Sociable lapwing, I almost ran over it but I did mange to get a picture.
Mark Rigby said
Sat Apr 24 9:35 AM, 2010
Best birds seen from a moving vehicle?
Ian Boote said
Sat Apr 24 12:56 AM, 2010
I work in an office with the river irwell 6 foot below the window, most days, and on one wet day 5 inches. The sand martins nest in the building walls and it great to see them flying into the nests. Occasionally we get a king fisher on the window sill. It sounds good but the river can HUMMMMMM at times. But that provides lots of flies for the martins. One worker once saw mink. We also see goosander and once a black swan. Keeps things interesting Cheers Ian
Andy Bissitt said
Fri Apr 23 9:19 PM, 2010
Just changing tack slightly. What about moving birds seen from a stationary building?
Can I chance my hand by claiming office window bird of the day for today - lesser spotted woodpecker.
The only slight downer is that I work a mile or so into Cheshire. Still it provided a bright moment in the midst of humdrum office life.
If there's any interest, please feel free to start an office window bird thread if we haven't already got one.
richard howells 2 said
Mon Apr 19 8:53 PM, 2010
As Air Traffic Controllers are in the news for stopping aircraft piling into volcanic ash, it reminded me of stopping aircraft piling into Eider ducklings. We used to stop Lightning aircraft taxiing along the parallel taxiway at RAF Leuchars in the 70s while female Eiders were shepherding their families across the taxiway and down to the River Eden.
Apologies for being a little off-topic, but Lightning pilots certainly got good views of Eiders while their steed was vibrating with under-utilised power!
richard howells 2 said
Mon Apr 19 8:34 PM, 2010
Bateleur on one of the tracks around Etosha in Namibia. Nearly ran the hire car off the road!
Black-footed Albatross, Pink-footed Shearwater, Fork-tailed Storm Petrel and 9 species of Pacific auks from a moving cruise ship.
Bananabill from the Whalsay ferry.
jason fisher said
Mon Apr 19 3:16 PM, 2010
bald eagles lots of them in florida sitting on top of telegraph poles.
white and brown pelecans fishing also same florida trip
and having to get off the coach we were on, to shoo a turkey vulture away from a roadkill armadillo so we could get the coach past on the way to nasa.
my first little owl and red kite were also seen from the car
Mark Rigby said
Mon Apr 19 12:41 PM, 2010
Had a pair of Wheatear from the cab of 0938 Man Picc-Alderley Edge sevice, in field between Wilmslow and Alderley Edge. A "from the cab " tick
Rob Thorpe said
Mon Mar 30 2:59 PM, 2009
I'll always remember, years ago when on holiday (my first time abroad) with my parents in Majorca, on the coach journey to the airport, seeing a pair of Red-footed Falcons sat on a wire over the road. Maybe not the rarest of birds, but it was always one of my favourite birds in my childhood birdbook...
Mark Jarrett said
Wed Mar 25 3:43 PM, 2009
Lammergeier has to be up there. Upper Hecho Valley, May 2008.
David Murphy said
Sun Mar 22 4:03 PM, 2009
Debs,
I drive from Rammy to Lancaster to work each day- and it's still there- I see it most evenings in a field on the right about 5 miles south of Forton service station.
David
James Minchin said
Fri Mar 20 3:55 PM, 2009
The best I've seen is a Golden Eagle in Scotland, the only one I've seen.
Pete Hines said
Fri Mar 20 11:50 AM, 2009
Houbara Bustard, whislt driving, twice in the last few days. Mind you I was in Houbara-ville, Fuerteventura
Mark Rigby said
Sun Mar 8 10:22 PM, 2009
King Eider seen from a moving car(just)
jason atkinson said
Sun Mar 1 12:51 PM, 2009
Adult Male Black-headed Bunting last year on Fetlar over a mile away from where it was found last spring, or a different bird ?
cheers jason
Joey Eccles said
Sun Mar 1 12:36 PM, 2009
Saw a black grouse in scotland fly over on an A road in highlands.
