Showing posts with label Delicate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Delicate. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 October 2018

Cornwall - 18th-24th October

Sarah, Tobias and I had a few days booked at our cottage between St.Ives and Zennor and with the Grey Catbird, first found on 15th October, still present come 18th I was anxious to get on the road to try and see the bird. Sarah was heading down at around 11:00 with Tobias but I couldn't wait that long and so the alarm went off at 03:30 and I was on the road by 04:00. By 08:15 I was arriving at the site of the Grey Catbird at Treeve Moor, Trevescan, Lands End. I joined the small gathered crowd on the carpark site of the small area of Bramble and Gorse scrub where the Catbird had set up home and waited. Before long, it was evident that the birders on the opposite side of the scrub were watching the bird and so I wandered around to the north side of Treeve House. After around 30 minutes the Grey Catbird appeared low down in a willow and I had brief but fairly good views of this stunning little bird. Over the next couple of hours I obtained further fairly fleeting views but rather poor photographs. At 12:30 I decided to head off and birded at Porthgwarra until around 15:00, it was fairly quiet but I did see two Yellow-browed Warbler, a Black Redstart and four Chiffchaff. It was time to head to Penzance and get some supplies for the weekend but I just had time to stop for the three Ring-necked Duck at Drift Reservoir, they showed very distantly at the far end of the water and I didn't have time to wander any closer. It was time to head off to get some supplies and meet Sarah and Tobias at the cottage.

On 19th, Sarah was feeling a bit under the weather and so I headed out with Tobias to give her some peace and quiet. We headed to Paradise Park and then Tobias decided he wanted to see the Catbird so I took him to Treeve Moor where he got brief views as the bird perched on top of Brambles, but he was more interested in playing with my tripod and looking at the cows. Still. there cant be many five year olds with Grey Catbird on their British list.

On 20th I birded Cot Valley but saw relatively little, a Yellow-browed Warbler showed fairly well and there were four Chiffchaff and two Blackcap but little else. I then headed to Carn Gloose, just south of Cape Cornwall where four Vagrant Emperor had recently been report but I failed to see any but did see a Red-veined Darter, female Merlin and a heard only Yellow-browed Warbler. The afternoon was spent doing family things in St. Ives.

On 21st I decided to head back to the Grey Catbird site but as I left home the fog was so thick it was difficult to see the road in front of me. Arriving at the Grey Catbird site the fog hung heavy and as my main reason to return was to get some better photographs I decided to head to Lands End for some general birding. I parked in the main car park and wandered through the willows, there were six Chiffchaff, two Reed Bunting and then a semi-familiar call, a Common Rosefinch which flew in and landed in the willows but I had relatively brief views in the fog. I wandered further around the willows and by 09:30 the fog had cleared and I headed back to the Catbird site and the area to the north of Treeve House. I spent the next three hours here and after some brief views and then prolonged but distant views as it showed in the open at the bottom of the carpark the Grey Catbird made a direct flight for my position and pitched in the Brambles no more than 10m away. Over the next hour or so, the bird showed exceptionally well, on and off, appearing on the Brambles and atop an Elder bush and then it spent at least five minutes on a moss covered Elder branch scratching and surveying the scene which is presumably unlike where it really should be now. The views were fantastic and I obtained the shots I wanted, the following all being taken on my Olympus OMD EM-1 Mark II with a 300mm lens and 1.4 converter. I even managed a little bit of video. Also here, a Short-eared Owl perched in the Gorse on Treeve Moor and gave good views.

On 22nd and 23rd I decided to relax with Sarah and Tobias and on 24th we packed up and headed to our cottage in the Cotswolds. I stopped for 30 minutes at Hayle Estuary where the highlight was a Great Egret on Ryan's Field. Otherwise there were good numbers of Wigeon, Teal, Lapwing, Curlew and Redshank and huge numbers of gulls but not a lot else. I decided it was time to head off and get to the Cotswolds before I ended up stuck in rush hour traffic on the M5.

Previous British records of Grey Catbird are as follows:

  • 1975 Jersey - Mid-October when trapped and kept in captivity until December.
  • 1986 Cape Clear, County Cork - 4th November only.
  • 2001 South Stack, Anglesey - 4th - 6th October.

