Saturday 30 August 2014

Montagu's Harrier, Alkborough

I’m reposting this as the earlier one looks so bad, not sure what happened but I’m blaming Youtube!

A few more test shots with Canon S120

Ruff

Ruff Alkboro 30.08.14

Ruff Alkboro 30.08.14 (2)

Little EgretLittle Egret. Alkboro 28.08.14

A couple more of this weeks Pectoral SandpiperPec Sand Alkboro 26.08 (1)

Pec Sand Alkboro Flats 26.08 (4)

And Little GullsLittle Gull Alkboro 30.08.14 (2)

Little Gull Alkboro 30.08.14 (3)

Alkborough Great White surprise!

So after a productive week at Alkborough, (Pectoral Sandpiper, Temminck's Stint, Little Stint, Curlew Sandpiper and Tree Pipit) was it realistic to expect another new bird? On the way there at 7ish this morning Wayne predicted a Great White Egret as there seemed to be a few in the country so our usual policy came into play of going straight to the hillside to look over the reserve and see roughly where everything is and the first bird we see in front of the main hide is a stunning Great White Egret. Wayne frantically gets some record shots and we decide to shoot down to the hide to get closer views and predictably as we are driving down the hill the bird is flying high south! So we think roughly the bird was on site from 7-8 am. We decide to stay down in the main hide to look for the Pec which we didn't see but we were entertained with 5 Spoonbills, Hobby and Peregrine and a few Ruff and then at 12.20 Wayne thinks he got a glimpse of the Egret flying west up the Humber towards Trent Falls but as usual at Alkborough reeds get in the way and it doesn't reappear so off we trek down to the Trent bank and yes there it was on the rocks at Trent Falls with 2 Spoonbills, a Grey Heron and Little Egret. Again Wayne tries frantically to get more record shots when after 5 or so minutes it's off again this time along the Trent and back down in the flashes at Alkborough where it spent another couple of minutes before once again flying off high s/sw. Now unbeknown to us a Great White a Egret flew west past Far Ings at 10.55 which means potentially we had two separate birds or did our first bird do a big loop and come back to where it started - if we had some good images it may be possible to tell but judge for yourself.

Video at Trent Falls http://youtu.be/X1PiiwEjLbg


The two images below were taken on main lagoon at Alkborough, the one above at Trent Falls, are they the same bird?


Thursday 28 August 2014

Alkborough this evening

Pec Sand still around but distant, new waders included 4 Little Stint and Curlew Sandpiper. Also 3 Whinchat on the reserve - Wayne still testing his new camera set up and it seems to be excellent for videoing with hardly any light it's just a pity that YouTube compresses the file to the extent that the final quality is so bad. This video looks fantastic in its original state but terrible here ....

View video here http://youtu.be/f8iwk9LdGDY

Tuesday 26 August 2014

Pectoral Sandpiper at Alkborough Flats

How’s this for a bit of luck, Wayne’s new camera came this morning so with only an hour or so of daylight left this evening he decides to take it down to Alkborough for a quick test and the first bird he sees is a Pec Sand! The camera by the way is for digiscoping and is a Canon S120 attached to a Swarovski ATS80HD telescope.
Thursday morning update, Pec and Temmincks Stint both in front of hide!
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Saturday 23 August 2014

Birding at Alkborough Flats

Birding at Alkborough is not easy, as you can see from image below to get any idea of where birds are you have to bird at a distance (the flats are in the background) and then you have inquisitive visitors to contend with!


Thursday 21 August 2014

Juvenile Wheatear, Alkborough

So autumn is well underway and bringing with it a trickle of waders, over the past 10 or so days there has been plenty to see including 2 Whinchats, up to 12 Spoonbills, 48 roosting Little Egrets, Bittern, 4 Wood sandpipers, 8 Spotted Redshank, 20+ Ruff, 1000+Avocet, 500+ Black-tailed Godwits, juvenile Cuckoo, juvenile Peregrine, Hobby, 20+ Snipe, 6 Green Sandpipers, 11 Common Sandpipers, 2 Knot, 2 Whimbrel, 4 Greenshank, 25+ Redshank and 1 Temminck Stint. Also seen were 8 Noctule Bats and a Mink!
Wayne's patchwork challenge hit a rough patch in July with no new species added but a few added for this month. Oh and nearly forgot this very tame juv Wheatear which was outside the main hide last night.