Israel for a couple of days and nights; a lovely evening followed, which included some delicate negotiating, resulting in permission granted for Yoav and I to slip away to the coast for a few hours on Friday (yesterday) morning (thanks Amity, Adva and the kids ;-).
Tree Sparrow

Revelling in my coastal roving of late and not fussed about which of my favoured locations to hit, Yoav chose Flamborough, and as another beautiful sunny day dawned, we found ourselves at Old Fall, and straight into birds. The hedge was busy, with a flighty, vocal Little Bunting being the highlight, before a long, memorable session on the sunny, sheltered, southern side of the wood and hedge (with John B for much of the time - incredibly, the only other birder on site).
Yellow-browed Warbler

This enchanted corner of Old Fall can be a very special place under the right circumstances - and these were exactly the right circumstances. John had already had at least one more Little Bunting, plus lots of commoner migrants, in the area by the time we arrived, and waves of birds were passing through - literally in many cases, as we watched not just finches, thrushes and buntings, but also warblers and 'crests heading west out of cover. 

As is so often the case here, it can be seemingly almost birdless for ten, even twenty minutes, and then bang, it kicks off almost out of nowhere. And so it was for our joy of a 90 minute session here: a vocal Richard's Pipit west, one (perhaps two) Little Buntings in the hedge, an equally vocal Red-breasted Flycatcher, a Firecrest, at least five Yellow-browed Warblers (often interacting / chasing each other), tons of 'crests, Blackcaps and Chaffinches, plus Bramblings, Redwings, Song Thrushes, Skylarks and more on the move.
Happy birders

Our time was up, we'd had our fill, and our morning was one of those hit-and-run sessions (well, more grin-and-stand) that are great on your own - as at Filey the day before - but sometimes even better when you get to share it with a good friend who you don't see anywhere nearly enough.

Friday, September 27, 2024

North Yorkshire Pelagics, mid-late Sep '24 - Shearwaters

Sooty Shearwater

After an exceptional season and many memorable trips, last week saw the last of our YCN Seabird and Whale Adventures out of Staithes, North Yorkshire for '24. I led four in the week (long trips on 16th, 18th & 20th, with a shorter one also on 20th), all of which were very productive, and all in different ways.
A (particularly dark) Balearic Shearwater with Manx Shearwaters, 18th

As well as the cetaceans (see upcoming post), seabirds were fantastic, in both quantity and quality, with many hundreds of terns, good numbers of skuas on each trip (including double figures of Arctics on each, a handful of Bonxies, and a Pomarine on 16th), Caspian Gulls on 16th and 18th (two), Little Gulls (peaking at 25 on 16th), a Velvet Scoter on 20th, wildfowl on the move, as well as big numbers of auks, Gannets and gulls...
Manx Shearwater

... but the show-stealers were Shearwaters. August and September have seen variably strong numbers of them on our 'patch' off the coast (and I was lucky enough to be guiding when a Great put in an extraordinary performance a few weeks ago), and last week they were especially abundant - dozens of Sootys, Balearics on 18th (two) and 20th, and - most unusually given the time of year - very big numbers of Manxies.
We expect them in two to three figures on our trips earlier in the season, when they're traditionally at their most numerous off the Yorkshire coast, July being the peak month; from then onwards, however, it's usually a steady decline until few, if any, by now. However, for whatever reasons (for another time!), we'd hundreds in rafts a few miles offshore, peaking at at least 470 on 18th.
Also unusually, all three species gave great close views, often drifting around the boat in nonchalant fashion - giving our guests fantastic experiences with these often locally scarce, shy, long-distance migrant seabirds.