A Cuckoo was heard calling in the forest, on the North side of Ashton Road, about half way between the crossroads and
Barnsbridge car park. Soon afterwards the bird was also heard calling from the forest on the South side of the road too.
Also seen in the forest area around Blakemere were a family of 5 Nuthatches and a single Buzzard.
Several Willow Warblers were seen, whilst 3 Chiffchaffs were still singing, the only other songsters being Wrens and 2 Blackcaps.
A good scan through Blakemere gull colony only produced sightings of Black Headed.
A pair of female Mandarin ducks, a couple of Lapwings and a huge flock of Greylag Geese were also on Blakemere.
Also there was a single Grey Heron, which was really upsetting the gulls.
-- Edited by John Williams on Wednesday 22nd of June 2022 07:12:47 PM
John Williams said
Fri Feb 25 5:25 PM, 2022
10.30-13.30 Explored forest from Ashton Road to B5152 and around Blakemere.
Forest : 2 highly vocal Ravens circled above.
At one point a roving mixed party of Long Tailed, Blue and Coal Tits also contained 1 Treecreeper, 2 Goldcrests and 5 Robins.
Amazingly the Robins appeared to show absolutely no animosity to each other. A pair of female Bullfinches were also seen.
Blakmere : Lots of Black Headed Gulls busily setting up their breeding spots. No sign of any Mediterranean Gulls yet though.
The islets in the SE corner of the mere held surprising numbers of waders, they were difficult to count,
but there were at least 70 Lapwings, 25 Snipe and a single Redshank.
7f+4m Goosanders and at least 20 Teal were also noted.
John Williams said
Mon Dec 27 7:51 PM, 2021
Explored the Northern segment of the forest from rear of Hatchmere to Castle Cob and return.
Within forest :
Apart from the common garden species, and even they appeared scarce, 3 Treecreepers and 1 Great Spotted Woodpecker were seen.
Adjoining sheep pastures proved more fruitful though with the following being noted:
1 Buzzard, a pair of Mistle Thrushes, 12 Fieldfares (With a flock of 40+ Starlings), 2 Ravens (1 highly vocal),
16 Common Gulls (Amongst Black Headed Gulls on a flooded area) and 1 Reed Bunting.
Steve Costa said
Wed May 27 10:52 PM, 2020
For your information
I was in the forest from 10:30 to 14:30. I didn't know all the car parks would be open. It soon became very busy, like a Bank holiday. There were many, sometimes large, groups of people, often not observing any kind of social distancing either amongst themselves or with other people. It was actually quite stressful at times. My advice: if you want to visit Delamere Forest, go very early. Otherwise, AVOID (especially during the hot weather).
John Williams said
Wed Mar 27 3:32 PM, 2019
10.00-13.00
Blakemere :
An amazing 11 adult Mediterranean Gulls, mostly in the SE corner of the mere.
Also on the mere were 6 Lapwings, 6m Shoveler, 1 adult Great Black Backed Gull, 3 Common Gulls, 7 Herring Gulls and 4 Cormorants.
1 Song Thrush, 1 Great Spotted Woodpecker and numerous singing Chiffchaffs were along the edge of the mere.
John Williams said
Wed Jun 20 10:16 PM, 2018
Late Post : 19.06.2018 18.00-21.00
I had a good scan through the gull colony on Blakemere, but apart from 2 Lesser Black Backs the rest were Black Headed.
8 full grown youngsters were noted, and quite a few adults appear to be still brooding.
20 Greylag Geese, 4 Lapwings, a Cormorant and a Grey Heron were also on Blakemere.
3 Willow Warblers were still in song around the perimeter of Blakemere.
In the forest around Hunger Hill were 1 juv Great Spotted Woodpecker, 4 Jays (Which appeared to be showing a keen interest
in picking up tiny frogs from the surface of the main tracks), 3 Nuthatches and a Mistle Thrush.
A black peaty pool near Hunger Hill held a drake Teal and a female Mallard with a brood of 5 half grown ducklings.
Doc Brewster said
Sun May 6 9:48 PM, 2018
Headed back to Barnsbridge car park again today after a report yesterday of singing Pied Flycatcher near to there. After a short walk and keeping our ears pricked we picked up the distinctive song & were soon watching a cracking male Pied Flycatcher up high in the canopy of an oak. A prolonged watch never saw the bird come down, it was always up in the tops of the trees, but what a fabulous local bird
A really interesting diversion from Newchurch today for me (although I did get my walk in!) albeit only about 3 miles away from my local patch as the bird flies.
