Common Buzzard - Baltrasna, Ashbourne

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Buff-breasted sandpiper

I headed down to Kilcoole this morning hoping that the "buff-breasted yankee" was still knocking around.  It was, and it was very tame.  It was sat up on the shingle ridge right at the waters edge a couple hundred meters short of webbs field. 

It eventually moved up the shingle towards us and began feeding in the short grass just off the footpath, at this stage it was only about 25ft away. Its mustard legs were really striking at this range, as was the piercing very black eyes.  It preened, streched, looked around and generally didn't really care that there was numerous lenses and scopes pointed at it from practically point blank range...... why did I not bring a camera??

I eventually headed further south towards the buckthorn bushes in search of the lapland bunting thats been seen there recently.  Unfortunately time was against me and I didn't get to hang around long enough to get a sighting, those are the breaks..... but the trip really was all about the sandpiper and I had that for 30 minutes or more so I was going home happy regardless.

Out to sea there was plenty of gannett activity, numerous auks and a pair of red-throated divers passed heading south into the wind.

Landside there was the usual large flocks of goldfinches, plenty of swallows and house martins, quite a few wheatear, and a pair of stonechats.  Some dunlin were mixing with the turnstones at the waters edge and a single rock pipit was flushed on the way up to the buckthorn.

Webbs field held the usual numbers of ducks (mixed), cormorants, gulls and corvids.  A single pink-footed goose was there as were some mutes.  There were practically no "smalls" in the field, but I have it on good authority that there has been plenty of sparrowhawk and kestrel activity within the field lately and this seems to have scarred off most of the waders for now.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Port Oriel

A bright mild day seen me head for Clogher Head/Port Oriel this morning.  What a difference a day makes, same time yesterday I was out on a wet, windswept Bull Island.  The Bull threw up some curlew sandpipers and the blue winged teal which has returned for the 4th or 5th autumn/winter was as usual associating with the shovelers.  However the highlight was a fox out on the marsh slowly sneaking upon some roosting gulls at high tide.  The rain came, the car beckoned and I never got to see whether the fox had dinner!

Back to today, the port was busy enough with trawlers going in and out and that of course means Gulls.  Common, BH, GBB and herring gulls all on show.  The herring gulls lazily sunning themselves on the rocks below the upper car park.  The inner harbour had twenty guillemots, two razorbills and a lone cormorant on show. 


Above the harbour a noisy mixed group of about thirty common and arctic terns must surely be set for the off any day now, not to mention the three swallows that shared the air space with them.

Outside the walls of the harbour on the seaward side there were plenty more auks on show, including a flyby by five black guillemots.  A gannet was circling and diving a few hundred meters off shore and there was plenty of movement back and forth by cormorants, gulls and an occasional shag.  A grey seal was showing well near the rocks just below the harbour wall, keeping him company was seven GC grebes.

Moving up to the headland there was plenty of smalls on show, wren, robin, dunnock chaffinch, linnett, a single redpoll and a yellowhammer heard but not seen.  A sparrowhawk flushed some sparrows but it disappeared from view as quick as it appeared and I didn't see if its efforts were rewarded.

A grey wagtail was sat on a wall on the drive back down the hill to the village.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Broadmeadow

Took a trip out to Swords yesterday evening just as the tide was on the turn and on its way back in.  I spent a quite 90 minutes on my own, no other birders around and unusually for Swords hardly any walkers!

There were plenty of lapwing, sanderling and godwits (both) about, twenty odd oystercatchers and at least 12 grey herons tucked up as usual in the grass near the overpass. 

Plenty of redshank moving busily over the mudflats, and closer to shore a handful of turnstones moving up and down the shoreline.

The obligutory mix of gulls and of course the mute swans over the Donanbate side were also present.

mute swan, Swords


The highlight was a solitary greenshank, tucked up, head on shoulder trying its best to stay warm, it was suprisingly cold, the breeze had a real bite to it.  There was also a pair of grey plovers in amongst the dunlin.


Further out, a group of 15 GC grebes were keeping company with 3 goldeneye. 

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Gormanstown

County Meath has a very short coast line, only about 11km in total, so this afternoon I decided to take a trip over to Gormanstown, one of the very few decent spots to catch shore birds, gulls and terns in the county.

The usual mix of gulls, common, BH'd, GBB'd, LBB'd, and herring gulls formed large flocks which were spread out on the rocks to the right and front of the car park under the rail bridge and in the sea just in front of the car park.  The tide was in so the flocks on the water were really close, I set the scope up and started to scan.  Sure enough mixed in amongst all those gulls were a small group of eight kittiwakes and two little gulls.

There were quite a few common terns doing their usual acrobatics, at least three sandwich terns and two arctic terns mixed in with the flock.

Further out to sea I spotted six razorbills, four guillemots an occasional gannet and a dozen or so cormorants passing across the horizon.  Resting up on the surface of the sea much further out (scope up to 60x mag)  was small groups of RB mergansers and great crested grebes.

Along the shore little groups of sanderling, dunlin, ringed plover and couple of black tailed godwits kept a solitary redshank company.  When I turned my attention to the rockier section of the beach near the bluff over to the right my eye caught the busy movements of a small flock (six to eight) turnstones.

After a brief visit to the front seat of the car to avoid a soaking from a shower which went from zero to torrent in about five seconds flat I finished up the visit by turning my attention to the trees and bushes which line the river along the road back out to the Balbriggan road.  A lone yellowhammer and a pair of collared doves were about all there was along the lane.

An hour well spent, Gormanstown is a really good spot for getting a good variety of species in, especially if time is of the essence.  From the car park you can set up the scope and have great views of the beach, the rocks out to sea, the bluff and the outlet without having to move.  I'd especially recommend a visit in the height of summer when on any given day it's possible to tick off five species of tern, all our summer gulls and usually something you weren't expecting.