Pete Hines said
Sun Mar 1 9:36 AM, 2009
Chris Murphys' Harlequin Ducks in 1996 will take some beating. To quote from the 1996 BBRC report :
'Harlequin Duck Histrionicus histrionicus (7, 5, 2) Ayrshire Girvan, two first-summer females, 13th-27th April, photo. (C.J.Murphy et al.) (Brit. Birds 90: plate 163). An outrageous 'while-driving' find for the alert leader of Murphy's Wildlife Holidays. The first since 1991; the last male was in 1987 and the last adult male in 1965.'
Pete Welch said
Sun Mar 1 8:11 AM, 2009
Driving through the Rhino area at Knowsley Safari Park last year and took a shot of a "kestrel" being mobbed by jackdaws - only when I got home and blew the photo up did I realise it was a Hobby! I think it was probably nesting in woodland from the direction of travel.
Does it count as we were only doing about 10 miles per hour?!?
Mark Rigby said
Sat Feb 28 7:55 PM, 2009
Had Green Sandpiper from the 1310 Rawtenstall to Heywood train on the flooded field between the railway line and the River Irwell, just north of Burrs Country Park.
Debs Wallace said
Wed Feb 25 10:02 PM, 2009
Not sure how unusual this is, but I've never seen one before. Pure white pheasant (not close enough to see its eyes) seen in field off M6 when travelling back from the Lakes on Sunday.
Dave Thacker said
Wed Feb 25 8:54 PM, 2009
Andy If ever a Great Spotted Cuckoo turns up on Astley moss its going to take most of us a little longer to get there and see it.
The maximum speed limit on the East Lancs road [ A580] is being dropped from 60mph to 50mph in the next couple of weeks due to the recent unfortunate fatalities.
Andy Bissitt said
Wed Feb 25 8:23 PM, 2009
To Everyone,
Amidst all the well meaning banter, can I make a plea for everyone to observe speed limits around our suburban (and even urban) roads as we approach the breeding season. It always saddens me every year about now as I begin to see more and more pathetic piles of squished black feathers on our roads. If we all keep to the 30 mph limit where applicable, it just might give that blackbird or house sparrow an extra second to make that death defying swoop right across our paths. I know it can't always be avoided (I think everyone must have hit a bird at some time), but I think we can certainly avoid a few more casualties if we are that bit more careful. So think of this when you're dashing off after that Great Spotted Cuckoo on Astley Moss next month!!
Mike Passant said
Sun Feb 22 3:02 PM, 2009
This takes me back to a really odd day, namely 3rd November 1985. I'd been to Westleton, Suffolk with Geoff and Heather Lightfoot to successfully twitch my very first Nutcracker, on a bitterly cold morning. Heather was driving us back home on the A17, heading west out of Norfolk near Walpole Cross Keys. Geoff was asleep on the back seat and I was just waking up in the front passenger seat and happened to glance out past the driver. Just outside her window, a black and white chunky bird was flying parallel to us at the same speed about 12 feet away. As my eyes focused, I thought at first House Martin, but realised at once it didn't fit. Then I exclaimed ,"Look at that, there's some kind of little.... auk. - LITTLE AUK!!!" Sure enough, however surreal, there was indeed a Little Auk which flew next to us for another 60/80 yards before veering over us and off to disappear to the left. Brilliant! (It must have flown south down the Wash and run out of sea).
The day had got off to a weird start. Geoff and his wife had arranged to collect me at 1 am but my alarm clock didn't go off and they were banging on my door while I was still asleep. Horrified at being late, I jammed on my clothes and grabbed all my gear and sandwiches and shot out to join them, full of apologies, within minutes. En route, I felt really uncomfortable as if my clothes didn't fit properly, but I more or less shrugged it off although kept skirming and tugging at my waistline, as if something were biting into me. It felt basically as if my waist was suddenly 4 inches bigger. Several hours later, having seen the Nutcracker come into a little orchard to chomp on apples after a wait of over an hour, I popped into a gents toilet for a pee and realised what the problem was. On jumping out of bed half asleep and aghast at oversleeping, I had tugged on my underpants with one leg through the waist hole and my waist through a leg hole. "Nutcracker" therefore summed up that day in every sense.