It all started with a message on our grapevine from Frank Duff who lives in, and watches Delamere regularly. He had found a Chifchaff that was singing Iberian Chiffchaff type song consistently and responding to Iberian playback too. I headed over there and thanks to his directions and knowing Delamere quite well I soon found the area where he had been and immediatley picked up the distinctive singing. No-one else was there whilst I was there but it was easy to locate the bird, given its Iberian-type song. The phrases didn't match perfectly the full repertoire of a classic Iberian Chiffchaff but it sang probably 80-90% of it. I played an Iberian Chiffchaff call on my phone and the response was incredible. The bird shot over to me, perched a couple of feet above my head, adopted a head down, tail up pose and went into a manic drooped-wing quivering display. This all allowed me to get cracking views and the bird showed good pro-Iberian features. It looked more lik a Willow Warbler than a Chiffchaff, having green upperparts, pale underparts with a lemon wash, a noticeably pale beak, strong fore-supercilium and pale-ish brown legs. As I said, all pro-Iberian features! Given that the Iberian Chiffchaff in Cheshire was only a few miles away last year, could this be the same bird returning, and has its song been influenced by being in the company of 'collybita' Chiffchaffs in the interim period?
The best directions I can give are to park in the Barnsbridge car park at SJ542716 and walk to Black Lake, go past it and turn right at Post 55 on a track labelled 'Baker Way', head to where the path takes a sharp turn and if it is still there you will hear it easily. The approx grid ref of the bird is SJ534710. It's definitely worth a look, well found Frank
Mike Duckham said
Wed Dec 27 11:27 PM, 2017
At Eddisbury Fruit Farm today were large numbers of Fieldfare, couldn't get a real idea of how many as they were spread out around the orchards and only a fraction were visible from the roads at any one time, i prob saw about 200 - 300 in the air at one point as a fem Sprawk went over but suspect there were many more. Green Woodpecker flew in and landed just behind one of the old cottages and called loudly. About 4 Bullfinch and a handful of Redwing too.
John Williams said
Sat Jun 24 9:10 PM, 2017
10.00-15.00
Walked from Norley to Delamere and back.
Norley & along the "Delamere Way" path :
1 juvenile Great Spotted Woodpecker, 1 singing male Greenfinch and 1 Raven.
Delamere Forest (N.E. section) :
1 pr of Bullfinches, 1 Sparrowhawk, 1 Buzzard, a family of 4 Treecreepers plus 2 other adults seen nearby, 1 Nuthatch, a newly fledged family of Blackcaps in a bramble patch
and 4 Song Thrushes. Chiffchaffs (4), Blackcaps (3) and a single Willow Warbler were still singing.
Doc Brewster said
Fri May 5 11:18 AM, 2017
This is a belated report as I was asked to keep news quiet until now, I still can't name exact locations but I am itching to share my news, so forgive me for not being specific, but the bird has departed now and isn't a rare species!
A friend of mine who sometimes works on Abbots Moss on my patch offered to take me to several restricted areas that he has access to with his job, but which are strictly no entry for anyone else. I jumped at this of course and we headed off in the general 'Delamere Forest area'. Some of the sites were reminiscent of Dorset & Hampshire heathland and pine forests and were fabulous with massive potential. One site we went to though was to come up trumps for me.
We headed in and he was a bit disappointed as it had quietened down since his last visit a couple of days earlier when he had had a Whinchat, several Wheatears and a few interesting waders. We saw good numbers of Lapwings, Skylarks and Meadow Pipits, all in breeding habitat so fabulous news. I scanned a nearby slope with my bins and couldn't believe what I saw, "I've got a Ring Ouzel" were my next words, expecting the reply, that it had been there for a day or two. But no, this was a new bird for this patch and I'd found it We then scoped the bird, a cracking male, as it fed on short grass on the slope some distance away. Two people 'do' this patch so the other one was rung & they duly left work to twitch my find!! The other birder arrived and we watched the ouzel, I took a couple of record shot pictures at a distance & we left it in peace. The two patch watchers tell me it stayed for a couple more days but is now long gone. Three Wheatears were still present too, but the Ring Ouzel was the star of the show.
