The Safari was very kindly taken up to Leighton Moss by CR for our first day out after jour recent surgery.
Our first stop was at Tim Jackson hide where a noisy pair of Oystercatchers were on and off the Sand Martin nest bank/box, they must have had a youngster somewhere but it was out of sight from our vantage point. The obligatory check for Red Deer under the trees to the right was negative - again! A family of Mute Swans cruised around the back of the pool but there wasn't really enough going on to keep us interested for long. having seen all that was on offer we soon moved round the corner to Grisedale Hide. Here a Heron and a Great White Egret were having a preen-off in the large tree across the pool, if you look closely thesere's a Cormorant up there too.
While continuing to scan for raptors and check if any more Fallow Deer had emerged from behind the aforementioned tree we ddi get a big brown bird in flight circling not too high over the reedbeds in the middle distance - not a raptor but a very welcome Bittern...#154. Not the best pic- we should have upped the shutter speed a bit...but when it all happens in a moment we'd didn't get a chance to think to do that before it had descending into the reeds never to be seen again.
With no Marsh Harrier activity this morning - where were they all? - we trundled off back down the path to Lillian's Hide. From there we saw numerous Coots and a Great Crested Grebe with an almost independent youngster doing its own thing and another Heron or two. So far today Herons were easily out numbering egrets. A few Swifts scythed through the air above the pool but nothing like the numbers we've seen in the past. Are we going to be able to reverse this dramatic loss of wildlife or are we just going to document its inexorable decline to almost nothing, hopefully not the latter but if it's not to be that then a lot of people have got to do make serious changes starting with governments doining joined-up thinking across all departments and policies to include nature in their thinking....and more impotantly DOING.
One species that is sort of thriving and making a comeback from being extirpated from the British Isles is the Osprey, and we saw one briefly from the Causway Hide while chowing down on our pies and butties. From tentative nesting attempts in the 1950's and then protection in the late 50's followed by more recent re-introduction schemes there are now maybe 300 pairs and a good number of non-breeding individuals around the country. 300 pairs might sound quite a lot but there's more people than that in our street!
With butties munched it was time to take the path down to Lower Hide, all quiet along there now that putting seed down has been discouraged. The only thing of note we saw was a juvenile Cetti's Warbler skulking along the pathside ditch. In the hide it was good to catch up with KL and his mates and while chatting we spotted more deer on the far hillside, not more Fallow Deer but a pair of Roe Deer in the field to the left of where the Fallow Deer had been, they'd moved on by the time we'd got down here. Once again too far away for a sensible photographer but you get the gist and it's always great to see them no matter how far away.
No more Ospreys turned up and the only Marsh Harrier was very distant and not very active on the far side. A prominent wake disappearing behind a reedy island had us going, was this to be our first Otter of the year...no - a Cormorant appeared at the other end of the island a minute or so later. The best of the rest was a female Emperor dragonfly ovipositing among the Water Horsetails in front of us but although we had good views through the bins she was too obscured by intervening vegetation for a decent pic.
Heading back to the car we'd not gone far when we saw a group off photographers pointing their lenses at something close by in the bushes. It turned out to be a trio of juvenile Cetti's Warblers waiting patiently for the/an adult to come back with a beak full of delicious grub(s). One of them was probably the one we'd seen earlier as they weren't far from where we'd seen that one. Getting a pic through the jungle was far from easy, the could have done the decent thing and sat a foot or so higher where the vegetation was much thinner.You might ask if we didn't bother with the ovipositing Emperor why did we bother to get a pic of these? Well you do see Emprerors egg-laying fairly often if your out n about along the water's edge but a trio of Cetti's fledglings is a whole differrent ball gane - a once in a lifetime event!
Our next stop was the Allen Pool out on the saltmarsh but it was deserted apart from looking far left against the light. So straight to the Eric Morecambe Hide it was. KL had told us where he'd seen the Wood Sandpiper, a good bird for us it's a feair few years since we've seen one. It had moved since he was last in the hide but it didn't take us long to find it although it was now quite a bit further away than he'd seen it. A good one for the Challenge, a 'Bonus Bird' taking us to 155
For several minutes it worked its way back and forth along that far bank.Once it had flown off we turned our attention back to the other side of the hide where a couple of well grown Avocet chicks were swidhing their growing bills through the shallow water. On the loppy exposed mud a flock of Lapwings loafed about, one got hungry and went to get a snack.A young Pied Wagtail was close by scampering about picking off hatching flies.An adult Avocet flew in and landed among the Lapwings and showed the young Avocets how to use their bill once it had grown to its full length.Guess who blew the highlights - is it really the cardinal sin of photography? Darn not having time enough to check and change those settings!for much of the afternoon birds had been walking round a bit of wood stuck in the mud close to where they were feeding. When a Lapwing walked very close to it we saw there was an eggshell caught on it. Looks like either an Avocet's or Black Headed Gull's and if you look at the full size image you'll see a hole in it which may be from predation or it didn't hatch and got damaged floating into the stick.
Meanwhile a Little Egret flew past prompting a check of the area for any more but we couldn't see any 'new' ones so the day ended with a narrow but very welcome victory for Herons 11-10.Back on the mud more lapwings were pulling out worms, through the bins it appeared there were two or maybe even three species involved - how the Lapwings saw them is another matter, they can't have been deep cos a Lapwing's beak isn't very long but when we scrutinised a particular Lapwing until it caught one we couldn't see anything on the surface that would suggest a worm was present, the Lapwings must be able to detail down to almost individual grains of mud moving 'in the wrong direction'. They were almost 100% successful, rarely bending down for a peck without coming up with a worm.That one with the wind-blown curly tuft is my favourite shot of the day
We finished the day with a fly-by Black Headed GullA reflective OystercatcherAnd a gaggle of AvocetsIt was a grand day out on safari which on the face of it appeared to be a quiet day but then looking back you can't sniff at Bittern, Osprey, Marsh Harrier, 2 species of deer, egg laying dragonfly, Cetti chicks, Avocets and much much more. Add in the fresh air, craic and banter and you've got the makings of a proper good day out on safari. Big thanks to CR for sterling work behind the steering wheel too.
Where to next? We're out on safari again tomorrow, somewhere we don't visit perhaps as often as we should.
In the meantime let us know who's the not so early bird catching all the worms in your outback.
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