Mike Chorley said
Wed Feb 11 11:35 PM, 2009
I'll bet it didn't cause as much hilarity as the log entry I had to make while volunteering at Arne. "3 Flamingoes on the Piddle"
Ian McKerchar said
Wed Feb 11 10:54 PM, 2009
Greater Flamingo has of course been recorded in the county and I hadn't touched a drop I even managed to basically prove it had not originated from the UK but it still resides in a 'non countable' catagory due to the difficulty in proving a wild origin for those who haven't read it the full account with photos on the rarity accounts pages of the articles section of the website makes for intruiging reading
-- Edited by Ian McKerchar at 22:59, 2009-02-11
Mark Rigby said
Wed Feb 11 8:09 PM, 2009
Seen a big pink bird 'from the cab' today, possible Greater Flamingo Hic, Hic
Simon Warford said
Tue Feb 10 8:40 AM, 2009
Mark Rigby wrote:
Added Jack Snipe to my "from the cab" list-on 1325 Buxton to Manchester Piccadilly service today. Flew from the "Cess"(area between the rails and the embankment) as the train was 10ft away from it, then flew in front of the cab window for about 20 metres. Cracking views at 10ft range.
I told you not to drink on the Job
Mark Rigby said
Mon Feb 9 11:17 PM, 2009
Added Jack Snipe to my "from the cab" list-on 1325 Buxton to Manchester Piccadilly service today. Flew from the "Cess"(area between the rails and the embankment) as the train was 10ft away from it, then flew in front of the cab window for about 20 metres. Cracking views at 10ft range.
Matt Potter said
Wed Jul 16 9:01 AM, 2008
Mike Chorley wrote:
Mark Rigby wrote:
Looking for Golden Oriole at Fordham whilst airborne in my plane/car or looking for Honey Buzzard at Swanton Novers arriving sideways in the car park with squeeling wheels Have you recovered yet Mr.Chorley
For a more exhilarating birding experience contact:
riggers@ dukesofhazzardbirding.co.uk/ouch
The pains from my stomach still haunt me after laughing so much when Marks car took off at Fordham, then dissapeared in the dip!!
Also sneeking into Swanton Novers after Mark flew insideways was another good laugh!!
That was a good weekend!
In terms of best birds from Marks car, well there are far too many to mention over the years being driven at mach 3 around Great Britain!
From my own car (and living in Mid Wales) I have had millions of Red Kites, very close to the car too! Little Egret (they breed up the road at Ynys Hir) Buzzard, Redstart, Raven, wheatear, Tawny Owl and merganser.
-- Edited by Matt Potter at 09:53, 2008-07-16
Dean Macdonald said
Tue Jul 15 9:13 PM, 2008
Just remembered this one. Twas about 15yrs ago an early morning trip to Brotherswater in the lakes. My mate had drunk far too much the night before and we had to pull over on a country lane so he could throw up! While waiting in the car a Short Eared Owl came up in the field and put a Buzzard up. He sobered up pretty quickly and got a good look.
Cheers Dean.
fred fouracre said
Tue Jul 15 7:40 PM, 2008
once saw a barn owl as i drove down a country lane near shrewsbury.it was sitting on a fence right by the road.i found my camera and slowly reversed.it didnt fly away as i got level.lifted up my cameara and of course it flew away.a great thrill nevertheless to be so near to such a beautiful creature.
