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 1, 2022

Fly Flatts, photos through the fog a.m./ a busy wader afternoon.

                                                          Up to 6 Dunlin present



                                           More Common Sandpiper arriving
                                                   Usual Ringed Plover





                                                              Just a single male  Wheatear

                                              Plenty Swallows around now








                             DJS's Whimbrel still held down by fog this morning at C.E.D.

                                                      Taken through the fog


                                                       New life for Fly Flatts, Lapwing chick

Dense fog on the tops this morning with just enough visibility to check the shoreline but no view of the water. A very light SW>2 at 6 degrees with light drizzle.By mid afternoon the fog had cleared leaving dark and cloudy skies.
                          A good start to the morning with a stop off at Cold Edge Dams to find DJS's Whimbrel still present held down by the fog but reported to have left late morning >N.
                        Fly Flatts was enveloped in dense fog with no visibility over the water but enough to check the shoreline for waders.
A very frustrating morning with plenty small wader activity flitting around the fringes of the water and then disappearing in the fog. 
                          A return visit mid afternoon found it alive with Dunlin and Common Sandpiper plus the usual Ringed Plovers and Redshank whilst 3 Snipe were present, one taking food into the reed bed.
Swallows were a regular sighting whilst there are now 2 pair of Greylags with young as well as several Canada goslings. A noisy Lapwing alerted me to the presence of 2 chicks looking very vulnerable.

Fly Flatts
6 Dunlin
8 Common Sandpiper
2 Redshank
3 Snipe
2 Ringed Plover
1 m Wheatear
1 Oystercatcher
1 Grey Wagtail
1 Pied Wagtail
14 Swallow
2 m Reed Bunting
2 Lapwing chicks
several Greylag and Canada Goslings
2 Kestrel
+ usual sp.
BS