Category Archives: Birds

Inelegant in Flight (Muscovy)

Yesterday’s sun was a blip. Overcast once again today, and the pond is full to the brim.

No Fishing sign in flooded pond at Falmer

The main sequence is the Muscovy drake, coming in to land having flown the length of the pond. He had spotted one of the locals who arrive regularly to feed the ducks in the morning and was anxious to make sure he didn’t miss out on any grub. Muscovy ducks are surprisingly good in the air (flight seems a near impossible feat when you watch them waddle on the ground), but they are a touch inelegant, especially when they realize it’s time to touch down again. These are four consecutive shots taken over around half a second.

Muscovy duck (male/drake) in flight

Muscovy duck (male/drake) in flight

Muscovy duck (male/drake) in flight

Muscovy duck (male/drake) in flight

Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Also posted in water birds Tagged |

Kestrel Sequence at Sheepcote Valley

I don’t think it rained today. Not a drop, which makes it something of a red letter day in itself. It also meant that it was time to get started on some overdue jobs around the place. When I’m outside I keep an eye on what’s around and there was some good sightings, including my first butterfly of the year (probably a red admiral, though the sighting was all too brief).

I was up a ladder repairing some guttering when a buzzard (with accompanying escort of herring gulls) flew overhead; and later while I was shifting some garden rubbish a sparrowhawk flew low across the garden scattering pigeons in its path. I did get a chance to use the camera though. I stopped off at Sheepcote Valley on the way back from my first trip to the local dump. A small herd of sheep were grazing the scrub.

Sheep in Sheepcote Valley

A kestrel was out hunting. It was scouting along a ridge line and I watched it for 10 minutes or so before it headed off into the distance

Kestrel over Sheepcote Valley

Kestrel over Sheepcote Valley

Kestrel over Sheepcote Valley

Kestrel over Sheepcote Valley

Kestrel over Sheepcote Valley

We’ve had a brief glimpse of Pretty in the garden tonight, but she was more interested in fox business and stayed at the rear of the garden listening intently to another fox calling from one of the neighbouring gardens. She’ll probably turn up again later. She usually does.

One minor tweak to the blog. I’ve added an email subscription as a means of getting alerts when new posts are made. The emails are sent as plain text as I still have something of an aversion to html emails.

Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Also posted in Bird of Prey Tagged , , |

Rottingdean Beach After the Storms

With a lull between the almost constant storms, I headed down to Rottingdean beach this afternoon which threw up a couple of surprises. The tide was out, but the winds were still strong and in the distance the Brighton Marina was being battered by large waves.

Brighton Marina

The lower parts of the Undercliff walk were strewn with shingle blown up from the beach, but the most obvious sign of what had been going on were several large boulders scattered on the beach itself.

Palm Oil lump

At first glance I assumed this was a part of the cliff that had come away, but its location – and the absence of any signs of a cliff collapse – made me investigate further. On closer examination I found the ‘chalk’ was waxy and soft. It could be scraped with a stick, a bit like soft candle wax.

Sample of washed-up Palm Oil

It is in fact a lump of palm oil, most likely discarded by a ship and washed in by the storms. It’s somewhat unpleasant stuff, and while not toxic to humans it can be poisonous to dogs. As well as several large boulder-sized lumps like this, there were scatterings of smaller pieces across the beach.

Nearby, also a victim of the storm, was a razorbill. This is a seabird I’ve not seen before, and it’s a shame that my first sight of one is a washed-up victim of our dreadful weather.

body of a razorbill

On a more positive note, the local fulmars seem to be thriving. I wouldn’t expect anything else from birds acclimatized to the north Atlantic and whose family include the Storm Petrel as a close relative.

Fulmars

Fulmars

Fulmars

Further out, taking advantage of low tide, a number of oystercatchers were skimming along the coastline in search of good feeding grounds while great black backed gulls surveyed the area from above.

Oystercatcher

Great black-backed gull

There have been cliff collapses further along the coast at Hastings, and Brighton beachfront was flooded last night; but overall the local coastline appears to have survived quite well. So far!

Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Also posted in coastal, Landscape, water birds, Weather Tagged , , , , , , |