All this happened on April 26th and it's a cracking record for this part of Cheshire, now followed by the female at Elton Hall Flash, Sandbach Record, low res picture attached.
Yesterday Monday 24th brief visit on way to hospital appointment, at 2pm were 6 Waxwings on opposite side of road to entrance to Eddisbury Fruit Farm and c. 50 yards uphill (south). After a couple of minutes they flew low SW over the orchards. Strong smell of decaying apples!
Mike Duckham said
Tue Apr 18 7:26 PM, 2017
Nine Waxwings at 6.45pm at top of sycamore behind car park at Eddisbury Fruit Farm before appearing to go down, possibly to the ivy bush at Blackcurrant Cottage then heard overhead 200m along Delamere Loop - going to roost?
Delighted to catch up with these, had looked for them 2 1/2 weeks ago but turned out I wasn't quite far enough along the lane.
At least one, prob two Garden Warbler in birch regen behind oaks and beech along the Delamere Loop.
David Morris said
Sat Jun 11 10:12 PM, 2016
Cuckoo heard calling today about 11:45am. Wasn't there birding though so couldn't go looking for it :(
Steven Ellis said
Sun Apr 3 9:15 PM, 2016
Sunday morning 3rd April
Two pair of Mediterranean Gulls seen amongst the Black headed gulls (Blakemere)
-- Edited by Steven Ellis on Sunday 3rd of April 2016 09:16:25 PM
-- Edited by Ian McKerchar on Sunday 3rd of April 2016 09:46:17 PM
steven burke said
Sun Mar 27 11:00 AM, 2016
yesterday 10-2pm
hundreds of black headed gulls on blakemere with 12 Mediterranean gulls, 5 common gulls, 3 lesser black backed gulls & 5 herring gulls. 9+ crossbills seen in flight, 2 seen briefly perched on top of pines. 4+ buzzard 4 treecreeper 3 nuthatch lots of goldcrest around 5 tufted duck 2 gadwall 2 shoveler 1 great crested grebe.
Nik Grounds said
Wed Jul 1 3:15 PM, 2015
Sunday 28th June
1 Mediterranean gull seen on Blakemere
John Williams said
Tue May 12 4:27 PM, 2015
08.30-12.00
Blakemere
A good look through the hundreds of Black Headed Gulls but no sign of any Mediterranean Gulls.
12 immature Lesser Black Back & 3 immature Herring Gulls around the Black Head colony. 1 Tufted Duck & 3 Cormorants.
A mother Mallard with a brood of 8 small young. A pair of Greylag and several pairs of Canada Geese.
1 Cormorant was seen diving, I'm surprised that any fish (Except the odd Stickleback or Eel) could survive in the black peaty water?.
Lots of Willow Warblers singing in the young birch/willow thicket around the mere, also 4 Blackcaps and a single Whitethroat. 1 Large Red Damselfly.
Elsewhere in the forest.
Numerous Chiffchaffs singing in the drier forest areas. 1 Sparrowhawk & 2 Buzzards above the forest.
4 Brimstone, 3 Peacock, 2 Orange Tips and 1 Small White butterflies.
steven burke said
Sat Mar 29 9:28 PM, 2014
a few hours this morning, highlights...
3 Mediterranean gulls amongst the many hundreds of black headed gulls, few common & lesser black backed gulls. at least 12 crossbills 2 singing male blackcaps, 1 seen 2-3 chiffchaffs 4-5 buzzards 1 male mandarin 2 shovelers 8 tufted ducks 2 wigeon lots of siskins around several lesser redpolls nuthatches, treecreepers, goldcrests & great spotted woodpeckers.
Tanmay Dixit said
Sun Mar 23 10:20 AM, 2014
Brief visit from N Wales yesterday
40+ crossbills (lifer, finally got common crossbill having already seen two-barred and parrot!!!), very vocal and mobile but managed decent views.
Some brambling present, goldcrest calling, male great spotted woodpecker etc.
+ an astonishing number of great tit...a 30+ tit flock contained all great tits except one blue tit!
Denzil Nicklin said
Sat Nov 10 10:25 PM, 2012
Hi
Had a nice morning at Delamere Forest today,with the main focal point being a full circular walk of Hatchmere. There wasn't a great deal on the water itself,with only Coot,Mallard and Moorhen present,but the woodlands that surround the lake itself held both Lesser Spotted Woodpecker and Marsh Tit,although I could only manage to hear both calling,as opposed to seeing them physically. Apart from those 2 good birds,there was a very good selection of all of the common woodland species,and I eventually managed to complete the morning with 33 species noted. The forest has turned up some great birds over the years,and I'm really surprised that no one reports any sightings from here on a regular basis.