Adrian Dancy said
Mon Jul 14 12:40 AM, 2008
A red kite , about 8 years ago. I had never seen one before. I was a passenger driving through Oxfordshire. I asked the driver to stop. Driver didn't stop so I through myself out the car and into a ditch and got a great view of the bird. No bones broken. It's not the silliest thing I've done but it ranks pretty high.
Red kite again...few years back. Seen from a 135 bus on the way to Bury.
Driving through Wales a flock of 60 curlew flying close beside the car at eye level with the mountains behind. Beautiful sight. Camera in the boot.
pete berry said
Wed Jul 9 1:12 PM, 2008
This didn't happen to me but a mate of mine.He was driving across the moors in Durham several years ago when he saw a white bird chasing a smaller black bird across the moor.His first thought was it must be a Black Headed Gull chasing a Blackbird,but this didn't seem right as it seemed a strange place for a Blackbird on open moorland.As he got closer the two birds flew across the road right in front of the car.He realised straight away what they were-it was a white phase Gyr Falcon chasing a Black Grouse!!The Gyr was seen again on and off for about three weeks,unfortunately I dipped it twice.
-- Edited by pete berry at 13:13, 2008-07-09
Steve Scrimgeour said
Mon Jul 7 2:32 PM, 2008
Golden Eagle whilst travelling from Girvan - Barr Hill Ayrshire, Swooping low over a field full of cattle. We pulled in to a layby and watched as it circled over a cow giving birth, it moved to fence post before being moved on by the farmer coming thundering over the hill in his tractor beeping his horn and frantically flasing his lights. Quite an unforgetable sight as was the wife as she dissapeared into a ditch I parked next to as she was knee deep in mud.
Rob Smallwood said
Mon Jul 7 12:33 PM, 2008
Whilst honeymooning in Eilat we got the coach to Jerusalem to do a 36 hours, been there done, done that tour of the major sites.
From the coach window I spotted a big lump sat on an Acacia tree.
I'm convinced to this day that it was a Lappet-faced Vulture - the area was right, it even resembled the drawing in my field guide of one sat on an acacia, but it had to go down as the best bird I haven't ticked from a moving vehicle!
Kane Brides said
Sun Jul 6 2:56 PM, 2008
not one of my ''best'' birds seen from a moving vehicle, but on the way to pick my brother up in Knutsford this morning a female mallard and around 8 ducklings were on the hard shoulder of the M6 near junction 19!! For their safety and motorist and called the police, who then sent out a traffic officer....On my way back there was quite a lengthy tail back as they tried to catch the birds!
Kane
Mark Rigby said
Thu Jun 19 8:12 PM, 2008
Added Spoonbill to my "from the cab" list-on 1203 Manchester Piccadilly to Crewe service at Sandbach Flashes.18/06/08
-- Edited by Mark Rigby at 20:13, 2008-06-19
Dave Thacker said
Wed Jun 4 7:16 PM, 2008
Eleonoras Falcon seen chasing insects while I was looking out from a train stuck up a mountain in Sardinia. Hoopoe from plane while on runway also in Sardinia. Rock bunting seen from coach in Croatia.
Little egret from my car while driving up M6 SE Owl from my car near the Strawberry duck between Bolton and Blackburn. Great view of a Merlin as it flew alongside a Cessna I was flying in out from Barton airport.The Merlin was flying faster than the plane at take off and I was beginning to worry that I was running out of field and was not going to get airborne due to watching the bird instead of watching my controls.
Mike Chorley said
Wed Jun 4 9:09 AM, 2008
Mark Rigby wrote:
Looking for Golden Oriole at Fordham whilst airborne in my plane/car or looking for Honey Buzzard at Swanton Novers arriving sideways in the car park with squeeling wheels Have you recovered yet Mr.Chorley
For a more exhilarating birding experience contact:
riggers@ dukesofhazzardbirding.co.uk/ouch
Brian Harding said
Tue Jun 3 11:20 PM, 2008
I saw a short eared owl on snake pass (nr sheffield) a couple of years back flying close to the road side. as i went up to it it turned and flew pretty much over the bonnet of the car. superb views of it.
