6.0°C > 9.0°C: Excellent sunrise. Patchy cloud thereafter. Moderate / fresh SSE wind . Very good visibility.
Sunrise: 07:11 GMT
* = a photo today
Priorslee Lake: 06:15 - 09:50
(14th visit of the year)
Notes:
- A single immature Mute Swan again seen in flight passing from W to E. The adults are amazingly alert. They seemed to be busy at the nest site. I noted the immature still some distance away in binoculars and the adult were instantly both in the water with wings arched.
- A single Lapwing flolloped over
- The only Grey Heron I noted was a bird flying over the fields to the E - it may just have flown from the lake but it looked to be more interested in the pond located in the small copse there.
- *In addition to the fly-over Siskins several birds were giving their wheezy song from trees near the Teece Drive gate.
- A single Reed Buntings left the W end reeds. Two others heard in song.
Birds noted flying over / near here: low numbers of everything:
- 6 Canada Geese: two pairs outbound; one pair inbound.
- 1 Greylag Goose: single outbound
- *1 immature Mute Swan again
- 1 Feral Pigeon
- 47 Wood Pigeons
- 1 Lapwing
- 9 Herring Gulls
- 26 Lesser Black-backed Gulls
- 1 Grey Heron
- 1 Common Buzzard
- c.300 Jackdaws
- 36 Rooks
- 2 Siskins
Counts from the water:
- 2 Canada Geese: arrived and departed
- 2 Mute Swans
- 11 (7♂) Mallard; 4 (3♂) flew off
- 5 (3♂) Tufted Duck
- 10 Moorhens
- 34 Coots
- 3 Great Crested Grebes
- c.350 Black-headed Gulls
- *4 Herring Gulls: including first, second and third winter birds. all briefly
- 2 Lesser Black-backed Gull, briefly together
- *2 Cormorants: arrived separately
My 2021 bird species list for here moves on to 62 with the Lapwing sighting.
On / around the street lights pre-dawn:
- a very plain-looking micro moth flew off before I could get a photo to hope for an identification.
Also noted:
- 1 Grey Squirrel
The first hint that there might be a good sunrise this morning. This at 06:30. Hand-held at about half a second.
Sunrise: 07:11 GMT
* = a photo today
Priorslee Lake: 06:15 - 09:50
(14th visit of the year)
Notes:
- A single immature Mute Swan again seen in flight passing from W to E. The adults are amazingly alert. They seemed to be busy at the nest site. I noted the immature still some distance away in binoculars and the adult were instantly both in the water with wings arched.
- A single Lapwing flolloped over
- The only Grey Heron I noted was a bird flying over the fields to the E - it may just have flown from the lake but it looked to be more interested in the pond located in the small copse there.
- *In addition to the fly-over Siskins several birds were giving their wheezy song from trees near the Teece Drive gate.
- A single Reed Buntings left the W end reeds. Two others heard in song.
Birds noted flying over / near here: low numbers of everything:
- 6 Canada Geese: two pairs outbound; one pair inbound.
- 1 Greylag Goose: single outbound
- *1 immature Mute Swan again
- 1 Feral Pigeon
- 47 Wood Pigeons
- 1 Lapwing
- 9 Herring Gulls
- 26 Lesser Black-backed Gulls
- 1 Grey Heron
- 1 Common Buzzard
- c.300 Jackdaws
- 36 Rooks
- 2 Siskins
Counts from the water:
- 2 Canada Geese: arrived and departed
- 2 Mute Swans
- 11 (7♂) Mallard; 4 (3♂) flew off
- 5 (3♂) Tufted Duck
- 10 Moorhens
- 34 Coots
- 3 Great Crested Grebes
- c.350 Black-headed Gulls
- *4 Herring Gulls: including first, second and third winter birds. all briefly
- 2 Lesser Black-backed Gull, briefly together
- *2 Cormorants: arrived separately
My 2021 bird species list for here moves on to 62 with the Lapwing sighting.
On / around the street lights pre-dawn:
- a very plain-looking micro moth flew off before I could get a photo to hope for an identification.
Also noted:
- 1 Grey Squirrel
The first hint that there might be a good sunrise this morning. This at 06:30. Hand-held at about half a second.
Progressing nicely. Red sky in the morning portend wind and rain. Just wind today.
A couple of close-ups of part of the sunrise. Number one ...
.. and number two.
A couple of very strangely lit clouds. Number one ....