Cheers Denzil
sid ashton said
Sat Apr 14 12:33 AM, 2012
A short visit to Blakemere Moss in Delamere Forest today with John Barber gave us excellent views of a single Mediterranean Gull amongst the thousands of Black-headed Gulls present.
sid ashton said
Fri Nov 5 6:19 PM, 2010
On the way to Merseyside this morning a slight detour gave us a few hours in Delamere Forest Park and for a change we approached from the southern side (A54) with the intention of looking for the reported Waxwings at the Yeld Lane car park (near Kelsall).
Found 6 shortly after we arrived despite being assured by the 5 birders - well people with binoculars - already in the car park that they were gone. The birds were actually about 50m away in a tall leafless tree but none of those already there were looking further than the trees in the car park - by the time we left we were counting 12 birds present.
As well as taking berries they all spent some time flycatching from the tall trees.
Given the number of berry trees in the area - there is a nursery growing them as well as the wild ones - it could be that the birds will stay for a while.
sid ashton said
Tue Jan 26 7:15 PM, 2010
Had a couple of hours at Delamere today - no sign of the Firecrests reported over the last few days and only brief flyovers of the 20+ strong flock of Crossbills. Still it was quite pleasant "down in the woods" with lots of Great Spotted Pecker activity.
A Cuckoo was heard calling in the forest, on the North side of Ashton Road, about half way between the crossroads and
Barnsbridge car park. Soon afterwards the bird was also heard calling from the forest on the South side of the road too.
Also seen in the forest area around Blakemere were a family of 5 Nuthatches and a single Buzzard.
Several Willow Warblers were seen, whilst 3 Chiffchaffs were still singing, the only other songsters being Wrens and 2 Blackcaps.
A good scan through Blakemere gull colony only produced sightings of Black Headed.
A pair of female Mandarin ducks, a couple of Lapwings and a huge flock of Greylag Geese were also on Blakemere.
Also there was a single Grey Heron, which was really upsetting the gulls.
-- Edited by John Williams on Wednesday 22nd of June 2022 07:12:47 PM
Forest : 2 highly vocal Ravens circled above.
At one point a roving mixed party of Long Tailed, Blue and Coal Tits also contained 1 Treecreeper, 2 Goldcrests and 5 Robins.
Amazingly the Robins appeared to show absolutely no animosity to each other. A pair of female Bullfinches were also seen.
Blakmere : Lots of Black Headed Gulls busily setting up their breeding spots. No sign of any Mediterranean Gulls yet though.
The islets in the SE corner of the mere held surprising numbers of waders, they were difficult to count,
but there were at least 70 Lapwings, 25 Snipe and a single Redshank.
7f+4m Goosanders and at least 20 Teal were also noted.
Within forest :
Apart from the common garden species, and even they appeared scarce, 3 Treecreepers and 1 Great Spotted Woodpecker were seen.
Adjoining sheep pastures proved more fruitful though with the following being noted:
1 Buzzard, a pair of Mistle Thrushes, 12 Fieldfares (With a flock of 40+ Starlings), 2 Ravens (1 highly vocal),
16 Common Gulls (Amongst Black Headed Gulls on a flooded area) and 1 Reed Bunting.
I was in the forest from 10:30 to 14:30. I didn't know all the car parks would be open. It soon became very busy, like a Bank holiday. There were many, sometimes large, groups of people, often not observing any kind of social distancing either amongst themselves or with other people. It was actually quite stressful at times. My advice: if you want to visit Delamere Forest, go very early. Otherwise, AVOID (especially during the hot weather).
Blakemere :
An amazing 11 adult Mediterranean Gulls, mostly in the SE corner of the mere.
Also on the mere were 6 Lapwings, 6m Shoveler, 1 adult Great Black Backed Gull, 3 Common Gulls, 7 Herring Gulls and 4 Cormorants.
1 Song Thrush, 1 Great Spotted Woodpecker and numerous singing Chiffchaffs were along the edge of the mere.
I had a good scan through the gull colony on Blakemere, but apart from 2 Lesser Black Backs the rest were Black Headed.
8 full grown youngsters were noted, and quite a few adults appear to be still brooding.