Grey Catbird - Treeve Moor, Trevescan, Lands End, Cornwall

Grey Catbird - Treeve Moor, Trevescan, Lands End, Cornwall

Grey Catbird - Treeve Moor, Trevescan, Lands End, Cornwall

Grey Catbird - Treeve Moor, Trevescan, Lands End, Cornwall

Grey Catbird - Treeve Moor, Trevescan, Lands End, Cornwall

Great Egret - Ryan's Field, Hayle Estuary, Cornwall

Red-veined Darter - Carn Gloose, St. Just, Cornwall

I ran a moth trap at the cottage every night but after the nights of 18th and 19th the winds picked up and the temperatures dropped and my catch declined to near zero. On the 18th and 19th the highlights were Pale-lemon Sallow (my first ever), Scarce Bordered Straw, Vestal, Pearly Underwing and Dark Sword-grass.

Pale-lemon Sallow - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Scarce Bordered Straw - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Delicate - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Feathered Ranunculus - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Autumnal Rustic - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Green-brindled Crescent - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Red-line Quaker - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Dark Sword-grass - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Lunar Underwing - Trowan, St. Ives, Cornwall

Wednesday, 23 August 2017

Cornwall - 23rd to 30th August

We had a week booked at our cottage in Cornwall, four nights of which were to be camping in the garden as we had family staying in the house. The weather for much of the week was hot, sunny, still and generally glorious, great for camping and the beach but not so good for birding - and in particular seawatching.

On 25th I was up early and went to Pendeen for a brief seawatch and then on to Kendijack. At Pendeen the sea was like a millpond and I saw relatively little a single Sooty Shearwater and a Balearic Shearwater plus 1000's of Manx Shearwater moving west. At Kenidjack the highlights were three Tree Pipit moving west, Blackcap, Whitethroat, 12 Chiffchaff, a single Common Sandpiper and a Greenshank over. The resident pair of Chough put on a good show at the seaward end of the valley.


Chough - Kenidjack


Chough - Kenidjack

Sleeping in the garden in a tent overnight was fantastic, not a breath of wind and lovely mild evenings. During the four nights we had Barn Owl over the cottage and Little Owl and Tawny Owl calling a little more distantly plus we heard Curlew, Whimbrel and Dunlin during the night.

On 28th I walked out from the cottage and west along the coast path, it was absolutely still and I didn't see many birds. Highlights being thrree Yellow Wagtail and two Tree Pipit plus a couple of family parties of Stonechat. Offshore there were large numbers of Manx Shearwater many becalmed and loafing around in large rafts. There were around 25 Common Dolphin (including at least five calf) and two Bottled-nosed Dolphin offshore while an lovely female Adder was new for the patch.

View from Pen Enys Point west towards Carn Naun Point. This is the nearest stretch of coast to our cottage

Stonechat (juvenile male) - Pen Enys Point

The parasol mushroom Macrolepiota procera - Pen Enys Point

Speckeld Wood - Trowan

Common Dolphin off Trowan

Common Dolphin off Trowan

On 29th the forecast was for a force 4-5 north-west wind and so I headed for Pendeen and spent the morning seawatching. It was not as busy as I had hoped but 18 Sooty Shearwater, five Balearic Shearwater, one Storm-petrel, one Arctic Skua and a Bonxie plus a constant stream of Manx Shearwater made the morning enjoyable.

I ran the moth trap at the cottage on four nights but it was fairly slow going. Highlights were Frosted Orange, Small Wainscot and up to six Delicate, a species often thought of as a migrant but it certainly breeds around Trowan. A list of species recorded is provided below.

Frosted Orange - Trowan

Frosted Orange - Trowan

Delicate - Trowan

Small Wainscot - Trowan

Rosy Rustic - Trowan

Macro-moths
Angle Shades
Brimstone Moth
Burnished Brass
Common Carpet
Common Rustic agg.
Common Wave
Dark Arches
Delicate
Double-striped Pug
Early Thorn
Flame Shoulder
Flounced Rustic
Frosted Orange
Garden Carpet
Green Carpet
Hedge Rustic
Knot Grass
Large Yellow Underwing
Lime-speck Pug
Lychnis
Mullein Wave
Orange Swift
Peach Blossom
Pinion-streaked Snout
Poplar Hawk-moth
Purple Bar
Rosy Rustic
Ruby Tiger
Setaceous Hebrew Character
Sharp-angled Peacock
Shuttle-shaped Dart
Small Square-spot
Small Wainscot
Snout
Spectacle
Square-spot Rustic
Straw Dot

Micro-moths
Acleris comariana
Acleris variegana
Agapeta hamana
Agriphila straminella
Agriphila tristella
Agrotis segetum
Celypha lacunana
Elophila nymphaeata
Epiphyas postvittana
Evergestis forficalis
Lobesia littoralis
Nomophila noctuella
Udea ferrugalis