I went to Par beach pool today with a new lens. It's one which I have been waiting a while for to come my way. The 200 F2 is world renowned as a sports lens but I have also wanted to try it on wildlife. I wasn't disappointed. In good light today, I used it at F2 (ie. aperture wide open at the maximum) ensuring fastest possible shutter speed and lowest depth of field. The first results are below and I am pleased. The main downside is the lack of reach though coupled to a 2x teleconverter, I'm not anticipating any real headaches. Shutter speed by the way, was 1/5000s !
Wednesday, 30 November 2011
Sunday, 20 November 2011
Gulls give above Par performance
Two Little Gulls have been present at Par Beach pool for several days. I managed to catch up with them today and also saw a very obliging adult Med Gull. All were seen at close quarters as they rested and preened on the grass in front of the car park.
Thursday, 17 November 2011
Common Crane reaches new heights
There are approximately 36 records of Common Crane in Cornwall up to 2010. This Autumn, Cornwall has hosted an unprecedented influx. The number of birds in 2011 is likely to equal or better the total records to date!
The first reported Common Crane seen in 2011 was a single bird flying south over Bosistow Lane and other sites around Land's End on 10th Nov. On the 12th Nov, an impressive flock of 24 flew over Winnard's Perch near the Bird of Prey Centre. All but one of these were adults. By dusk, they had settled in a stubble field at Trewince Farm, St Issey. The same flock was present all of the next day (Sunday 13th). This same flock was seen flying over St Kew Highway on the 15th in the morning and later in the afternoon at St Mabyn. The flock increased to "c27" at St. Mabyn on the 17th Nov. Adrian Langdon's excellent images can be seen here: > Adrian Langdon
On Monday 14th Nov, six Common Cranes were found at Trethvas Farm, Lizard (images below). Two more were seen at Madron but disappeared by 9.58am. Possibly the same two were seen later in the day flying over Troon, Camborne at 14.30. Meanwhile, the six adults at Trethvas Farm were still present on the 17th and appeared content feeding on vegetable matter on the corn-cobs. They were always wary and kept their distance. Sam William's photos from today in challenging conditions can also be found here Sam Williams
Thus the Cornwall total for 2011 so far is a maximum possible 37 birds, but definitly 32.
In context, in County Cork, Ireland, a flock of 19 Cranes are still to the west of Waterrock. There have also been seven birds south of Burgh Castle (Norfolk) in recent days and of course the resident 30 are present in the Horsey area of East Norfolk. Others have also been recorded in Devon, Hampshire, Suffolk and Dumfries & Galloway in the last couple days.
The origins of birds recorded in western Europe originate from breeding populations in Scandinavia and the Baltic countries. They winter in Spain and Portugal after resting up in large numbers in Germany and France.
Six adult Common Cranes were seen today at the Lizard. |
Monday, 7 November 2011
Desert Wheatear at Nanjizal
Jean Lawman found this adult male Desert Wheatear near the National Coastwatch station at Porthgwarra on Sunday afternoon, 6th November. It was seen briefly the following morning at the same location. Thankfully, it was relocated by Mark Wallis a mile further west at Nanjizal (100 yards from the Alder Flycatcher site).
This is the seventh record for mainland Cornwall, all of which have typically occurred late in the Autumn.
1984. Male. Porthgwarra. 17th-24th Nov.
1988. Female. Sennen Cove. 5th Nov.
1994. First winter female. Torpoint. 28th Nov - 16th Dec. This bird was then relocated at Gwithian from 21st Dec to 20th Mar 1995.
1997. Female. Loe Bar. 28th Nov - 3rd Dec.
1997. One at Hannafore, Looe 3rd-12th Dec.
2007. Female. Land's End. 17th Oct.
2011. Male. Porthgwarra. 6th Nov. Relocated during the next morning (7th) to Nanjizal.
This is the seventh record for mainland Cornwall, all of which have typically occurred late in the Autumn.
1984. Male. Porthgwarra. 17th-24th Nov.
1988. Female. Sennen Cove. 5th Nov.
1994. First winter female. Torpoint. 28th Nov - 16th Dec. This bird was then relocated at Gwithian from 21st Dec to 20th Mar 1995.
1997. Female. Loe Bar. 28th Nov - 3rd Dec.
1997. One at Hannafore, Looe 3rd-12th Dec.
2007. Female. Land's End. 17th Oct.
2011. Male. Porthgwarra. 6th Nov. Relocated during the next morning (7th) to Nanjizal.
Sunday, 6 November 2011
Meds and misses
The weekend has been a strange one. I have missed all the big shouts including a male Desert Wheatear at Porthgwarra today. I actually went to Pg; the only trouble was I didn't check the coastguard station area where a male has been present all afternoon. I also dipped on a Great White Egret, missed a Caspian Gull by an hour, failed to connect with the Rufous Turtle Dove and a Pallid Harrier. I took some shots of two first winter Med Gulls at Sennen though :-(
Wednesday, 2 November 2011
North American birds in Cornwall - Autumn 2011
The following is a report on all North American birds reported on mainland Cornwall this Autumn.