Mark Rigby said
Tue Jun 3 10:38 PM, 2008
Judith,
There is not a great deal left of these birds after a high speed collision with a train! The down side is that Buzzards frequent railway lines for just that reason-free carrion!
This means that as more Buzzards arrive for a free feed-more Buzzards get hit by the moving trains. It isnt only Buzzards that meet their maker in this way, Foxes and Badgers also feed on the carrion. It is not uncommon after noticing a corpse at the beginning of the week for there to be several more in that location by the end of the week.
My own personal record was at Grindleford where a Badger had been hit by a train early on Monday morning and by Friday morning there were 5 Badgers, 3 foxes and an unidentified raptor (Buzzard?)!!
Tawny Owls are just daft-they perch up in trees next to the railway lines and as they are flushed by the approaching trains, fly accross the railway lines in front of the oncoming train! and they make a terrific bang on your windscreen!
The worst carnage by far was on the railway viaduct at Reddish Vale in late summer a few years ago.
A mixed flock of Hirundines were perched on the railings on the viaduct facing the railway. As I approached, one by one, they flew of the perch into the front of my train. There must have been about 70-100 birds that got it on that occasion! not a nice feeling as a birder!! Why couldnt they all be facing the other way? and fly of to safety.
On a final note, Network Rail charge train operators a delay charge of around £50 per minute delay. I dont think my boss would be too impressed if I delayed a train to go and retrieve a Buzzard Corpse
Judith Smith said
Tue Jun 3 8:34 PM, 2008
The Centre for Ecology and Hydrology are interested in receiving any corpses of raptors and other top predators eg Kingfisher...they send you a box to return it in (freeze it first of course). The like to assess the levels of pesticides.
Mark Rigby said
Tue Jun 3 1:05 PM, 2008
Unfortunatley Buzzard and Tawny Owl are the 2 main casualties-but lots of smaller passerines.
I assess train drivers now and threaten them with a failed assessment if they hit any birds
Steve Suttill said
Tue Jun 3 9:56 AM, 2008
Hi Mark
but have you got a list of birds hit by your train? My grandad was a train driver and had quite a tally! I well remember him telling me about the Tawny Owl he hit - you should have seen the scars the bird gave him when he rescued it - ungrateful thing!
Mark Rigby said
Tue Jun 3 12:06 AM, 2008
Looking for Golden Oriole at Fordham whilst airborne in my plane/car or looking for Honey Buzzard at Swanton Novers arriving sideways in the car park with squeeling wheels Have you recovered yet Mr.Chorley
Mark Rigby said
Mon Jun 2 11:55 PM, 2008
Warfy,
you should have been in the car the other Sunday. Oldham to Chorlton Water Park for the Fulmar in....
there may be policemen watching the forum!! Like the ones with the pagers when a speed trap appears between Hull and Spurn when a Mega turns up! a bit of a coincidence dont you think!
Simon Warford said
Mon Jun 2 11:06 PM, 2008
eh up Riggers, im suprised you have managed to see any birds from your moving vehicle the speed you drive, i shall never forget the drive from Horrocks flash to Audi recently for the red rumper, think it took about 15 minutes but when we got there i was to dizzy to see anything anyway
Mark Rigby said
Mon Jun 2 10:56 PM, 2008
Mike,
What about Waxwing in Holme or the Green Woody that I spotted at 90 mph clung to the side of a tree near Strumpshaw or Laughing Gull at Portmadog or..........................!!
I was going to add my "from the train list"(bet you havent got one of those Mr.Woosey)-but I suppose I have an unfair advantage having been a train driver for the last 20 years!!
