Champions of the Flyway!

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Humpback in Anger - Staithes Pelagic, 2nd Sep '24

Christ, where to start with this one? Ok, here we go.... the day before last (2nd Sep), I was due to lead our Yorkshire Coast Nature Seabird and Whale Adventure with our skipper Sean on our boat All My Sons out of Staithes, North Yorkshire. After birding on the coast the afternoon before (Long-tailed Skuas and a dusk fall at Filey - more to follow), I stayed over with the old man at Flamborough, set the alarm for 0420hrs, and went to sleep...
... only to be woken around 0300hrs by the most intense, prolonged and otherworldy lightning storm I've seen for many years. Leaving early in the pouring rain and under strobe-flashing skies (in anticipation of road flooding - there was some, but thankfully not too bad), I arrived at Staithes in good time to meet Sean on the harbour around 0700hrs - in thick, impenetrable fog. Hmmm....
Grey Seal and Humpback checking each other out... 

 After our ten guests arrived, we were soon out of the harbour and into the disorientating wall of nothingness - and on top of that, there was a seriously uncomfortable swell rocking the boat like a rubber duck in the bath at the mercy of an overexcited toddler. My sea legs are good, but even I had to breathe deeply, focus on the horizon, and keep talking to ride out the worst of it...
What seemed like longer than an hour or so later, and we glimpsed our first Minke - thank the gods! - but not everyone got on it, and my primary concern before we drop our shoulders is for everyone to get views; but this one soon disappeared in the gloom and behind the rolling waves... after another lengthy ride further north-east out into the North Sea, however, there was another. And another. And another....
And so began perhaps our greatest, most thrilling and memorable few hours in all the decade's worth of trips we've sailed out there (and I/you thought last week's was special!). About five nautical miles NE of Staithes, and with much credit to Sean for instinct and sonar skills, we hit a rich, dense column of Herring spawn, and suddenly we were in a maelstrom of intense cetacean-seal-seabird feeding frenzies that almost beggared belief, at least in the North Sea, off our beloved Yorkshire coast.
At the time I remember thinking, "this is going to be nigh-on impossible to describe", and well, I was right - quite how to do justice to the following few hours is beyond my capabilities, but try and imagine bobbing around gently (yes, the swell miraculuously subsided, and the fog steadily receded) many miles from land, in perfect silence, but for the constant blowing of whales at all ranges, with a bunch of fellow enthusiasts just as excited as yourself (and that's saying something).
Humpback and Minke 

Then picture those whales literally everywhere you look around the boat, in every direction and at every distance, until you realise you've easily thirty or more surrounding you... some hunting in groups, some diving under the boat, others loafing around, and still others almost colliding with the Humpbacks. Wait, did somebody say Humpbacks?
Our first sighting of a Humpback in the fog....
Incredibly, yes - not one, but two, one of which effectively stayed with us for over two hours, often just metres from the boat and almost within touching distance, clearly totally unconcerned (or, perhaps more likely, curious) about our presence, with a second, more wary individual keeping its distance. After years of patiently hoping, scanning, and persisting, here they were, feasting on what must be a beyond exceptional Herring spawning event.
For the Minkes to play second fiddle to the Humpbacks is not only unfair but (honestly) untrue, for they provided a phenomenon so outrageous not only in the show they provided, but in their sheer, ridiculous abundance. We travelled up and down the line of the feeding frenzy for several hours, stopping regularly, and at no point could we count less than 25 animals around us - indeed, somtimes more like 35-40 - in frantic, localised feeding mode.
In the cold light of day I would estimate we were in the presence of a hundred or more - which, in the cold light of day - is nothing less than mind-blowing. Whether this unprecedented influx continues, or dissipates, or even grows, who knows; maybe I'll be blogging about similar numbers and experiences next week, when I'm back on the boat. But maybe I'll never get to experience anything like it again off the Yorkshire coast, and for that, I'm eternally grateful.
(More posts to follow in the next few days regarding the fantastic seabirds and other wildlife experiences we also enjoyed on the day!).

