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




Wednesday, June 10, 2020

A rainy day at Fly Flatts, (no public access)

                                            Common Sandpiper
                                  Ringed Plover with 1 of 2 chicks
                                     Ringed Plover chick
                           11 days old, another 2 weeks to fledging.

                                            Both chicks moving about the shoreline
                                                   Mum watching on
                                                as well as Dad
                        1 of 2 Common Sandpiper chicks

                  Motherly love, giving them a warm

                                    Herring gull, very few big gulls today
                                      Just a single Dunlin present.

A day of good conditions today with light rain throughout on a light SW>2 turning SE>3 by late pm with full cloud cover at 10 degrees. The rain has given the mud a good soaking bringing it back to life and watering the vegetation that is growing nicely in certain areas which attracts the waders.
                                                                     Hard to keep tracks on the chicks now with Lapwing, Ringed Plover and Common Sandpiper darting around the mud whilst the Redshanks have herded their young up into the fields. The 2 Ringed Plover chicks are amazing to watch at the speed they run about. One minute you are watching them at the south end of the water until they disappear only to  re appear way over at the north side a minute later.
                                                                   Plenty Swifts passing over all >S along with a few Swallows whilst a family party of 5 Raven were over the Nab.

NOTE.. Whilst checking the breeding situation around the shoreline and in the reservoir basin before the water is allowed to rise no active nests are approached and all photography is taken at great distance using a 840 mm to 1344 mm lens creating no disturbance to chicks or adults, as can be seen by the photos.

Fly Flatts
2 Ringed Plover + 2 chicks
4 Common Sandpiper + 2 chicks each
4 Oystercatchers, possible the 4 I saw >W over Bradshaw early a.m.
7 Curlew
5 Raven
sev Swifts...>S
2 Barnacle geese
+ usual sp.
BS