WEST YORKSHIRE BIRDING

BRIAN SUMNER.
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KEEPING BIRDING LOCAL.

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NOTE !!
No sightings of Roe Deer, Fox, Hare or Badger will be mentioned on this blog throughout the year and links will be removed from other blogs giving the whereabouts of these mammals due to the rising influx of poaching, long dogging and lamping by sick individuals.
BS




Wednesday, December 6, 2017

A check around and back to Leeshaw

Sorry its more gull talk but December is the gull watching season.
                                                          A very dark, grey and windy afternoon as I set out at 1445 hrs to do a second day gull check at Leeshaw reservoir.
On the way there Pit Lane pitches held around 100 small gulls along with c 200 Starling whilst Raggalds Flood had plenty water in but only 4 Black Headed  gulls and 2 Lapwing present.
                                                                 The Shay fields below Soil Hill held the local Lapwing flock of around 150 birds whilst the Golden Plover flock was still present showing around 30 Goldies but hard to view from the main road due to walls and hedges.
                                                                 Leeshaw reservoir was very black and very windy with a strong SW>6 gusting 7 and large black clouds rolling off the moor.
In contrast to yesterdays session things were poor with around 400 small gulls and c50 large gulls but all were sheltering up in the NW corner of the banking out of the wind and all facing away from me into the wind.  A few Herrings were present but nothing on the scale of last nights influx whilst amongst the Lesser Black Backed one showed the signs of Intermedius with a very dark mantle.
                                                          Other than gulls, a pair of Mallard and a pair of Teal were on the water along with 4 Canadas plus the usual 3 Cormorants, and in the air , 16 Lapwings flew over the far fields with 2 Golden Plover in amongst them.
Dark by 1530 hrs this evening as I left Leeshaw but only 15 days left to Winter Solstice, the shortest  day when we turn the corner and slowly make our way back to lighter evenings.
BS