20 Greylag Geese, 4 Lapwings, a Cormorant and a Grey Heron were also on Blakemere.
3 Willow Warblers were still in song around the perimeter of Blakemere.
In the forest around Hunger Hill were 1 juv Great Spotted Woodpecker, 4 Jays (Which appeared to be showing a keen interest
in picking up tiny frogs from the surface of the main tracks), 3 Nuthatches and a Mistle Thrush.
A black peaty pool near Hunger Hill held a drake Teal and a female Mallard with a brood of 5 half grown ducklings.
Headed back to Barnsbridge car park again today after a report yesterday of singing Pied Flycatcher near to there. After a short walk and keeping our ears pricked we picked up the distinctive song & were soon watching a cracking male Pied Flycatcher up high in the canopy of an oak. A prolonged watch never saw the bird come down, it was always up in the tops of the trees, but what a fabulous local bird
A really interesting diversion from Newchurch today for me (although I did get my walk in!) albeit only about 3 miles away from my local patch as the bird flies.
It all started with a message on our grapevine from Frank Duff who lives in, and watches Delamere regularly. He had found a Chifchaff that was singing Iberian Chiffchaff type song consistently and responding to Iberian playback too. I headed over there and thanks to his directions and knowing Delamere quite well I soon found the area where he had been and immediatley picked up the distinctive singing. No-one else was there whilst I was there but it was easy to locate the bird, given its Iberian-type song. The phrases didn't match perfectly the full repertoire of a classic Iberian Chiffchaff but it sang probably 80-90% of it. I played an Iberian Chiffchaff call on my phone and the response was incredible. The bird shot over to me, perched a couple of feet above my head, adopted a head down, tail up pose and went into a manic drooped-wing quivering display. This all allowed me to get cracking views and the bird showed good pro-Iberian features. It looked more lik a Willow Warbler than a Chiffchaff, having green upperparts, pale underparts with a lemon wash, a noticeably pale beak, strong fore-supercilium and pale-ish brown legs. As I said, all pro-Iberian features! Given that the Iberian Chiffchaff in Cheshire was only a few miles away last year, could this be the same bird returning, and has its song been influenced by being in the company of 'collybita' Chiffchaffs in the interim period?
The best directions I can give are to park in the Barnsbridge car park at SJ542716 and walk to Black Lake, go past it and turn right at Post 55 on a track labelled 'Baker Way', head to where the path takes a sharp turn and if it is still there you will hear it easily. The approx grid ref of the bird is SJ534710. It's definitely worth a look, well found Frank
At Eddisbury Fruit Farm today were large numbers of Fieldfare, couldn't get a real idea of how many as they were spread out around the orchards and only a fraction were visible from the roads at any one time, i prob saw about 200 - 300 in the air at one point as a fem Sprawk went over but suspect there were many more. Green Woodpecker flew in and landed just behind one of the old cottages and called loudly. About 4 Bullfinch and a handful of Redwing too.
Walked from Norley to Delamere and back.
Norley & along the "Delamere Way" path :
1 juvenile Great Spotted Woodpecker, 1 singing male Greenfinch and 1 Raven.
Delamere Forest (N.E. section) :
1 pr of Bullfinches, 1 Sparrowhawk, 1 Buzzard, a family of 4 Treecreepers plus 2 other adults seen nearby, 1 Nuthatch, a newly fledged family of Blackcaps in a bramble patch
and 4 Song Thrushes. Chiffchaffs (4), Blackcaps (3) and a single Willow Warbler were still singing.
This is a belated report as I was asked to keep news quiet until now, I still can't name exact locations but I am itching to share my news, so forgive me for not being specific, but the bird has departed now and isn't a rare species!
A friend of mine who sometimes works on Abbots Moss on my patch offered to take me to several restricted areas that he has access to with his job, but which are strictly no entry for anyone else. I jumped at this of course and we headed off in the general 'Delamere Forest area'. Some of the sites were reminiscent of Dorset & Hampshire heathland and pine forests and were fabulous with massive potential. One site we went to though was to come up trumps for me.
