WEST YORKSHIRE BIRDING

BRIAN SUMNER.
WELCOME TO ( WEST YORKSHIRE BIRDING )
KEEPING BIRDING LOCAL.

BLOG UPDATED DAILY AROUND 2000 hrs.

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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




Sunday, May 13, 2018

Dunlin Day. Fly Flatts a.m.

               16 Canada chicks on the water in 4 families
  Greylag holding on to 6 out of 7 chicks.
                                    Dunlins on the move

                                 3 present + 1 fly over




                                         Common Sandpiper.
  Comparison of bills. Above, Common Sandpiper
                                                Straight bill.
                              Dunlin with curved bill.

0700 hrs at Fly Flatts with some dark threatening clouds on a moderate SW>4 at 12 m.p.h. but dropping to SW>3 and 50 % cloud cover with sunshine mid way through the watch.
                                                                   Dunlin were the birds of the day with 3 present along with at least 9 Common Sandpiper and 3 Redshank all along the west bank with a single Dunlin fly over from the NW but lost in the sun. No sign of yesterdays Ringed Plover which looks to have moved straight through probably due to lack of shoreline.
                                                                        Several Herring gulls flew over > NE and mega high whilst a Kestrel hovered over the Nab.
Just a handful of Swallows >N with no Swifts and no Wheatear today.
                                                             A check on the Nolstar field produced 4 Golden Plover and 2 Curlew.

1500 hrs pm visit. Back to the hot sticky stuff with blue skies and sunshine whilst the wind had turned WSW>3.
                         Bird wise was very much the same as this mornings visit with the Dunlins still present but across on the far NE corner working their way along the muddy ridge above the water.
A single female Wheatear was on Robin rock whilst a Buzzard was very high and distant being mobbed with Curlew and Lapwings.
BS