... and number two. Hanging like a curtain suggests this was possibly precipitation that was evaporating before it came near the ground.
Before I start with today's gull here is an update on my 'gull puzzle' from Sunday. I am again indebted to Tom Lowe for his identification of this bird as an immature Great Black-backed Gull. The rather indistinct tail band is a feature of that species and I should have twigged that at the time. I took a number of photos and selected what I thought 'the best'. In the light of Tom's ID I went back to some of the others ....
I have enlarged this more distant shot which shows other supporting feature is a large all-black bill, the way the head seems to lack any crown as it slopes to the bill as well as the lack of head-streaking. This latter feature is less distinctive as all immature gulls moult out of winter plumage.
A side-on view of the same bird. While the head shows no sign of acquiring the breeding 'black head' the bill is now all red-toned having lost the black mark of winter.
A second-winter Herring Gull. This bird is moulting in to second-summer plumage and has, like many of the large gulls, lost the head-streaking it showed during the winter.
An upper wing view of an adult winter Black-headed Gull. I looked hard at the tail tip: was there some remnant black there? I concluded not and that it was merely shadow.
This seems to be a first-winter Herring Gull showing off its tail-band. The inner primaries are not significantly pale and that suggests this might be a Yellow-legged Gull but the upper-tail looks too well-marked for that species.
The underside of what I think is a different first-winter Herring Gull. The low light on the underside of this bird really shows the markings well. Normally a bird this well-marked would be a Lesser Black-back.
It's a tiring life.
A third-winter Herring Gull unusually with an all-white tail - there would normally be some dusky remnants of the tail-band shown by younger birds.
A view of a swimming Cormorant showing the green-blue eye. This more-or-less adult is showing only the merest hint of the white head-plumes acquired in the breeding season.
A smart male Pied Wagtail was on the dam-top.
A male Greenfinch 'giving it some welly'. Not the best angle to see the plumage features but I knew if I moved the bird would fly.
I had to make do with this non-singing male. These are rather handsome birds, the black around the eye making them look rather fierce.
Behaviour I cannot recall seeing before. This male Siskin seems to be feeding on the emerging Willow catkins (the 'pussy willow' seen in some species of willow)
(Ed Wilson)
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On this day
2020
Priorslee Lake
Today's Sightings Here
2019
Priorslee Lake
Today's Sightings Here
2016
Priorslee Lake
Today's Sightings Here
2015
Priorslee Lake
Today's Sightings Here
2014
Priorslee Lake
5 Cormorants
3 Grey Herons
8 Pochard
8 Tufted Duck
1 Water Rail
1 Kingfisher
6 Redwings
391 Jackdaws
217 Rooks
(Ed Wilson)
The Flash
201 Tufted Ducks
2 Goosanders
(Ed Wilson)
Trench Lock Pool
4 Great Crested Grebes
(Ed Wilson)
Hortonwood
21 Redwings
(Dave Tromans)
2013
Priorslee Lake
Glaucous Gull
(Observer Unknown)
The Flash
Drake Scaup
(Richard Vernon)
2012
Priorslee Lake
1 Glaucous Gull
1 Caspian Gull
1 Yellow-legged Gull
(Observer Unknown)
2010
Priorslee Lake
2 Wigeon
55 Pochard
104 Tufted Duck
1 Common Gull
2 Ravens
22 Linnets
(Ed Wilson)
2009
Priorslee Lake
Iceland Gull
200 Black-headed Gulls
400 Lesser Black-backed Gulls
20 Herring Gulls
1 Yellow-legged Gull
Glaucous Gull
(Ed Wilson, Martin Adlam)
2008
Priorslee Lake
Iceland Gull
(Pete Nickless)
2007
Priorslee Lake
1 Little Grebe
3 Cormorant
5 Pochard
9 Tufted Duck
2 Kestrel
556 Wood Pigeon
27 Robin
23 Blackbird
1 Fieldfare
14 Redwing
47 Magpie
100 Jackdaw
96 Rook
16 Greenfinch
3 Reed Bunting
(Ed Wilson)
2006
Priorslee Lake
2 Little Grebes
6 Great Crested Grebes
1 Heron
2 Cormorants
9 Pochard
36 Tufted Ducks
3 Water Rails
c.420 Wood Pigeon
c.60 Starling
29 Pied Wagtails
23 Blackbirds
6 Greenfinches
17 Siskins
1 Redpoll
6 Reed Buntings
(Ed Wilson)