We headed in and he was a bit disappointed as it had quietened down since his last visit a couple of days earlier when he had had a Whinchat, several Wheatears and a few interesting waders. We saw good numbers of Lapwings, Skylarks and Meadow Pipits, all in breeding habitat so fabulous news. I scanned a nearby slope with my bins and couldn't believe what I saw, "I've got a Ring Ouzel" were my next words, expecting the reply, that it had been there for a day or two. But no, this was a new bird for this patch and I'd found it We then scoped the bird, a cracking male, as it fed on short grass on the slope some distance away. Two people 'do' this patch so the other one was rung & they duly left work to twitch my find!! The other birder arrived and we watched the ouzel, I took a couple of record shot pictures at a distance & we left it in peace. The two patch watchers tell me it stayed for a couple more days but is now long gone. Three Wheatears were still present too, but the Ring Ouzel was the star of the show.
All this happened on April 26th and it's a cracking record for this part of Cheshire, now followed by the female at Elton Hall Flash, Sandbach Record, low res picture attached.
Yesterday Monday 24th brief visit on way to hospital appointment, at 2pm were 6 Waxwings on opposite side of road to entrance to Eddisbury Fruit Farm and c. 50 yards uphill (south). After a couple of minutes they flew low SW over the orchards. Strong smell of decaying apples!
Two pair of Mediterranean Gulls seen amongst the Black headed gulls (Blakemere)
-- Edited by Steven Ellis on Sunday 3rd of April 2016 09:16:25 PM
-- Edited by Ian McKerchar on Sunday 3rd of April 2016 09:46:17 PM
hundreds of black headed gulls on blakemere with 12 Mediterranean gulls, 5 common gulls, 3 lesser black backed gulls & 5 herring gulls.
9+ crossbills seen in flight, 2 seen briefly perched on top of pines.
4+ buzzard
4 treecreeper
3 nuthatch
lots of goldcrest around
5 tufted duck
2 gadwall
2 shoveler
1 great crested grebe.
1 Mediterranean gull seen on Blakemere
Blakemere
A good look through the hundreds of Black Headed Gulls but no sign of any Mediterranean Gulls.
12 immature Lesser Black Back & 3 immature Herring Gulls around the Black Head colony. 1 Tufted Duck & 3 Cormorants.
A mother Mallard with a brood of 8 small young. A pair of Greylag and several pairs of Canada Geese.
1 Cormorant was seen diving, I'm surprised that any fish (Except the odd Stickleback or Eel) could survive in the black peaty water?.
Lots of Willow Warblers singing in the young birch/willow thicket around the mere, also 4 Blackcaps and a single Whitethroat. 1 Large Red Damselfly.
Elsewhere in the forest.
Numerous Chiffchaffs singing in the drier forest areas. 1 Sparrowhawk & 2 Buzzards above the forest.
4 Brimstone, 3 Peacock, 2 Orange Tips and 1 Small White butterflies.
3 Mediterranean gulls amongst the many hundreds of black headed gulls, few common & lesser black backed gulls.
at least 12 crossbills
2 singing male blackcaps, 1 seen
2-3 chiffchaffs
4-5 buzzards
1 male mandarin
2 shovelers
8 tufted ducks
2 wigeon
lots of siskins around
several lesser redpolls
nuthatches, treecreepers, goldcrests & great spotted woodpeckers.
40+ crossbills (lifer, finally got common crossbill having already seen two-barred and parrot!!!), very vocal and mobile but managed decent views.
Some brambling present, goldcrest calling, male great spotted woodpecker etc.
+ an astonishing number of great tit...a 30+ tit flock contained all great tits except one blue tit!
Had a nice morning at Delamere Forest today,with the main focal point being a full circular walk of Hatchmere.
There wasn't a great deal on the water itself,with only Coot,Mallard and Moorhen present,but the woodlands that surround the lake itself held both Lesser Spotted Woodpecker and Marsh Tit,although I could only manage to hear both calling,as opposed to seeing them physically.
Apart from those 2 good birds,there was a very good selection of all of the common woodland species,and I eventually managed to complete the morning with 33 species noted.
The forest has turned up some great birds over the years,and I'm really surprised that no one reports any sightings from here on a regular basis.
Cheers Denzil
Found 6 shortly after we arrived despite being assured by the 5 birders - well people with binoculars - already in the car park that they were gone. The birds were actually about 50m away in a tall leafless tree but none of those already there were looking further than the trees in the car park - by the time we left we were counting 12 birds present.
As well as taking berries they all spent some time flycatching from the tall trees.
Given the number of berry trees in the area - there is a nursery growing them as well as the wild ones - it could be that the birds will stay for a while.