Champions of the Flyway!

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

School of Birding, Module Two, Class Two - dismissed!

I'm just back in Yorkshire after our latest School of Birding in the Highlands - the second of our new Module Two (after the first in February), and the ninth Class overall (actually tenth if we include our School Trip to the Outer Hebrides last year); Christ, where does the time go....?

 

Unsurprisingly - with the majority of the team being return clients (and folk we're fond of), and with Module Two being suitably tweaked - it was a cracking week, in the classroom for our interactive learning sessions, in the field all day, every day for high quality birding, and generally for the craic, which was particularly strong with such a lovely bunch...
A very showy Mountain Hare... (thanks Sarah for the pics!)
The weather was generally kind, and with the forecast being substantially worse for pretty much every day, we really felt like we got away it; only on the final day did we need to seek the nearby sanctuary of the vehicles, but even then, there was so much going on, most of us stayed out anyway.
.. and a very showy Dipper 

Six days, five full days in the field, and learning sessions on subjects including Patch Birding, Songs and Calls, eBird / Birdtrack, Finding Rare Birds and much more, with those days in the field being suitably rich and varied, as it always is with so many contrasting and productive habitats within striking distance.
Male and female Bullfinch
Some of the highlights? On the coast, we enjoyed finding White-billed Divers on a four-diver day, breeding plumage Long-tailed Ducks displaying and Bottlenose Dolphins frolicking; on local lochs, breeding plumage Black-throated and Red-throated Divers and Slavonian Grebes, and various Ospreys (including a new active nest, close-up and previously undiscovered); in the skies, Golden Eagles, Goshawks, White-tailed Eagles, Peregrines, and various other raptors;

Osprey collecting nesting material 

In the woods, we'd very accommodating Crossbills, Crested Tits, lots of newly-arrived summer visitors, waders on the move on freshwater pools, plus close-up Mountain Hare and much more in the various habitats we covered during the week.
Sandwich Tern - a constant passage on the coast

The camera (barely functioning as it is) stayed firmly in the vehicle for pretty much all the time in the field, and so the few photos here are opportunistic (and far from representative of the magical experiences we had with many target species!)... back up in a few weeks for the next School, which we're very much looking forward to.
Osprey and Goshawk

Friday, April 10, 2026

The joys of spring

Male Brambling, Flamborough lighthouse (Click on images to enlarge) 

It's been a sketchy early spring for me with work, family and friend commitments prioritised over birding, but this last few days has seen lots of time in the field, and lots of spring indicators to point us in the right direction.
One of many Black-headed Gulls on the move down the Humber 

Tuesday was a long, windy, but mostly sunny day surveying on the industrial banks of the Humber at North Killingholme, where highlights included fresh-in Willow Warblers and Blackcaps in the scrub, a Merlin hunting Skylarks over the factories, a strong passage of Black-headed Gulls east along the river, and coming-into-breeding-plumage Black-tailed Godwits furiously feeding up before their imminent northbound journeys.


Gadwall, North Cave
 
Gannet collecting nesting material at Bempton 

Wednesday was altogether calmer (and genuinely warm and sunny), which was spent surveying on the opposite bank of the Humber, at Paull / Saltend and Newton Garth. Highlights here included fly-through Ring Ouzel, Yellow Wagtail (both firsts for the year for me) and Swallows, while a stop-off at North Cave Wetlands on the way home included Little Ringed Plovers, more Willow Warblers, Common Scoter, and multitudes of Sand Martins attending the nesting colony.
Still plenty of Avocets on the river 

Yesterday I finally got some coastal birding in, meeting Toby for a, er, Zeiss meeting over at Flamborough and Bempton (all the most productive meetings take hours strolling coastal clifftops, as you know). It was fairly quiet, but we eked out a nice selection of migrants, including Brambling, Yellow Wagtail, Common Whitethroat, Swallows, Willow Warblers and more (and had a very pleasant time too).
That's me done for a while, as Scotland beckons, for our second School of Birding of 2026. More to come from there anon.
Black-tailed Godwits on the Humber

Friday, March 27, 2026

Last Exit to Berlin

A few last bits and pieces from our time in Berlin. Places are now available for our March '27 tours - see here for more (mine begins on 8th).  
White-tailed Eagle (above), a nice soupy European Robin (below)
Nuthatch (above), Hawfinch (below)
White-fronted Geese (above), Red Squirrel (below)
Short-toed (and long-billed) Treecreeper

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Berdliners

Mitch, Rich and I birding Tempelhof 

A little touristy post before the last birdy one from Berlin (mostly from last weekend)....
Berlin birder-friend drinks in Kreuzburg
My group on Peacock Island (just after a close-up Black Woodpecker session)
I headed out for runs at the first opportunities, which were last Saturday and Sunday, both in / around Tiergarten, both great, both including Goshawks, Middle Spotted Woodpeckers, Hawfinches and more; the former was especially memorable for the timely, coincidental closure of the Straße des 17. Juni - meaning my 8km run was a weirdly peaceful, slightly surreal sightseeing adventure....
...when I also bumped into Rich's group -
birding with Mitch, north of the City

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Woodpeckers of Berlin

Woodpeckers were a ubiquitous presence while in Berlin, with the abundance of the commoner species particularly striking; Great Spots are everywhere, Middle Spots well distributed, and Green well scattered, while Black was happily wonderfully accessible (see last post), and Lesser Spotted - while very elusive - completed a five 'pecker set on our recon of Peacock Island.
Middle spotted (above), Black (below)
Lesser Spotted (above), Great Spotted and Green (below)