But Osprey, Goshawk, Little Egret, Woodcock, Kingfisher...............etc
Mike Chorley said
Mon Jun 2 10:27 PM, 2008
Despite several great views of Red Kites round both Leeds & Oxford I reckon my best birds are a tie between the Merlin that flew along side Mr. Rigby's car on one of our Norfolk trips (before zooming over us to ambush a field of winter thrushes) and the Osprey fishing in the river Tummel at Pitlochry (seen from the coach as I came back from a week volunteering at Loch Garten) Having seen several birds fishing at the fish farm it was nice to see one doing it 'in the wild'
I think Osprey would be quite high on my foreign birding list as well, partly because the one I saw at Aswan was (along with Bluethroat) one of the unexpected bonus birds of the trip, and partly because I got to point it out to one of my "I'm not a birder but..." travelling companions who thought he'd seen one that morning at the High Dam. He was chuffed he'd got the i.d. right. Certainly my best bird from a felluca! Also managed to spot Desert Lark, Desert & White-crowned Black Wheaters, and Trumpeter Finch on various minibus excursions to the tombs & temples, along with Senegal Thick-knee and Purple Gallinule from the cruise ship. Not unexpected, but not bad on a non-birding trip
p.s. best bird 'identified' from a moving vehicle was last years' Scops Owl, i.d.ed as we drove through Thrupp loking for the car park!
-- Edited by Mike Chorley at 22:31, 2008-06-02
Melanie Beckford said
Mon Jun 2 7:19 PM, 2008
A Golden Eagle flew along side a train l was on in Scotland a couple of years ago,we were virtually level,l felt very priviledged. Also late last year l saw a juvenile Kite being mobbed by some crows as l drove along the M66 towards Ramsbottom. Once l saw a juvenile Sea Eagle on Mull sitting in the trees, l begged my ex to stop but he he didn't believe me but once we did stop and we walked towards the area....it flew off!! The words 'l told you so' could be read by the look l gave him!!
Cheers
Ian
Can I chance my hand by claiming office window bird of the day for today - lesser spotted woodpecker.
The only slight downer is that I work a mile or so into Cheshire. Still it provided a bright moment in the midst of humdrum office life.
If there's any interest, please feel free to start an office window bird thread if we haven't already got one.
Apologies for being a little off-topic, but Lightning pilots certainly got good views of Eiders while their steed was vibrating with under-utilised power!
Black-footed Albatross, Pink-footed Shearwater, Fork-tailed Storm Petrel and 9 species of Pacific auks from a moving cruise ship.
Bananabill from the Whalsay ferry.
white and brown pelecans fishing also same florida trip
and having to get off the coach we were on, to shoo a turkey vulture away from a roadkill armadillo so we could get the coach past on the way to nasa.
my first little owl and red kite were also seen from the car
I drive from Rammy to Lancaster to work each day- and it's still there- I see it most evenings in a field on the right about 5 miles south of Forton service station.
David
cheers
jason
'Harlequin Duck Histrionicus histrionicus (7, 5, 2)
Ayrshire Girvan, two first-summer females, 13th-27th April, photo. (C.J.Murphy et al.) (Brit. Birds 90: plate 163).
An outrageous 'while-driving' find for the alert leader of Murphy's Wildlife Holidays. The first since 1991; the last male was in 1987 and the last adult male in 1965.'
Does it count as we were only doing about 10 miles per hour?!?
If ever a Great Spotted Cuckoo turns up on Astley moss its going to take most of us a little longer to get there and see it.
The maximum speed limit on the East Lancs road [ A580] is being dropped from 60mph to 50mph in the next couple of weeks due to the recent unfortunate fatalities.
Amidst all the well meaning banter, can I make a plea for everyone to observe speed limits around our suburban (and even urban) roads as we approach the breeding season. It always saddens me every year about now as I begin to see more and more pathetic piles of squished black feathers on our roads. If we all keep to the 30 mph limit where applicable, it just might give that blackbird or house sparrow an extra second to make that death defying swoop right across our paths. I know it can't always be avoided (I think everyone must have hit a bird at some time), but I think we can certainly avoid a few more casualties if we are that bit more careful. So think of this when you're dashing off after that Great Spotted Cuckoo on Astley Moss next month!!