Saturday, August 31, 2024

Staithes pelagic, 24th Aug '24 - whales, dolphins and more

From last week's YCN Seabird and Whale Adventure out of Staithes, North Yorks - lots of marine mammals, to say the least - which included abut 20 Minke Whales, 25 Bottlenose Dolphins, 60+ Grey Seals and a couple of Harbour Porpoise.
Several of the Minkes and dolphins had recognisable individual dorsal fins, which I'm chasing up and will update when there's positive IDs, but a couple of the Minkes are IDable as Jigsaw and Ell - more details to follow.

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Shear Joy - Staithes Pelagic, 24th Aug '24

After five weeks away in the USA and a couple of jetlagged days back home, yesterday was my first day of the season back on All My Sons, our Yorkshire coast Nature Seabird and Whale Adventure boat out of Staithes on the North Yorkshire coast - and what a day it was....
After two hours sleep and a 0430 start, I was hoping adrenalin and enthusiasm would power me through what was always going to be a long day - two trips out into the blue totalling more than nine hours at sea - and I needn't have worried; it turned out to be what we consider our best all-round day since we began our pelagic trips ten years ago.
I was hoping the severe storms of the previous days would have mixed things up, but mindful of the sea conditions (the forecast was far from perfect and the swell can often continue well after strong winds and extreme tides), and an initial inshore patrol a couple of miles offshore didn't bode well. However, in the distance, I could see a huge number of seabirds feeding - not in tight, seperate baitballs, but seemingly along a long 'line' out at sea - and it didn't take much to persuade skipper Sean to gun us out there.
Bearing in mind our trips are very much for everyone, and also that many aboard were particularly interested in seeing whales (and with only small numbers present so far this season), scanning for surfacing Minkes was a priority - but with so many birds feeding avidly along a stretch of oily ocean in both directions, I was acutely aware of the possibilities...
After picking up the first Minke, and then another, and another, with great views for everyone, the pressure was off, and (while keeping everyone engaged with the wonderful variety of commoner species on show, as well as the whales), I could pay more attention to finding something perhaps more unusual.
Long story short, and over the course of the two trips (three and six hours respectively), in no particular order we'd clocked 20+ Sooty Shearwaters, Manxies, many hundreds of terns including an adult Roseate, at least four Caspian and two Yellow-legged Gulls, waders on the move (including 21 Black-tailed Godwits, Ringed Plovers and Sanderlings), eight Arctic and three Great Skuas, hundreds of auks, a few Red-throated Divers, thousands of gannets and gulls in the frenzy, and our first ever Great Shearwater.
For context, this is the first Great Shearwater reported off the English East coast this year (despite the best efforts of many dedicated seawatchers), and completes the set for me on our YCN pelagics (Manx, Sooty, Balearic, Cory's and now Great). And then there were the cetaceans... but that's for another post!
(pics - Great and Sooty Shearwaters)

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

USA, summer '24 - Greenfield area

Red-eyed Vireo

Our five-week summer holiday in New England to see family and friends is almost over, and while birding was barely on the agenda, I did manage a few sessions if and when the opportunity arose. The last couple of these were with my wonderful brother (in-law) Ned while we were staying at his place in Greenfield, at the northern end of the Pioneer valley in western Mass.
Juvenile Wood Duck
High-flying Ruby-throated Hummingbird catching insects

Lots of regular stuff to enjoy, and increasingly strong signs of migration, as songbirds flocks became more abundant and diverse; in a couple of weeks, it'll all be happening.... but i'll be long gone, suffering the fate of leading seabird and whale pelagics into the North Sea off Yorkshire, and guiding at Spurn for a week before the end of the month. Poor me, eh?
Great Egret
Male Baltimore Oriole
Black-throated Green Warbler