I've been surrounded by them for what seems like many weeks now - from impressive influxes at various spots on the coast, to consistently high nocmig counts, to countless masses in the forests and slopes of the Highlands - and it's been a joy of course. With such a successful berry crop this autumn it's great to see it utilised as it should be, and the un-ed edges along the seawall were festooned with hungry, hungry thrushes for much of the day the in milky early winter sunshine.Thrushes are still very much on the move right now - masses piling through in the Highlands over the last few days, and I just had an after-dark run here in #Eyemouth on the Borders coast, and there's lots of Redwings arriving (in a blustery SW)....
— Mark the Birder (@markthebirder.bsky.social) November 24, 2024 at 8:38 PM
[image or embed]
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Humber Thrushes
I'm thinking we haven't seen enough Redwings on these pages of late (!), and so here's a few photos of them - and accompanying Fieldfares - from my surveying site at North Killingholme on the industrial south bank of the Humber.