Summary:
In one of the most exciting periods of birding for many years, no less than thirteen species occurred. The jewel in the crown must surely be awarded to the first year Scarlet Tanager at St Levan, closely followed by the Greater Yellowlegs at Treraven and the first year female Bufflehead on the Lizard. Each followed the same pattern of an all too brief, two day stay. The supporting cast of numerous Pectoral Sandpipers and Buff-breasted Sandpipers will be remembered forever.
Weather:
Hurricane Katia was the main reason for the incredible run of rarities. Katia is a Greek name and means Pure. To a Cornish birder, this can be extended to Pure Delight as this is what Autumn 2011 was to most of us. Hurrican Katia has been written about extensively across the internet and more detail can be found HERE .
In summary, as a post tropical cyclone, Katia moved quickly from the Eastern USA seaboard, north towards Newfoundland and then across the Atlantic. It was then expected to start affecting the UK during September 11th with hurricane force wind speeds and possible hurricane force wind gusts. On September 9, in preparation for this both the Met Office and Met Airenann started to issue alerts and warnings for parts of the British Isles. They warned that parts of the British Isles were likely to experience gale-force and storm-force windspeeds during September 11th and 12th which could be strong enough to uproot trees. The maximum wind gust recorded in the United Kingdom at a non-mountain station on the day of landfall was 81 mph (130 km/h) at Capel Curig, Wales. From an analysis of the Cornish records, it is easy to see that Katia was responsible for the large number of waders that started to appear from the 12th September.
Species:
Bufflehead. The Waterings, Lizard. 26th-27th Oct. First Year Female. Also seen briefly on 29th Oct at Loe Pool. This is the first record for Cornwall and given its age, lack of leg-irons, plumage condition, location and time of year, its provenance would seem impeccable.
Buff-breasted Sandpiper. At least fifteen individuals, occurring in two defined "waves" across the county. The peak counts were a flock of five at Stithians Reservoir and conservatively, presumably the same flock, plus two more at Predannack Airfield (restricted military access) mid September. The record of surprise was one was one at Pendeen Lighthouse; whilst watching migrating seabirds, the Buff-breast was seen to fly around the rocks before flying north.
Baird's Sandpiper. One first year bird on Hayle Estuary. 30th Aug - 11th Sep.
Semipalmated Sandpiper. Drift Res. 12th - 17th Sep. Davidstow Airfield 2nd- 6th Oct. Both first year birds. A third individual was photographed (photo on Cornwall Birding Yahoo Group) at Crowdy Res but dates are to be submitted.
White-rumped Sandpiper. Devoran 17th - 18th Adult. Davidstow Airfield 18th-19th Adult. Polgigga, Lower Bosistow 23rd one, age unknown. Devoran images by Ilya Maclean here.
Pectoral Sandpiper. A conservative count suggests as many as 18 birds were involved. The first was at Hayle on the 4th Sep and last at Drift on 25th Oct. Highlights were the four birds photographed together at Drift Res in front of the hide and three together at Davidstow on 1st Oct.
Long-billed Dowitcher. Two birds appeared, both first winters. Stithians Res 14th - 28th Sep and Davidstow Airfield 7th-8th Oct. Both were photographed well.
Lesser Yellowlegs. Drift Res. 14th - 27th Sep and St Clement, Truro 21st Sep - 20th Oct. The latter afforded unbelievable views as it fed in the shallows at high tide, beside the village car park.
Greater Yellowlegs. Treraven Meadows 12th - 13th Adult. The second record for Cornwall though arguably now the first. The 1955 record of one at Upper Tamar Lakes was most likely seen on the north lake which politically sits inside Devon. Either way, this is a long-overdue vagrant and one that was on many "prediction lists".
Ring-billed Gull. St Johns Lake. 12th Sep 2nd year bird.
Bonaparte's Gull. Sennen Cove. 28th Oct - 1st Nov Adult resting on the beach and feeding during the day on the fields near the school.
Scarlet Tanager. St Levan. 20th-21st Oct. First year, probably female. This is the second record for mainland Cornwall and just the fifth for the UK. The previous record was 30 years ago at Nanquidno. Found by Dave Lewis on the 20th, him and Matt Southam observed it four times at close range as it fed on pear fruit in Grey Gables garden. Incredibly, just 25 or so birders saw it next day at 9.45am for just three minutes. That was the last good view of this stunning bird. (Of interest, another Scarlet Tanager appeared on St Mary's on the 22nd. It was initially thought to be the same bird. However, this was a first year male and comparison of photo's by Jane Turner strongly suggests that two birds were indeed involved. The St Levan bird was most likely a first year female).
(Though not part of this report, the Scillies also recorded some truly superb vagrants, including Black and White Warbler, Northern Waterthrush, Baltimore Oriole, Solitary Sandpiper, Upland Sandpiper, Least Sandpiper, White-rumped Sandpiper, Wilson's Snipe, Red-eyed Vireo and Blue-winged Teal plus several Buff-breasted Sandpipers and Pectoral Sandpipers!)
I like the name Katia.
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