I'd been to Westleton, Suffolk with Geoff and Heather Lightfoot to successfully twitch my very first Nutcracker, on a bitterly cold morning.
Heather was driving us back home on the A17, heading west out of Norfolk near Walpole Cross Keys. Geoff was asleep on the back seat and I was just waking up in the front passenger seat and happened to glance out past the driver. Just outside her window, a black and white chunky bird was flying parallel to us at the same speed about 12 feet away. As my eyes focused, I thought at first House Martin, but realised at once it didn't fit. Then I exclaimed ,"Look at that, there's some kind of little.... auk. - LITTLE AUK!!!"
Sure enough, however surreal, there was indeed a Little Auk which flew next to us for another 60/80 yards before veering over us and off to disappear to the left. Brilliant! (It must have flown south down the Wash and run out of sea).
The day had got off to a weird start. Geoff and his wife had arranged to collect me at 1 am but my alarm clock didn't go off and they were banging on my door while I was still asleep. Horrified at being late, I jammed on my clothes and grabbed all my gear and sandwiches and shot out to join them, full of apologies, within minutes.
En route, I felt really uncomfortable as if my clothes didn't fit properly, but I more or less shrugged it off although kept skirming and tugging at my waistline, as if something were biting into me. It felt basically as if my waist was suddenly 4 inches bigger.
Several hours later, having seen the Nutcracker come into a little orchard to chomp on apples after a wait of over an hour, I popped into a gents toilet for a pee and realised what the problem was.
On jumping out of bed half asleep and aghast at oversleeping, I had tugged on my underpants with one leg through the waist hole and my waist through a leg hole.
"Nutcracker" therefore summed up that day in every sense.
-- Edited by Ian McKerchar at 22:59, 2009-02-11
I told you not to drink on the Job
The pains from my stomach still haunt me after laughing so much when Marks car took off at Fordham, then dissapeared in the dip!!
Also sneeking into Swanton Novers after Mark flew insideways was another good laugh!!
That was a good weekend!
In terms of best birds from Marks car, well there are far too many to mention over the years being driven at mach 3 around Great Britain!
From my own car (and living in Mid Wales) I have had millions of Red Kites, very close to the car too! Little Egret (they breed up the road at Ynys Hir) Buzzard, Redstart, Raven, wheatear, Tawny Owl and merganser.
-- Edited by Matt Potter at 09:53, 2008-07-16
Just remembered this one. Twas about 15yrs ago an early morning trip to Brotherswater in the lakes. My mate had drunk far too much the night before and we had to pull over on a country lane so he could throw up! While waiting in the car a Short Eared Owl came up in the field and put a Buzzard up. He sobered up pretty quickly and got a good look.
Cheers Dean.
Red kite again...few years back. Seen from a 135 bus on the way to Bury.
Driving through Wales a flock of 60 curlew flying close beside the car at eye level with the mountains behind. Beautiful sight. Camera in the boot.
-- Edited by pete berry at 13:13, 2008-07-09
Golden Eagle whilst travelling from Girvan - Barr Hill Ayrshire, Swooping low over a field full of cattle. We pulled in to a layby and watched as it circled over a cow giving birth, it moved to fence post before being moved on by the farmer coming thundering over the hill in his tractor beeping his horn and frantically flasing his lights. Quite an unforgetable sight as was the wife as she dissapeared into a ditch I parked next to as she was knee deep in mud.
From the coach window I spotted a big lump sat on an Acacia tree.
I'm convinced to this day that it was a Lappet-faced Vulture - the area was right, it even resembled the drawing in my field guide of one sat on an acacia, but it had to go down as the best bird I haven't ticked from a moving vehicle!
Kane
-- Edited by Mark Rigby at 20:13, 2008-06-19
Hoopoe from plane while on runway also in Sardinia.
Rock bunting seen from coach in Croatia.
Little egret from my car while driving up M6
SE Owl from my car near the Strawberry duck between Bolton and Blackburn.
Great view of a Merlin as it flew alongside a Cessna I was flying in out from Barton airport.The Merlin was flying faster than the plane at take off and I was beginning to worry that I was running out of field and was not going to get airborne due to watching the bird instead of watching my controls.
For a more exhilarating birding experience contact:
riggers@ dukesofhazzardbirding.co.uk/ouch
There is not a great deal left of these birds after a high speed collision with a train! The down side is that Buzzards frequent railway lines for just that reason-free carrion!
This means that as more Buzzards arrive for a free feed-more Buzzards get hit by the moving trains. It isnt only Buzzards that meet their maker in this way, Foxes and Badgers also feed on the carrion. It is not uncommon after noticing a corpse at the beginning of the week for there to be several more in that location by the end of the week.
My own personal record was at Grindleford where a Badger had been hit by a train early on Monday morning and by Friday morning there were 5 Badgers, 3 foxes and an unidentified raptor (Buzzard?)!!
Tawny Owls are just daft-they perch up in trees next to the railway lines and as they are flushed by the approaching trains, fly accross the railway lines in front of the oncoming train! and they make a terrific bang on your windscreen!
The worst carnage by far was on the railway viaduct at Reddish Vale in late summer a few years ago.
A mixed flock of Hirundines were perched on the railings on the viaduct facing the railway. As I approached, one by one, they flew of the perch into the front of my train. There must have been about 70-100 birds that got it on that occasion! not a nice feeling as a birder!! Why couldnt they all be facing the other way? and fly of to safety.
On a final note, Network Rail charge train operators a delay charge of around £50 per minute delay. I dont think my boss would be too impressed if I delayed a train to go and retrieve a Buzzard Corpse
I assess train drivers now and threaten them with a failed assessment if they hit any birds
but have you got a list of birds hit by your train? My grandad was a train driver and had quite a tally! I well remember him telling me about the Tawny Owl he hit - you should have seen the scars the bird gave him when he rescued it - ungrateful thing!
you should have been in the car the other Sunday. Oldham to Chorlton Water Park for the Fulmar in....
there may be policemen watching the forum!! Like the ones with the pagers when a speed trap appears between Hull and Spurn when a Mega turns up! a bit of a coincidence dont you think!
What about Waxwing in Holme or the Green Woody that I spotted at 90 mph clung to the side of a tree near Strumpshaw or Laughing Gull at Portmadog or..........................!!
I was going to add my "from the train list"(bet you havent got one of those Mr.Woosey)-but I suppose I have an unfair advantage having been a train driver for the last 20 years!!
But Osprey, Goshawk, Little Egret, Woodcock, Kingfisher...............etc
I think Osprey would be quite high on my foreign birding list as well, partly because the one I saw at Aswan was (along with Bluethroat) one of the unexpected bonus birds of the trip, and partly because I got to point it out to one of my "I'm not a birder but..." travelling companions who thought he'd seen one that morning at the High Dam. He was chuffed he'd got the i.d. right. Certainly my best bird from a felluca!
Also managed to spot Desert Lark, Desert & White-crowned Black Wheaters, and Trumpeter Finch on various minibus excursions to the tombs & temples, along with Senegal Thick-knee and Purple Gallinule from the cruise ship. Not unexpected, but not bad on a non-birding trip
p.s. best bird 'identified' from a moving vehicle was last years' Scops Owl, i.d.ed as we drove through Thrupp loking for the car park!
-- Edited by Mike Chorley at 22:31, 2008-06-02
Also late last year l saw a juvenile Kite being mobbed by some crows as l drove along the M66 towards Ramsbottom.
Once l saw a juvenile Sea Eagle on Mull sitting in the trees, l begged my ex to stop but he he didn't believe me but once we did stop and we walked towards the area....it flew off!!
The words 'l told you so' could be read by the look l gave him!!