No sooner do you say that North Ronaldsay is devoid of megas (see Sept mystery bird answers) and within minutes an Eye-browed Thrush turns up.
In the hope that lightning will strike twice could I just mention that Greater Manchester has been devoid of megas (barring the un-twitchable Rose-coloured Starling) for quite a while now.
Cheers, John
no sooner had Paul found it and he was winging the photos to prove it directly to my computer! My how we laughed at the coincidence of it all, well Paul did anyway. Im not generally an envious man and finding my own Eye-browed in China was mega enough but the species remains so high as a wanted find on my personal UK self-found list that I couldn't help the teeth gnashing when I heard about it.
No sooner do you say that North Ronaldsay is devoid of megas (see Sept mystery bird answers) and within minutes an Eye-browed Thrush turns up.
In the hope that lightning will strike twice could I just mention that Greater Manchester has been devoid of megas (barring the un-twitchable Rose-coloured Starling) for quite a while now.
Sandhill Crane left South Ronaldsay at 10.12am heading south then over Brora following the A9 at 12.25, thats 70 miles in just over 2 hours. Amazing stuff watching it being tracked down the coast, wonder where is next for the beauty.
Lets hope it goes straight to Holland without stopping, oh wait its actually heading our way! Wheres it going to turn up next?
Had an excellent weekend in Orkney. Bumped into Phil Rhodes at John O Groats he just arrived in time for the ferry but he hadnt booked his car on, luckily they let him on. Funniest moment was the convoy from the car ferry to the Sandhill Crane a journey of approx. 3 miles, 30 cars speeding down the main road on South Ronaldsay, locals wondering what was going on. It was follow my leader that went wrong, the lead car had no idea where he was going and we all ended up stuck down a single track dead end road to a farm, luckily we were in the middle of the convoy so managed to turn round and were on site soon after watching the Sandhill Crane.
Another humorous moment was at the B&B on Saturday night, the owner said he was going out for the evening and the door would be open for us to get in after we went to the local for food etc. But when we got back to the place it was locked up and in complete darkness, no owner in sight and we couldnt get in! One of our group disappeared round the back of the building only to emerge a few minutes later to say "ive kicked the back door in" well we couldnt believe it, "youve done what?!" we replied. But it transpired he was only winding us up the owner had in fact left the kitchen door open for us but had only forgot to tell us!
Bird wise, too much to mention really, apart from the Sandhill Crane, 2 smart adult American Golden Plovers were particularly obliging. As you would expect at this time of year, lots of birds on the move, with good numbers of Pink footed geese arriving and flying south, ducks much in evidence with Wigeon everywhere, plus Scaup, 2 Surf Scoters & Long Tailed Ducks. Also several Slavonian Grebes, 60+ Black Guillemots, all 3 Diver species, Bonxies, Hen Harriers, Merlin & Short Eared Owl. Gutting that the Yellow Billed Cuckoo didnt make it till the morning, thats 2 ive dipped now
One of the best twitches ever, not as good as the Wallcreeper twitch though
-- Edited by Simon Warford on Tuesday 29th of September 2009 01:36:09 PM
Looks like the Sandhill Crane is on the move,its now on mainland Scotland,makes it a lot easier to twitch,it could be on its way southward
it's quite interesting keeping track of it's adventure via the birdguides website, although I am supposed to be working. Its certain to pass through Greater Manchester
-- Edited by Rob Thorpe on Tuesday 29th of September 2009 12:49:15 PM
Many folk didn't sleep for two nights getting there and back . A couple of photo's of the crane now in the 'out of county' photo gallery . Myself & Tom McK spent an hour at the Gloup car park 13.30-14.30 on Friday, grilling mobile GP's, only a few metres from the Y-b Cuckoo that nobody knew about, news came out when we got on the returning 17.00 ferry
The NE beckons once more with a TAIGA FLYCATCHER on Fetlar, Shetland, present for it's 6th day (3rd British record) ferry departs Aberdeen 19.00 this evening.
-- Edited by Pete Hines on Monday 28th of September 2009 11:09:48 AM
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Gm birders have landed! the assault pary led by Warfy has gone into the wilderness, the Crane is still there,however.............all contact has gone dead.... radio silence......
Paul, I understand Tom Mckinney was one of the lucky few who saw the Albatross today, thats quite a "back up" bird or would that surpass the Crane? think it would for me.
bigger than the recent murrelet would you say Simon? Hope so, because I dipped the murrelet, will make me feel a little more consolable about that incident!
Paul, undoubtedly one of biggest mega's of recent times! Ive seen Tufted Puffins in Vancouver they are great birds, it was seen well by 6 birders and photographs can be seen at
I lazily nipped down to Farmoor Res, Oxon for the Chilidonias trio this afternoon (30th Aug 09) and was well chuffed . The juvenile American Black Tern, juvenile White-winged Black Tern and juvenile Eurasian Black Tern all together. Prob could have got some decent digi-scope perched shots/vid clips if I hadn't left the camera in the car
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Statistically it is of course a mega, but Blue-cheeked Bee-eater and Cowbird on the same 'mega' thread, which one would you rather see especially as Cowbird doesn't even have wings with which to carry itself across the Atlantic. And to think, in some terms it is a 'better' bird than the Bee-eater
Sounds like it could be twitchable but after being caught and caged for a few hours (where it got agitated) I wouldn't be suprised if it 'did one' and vanished overnight. Weather conditions overnight are set to be partially cloudy, chilly and little wind. Good luck to those who brave it! I hope it does a White-crowned Sparrow on us again and sticks it out until March. Henry.
Rob- a good laugh for someone! I think not, this type of action is disgraceful, and they should be ashamed, ,not everyone is a cautious as Warfy and as soon as the news is out, they,re off. I can think of a number of occasions where birds may have been missed by waiting around, Belted Kingfisher for one.
Years ago a stuffed bird was photographed in a field and that caused alot of trouble and strife for all concerned.
Mistakes I can live with, Grosbeak spring to mind, but not this. bang out of order
Indeed - a good laugh for someone, but not those who took time off work or travelled long distances (Scotland for example) to try and re-find it.
Not the first hoax, nor the last I fear.
This sort of thing puts huge pressure on those of us that share our rare birds, the likes of Ian that provide information, and the info services that most of us rely on.
Luckily I went NE and picked up the gull on Saturday, seemingly just in time!
Stellar's Eider off Lleyn Peninsular (although possibly only last weekend for latter).
Rob, it would appear the Stellar's Eider was in fact a hoax, the photo was found to be taken in 2006 in Finland An identical picture can be found easy enough on google images. Always useful to wait for confirmation I find. One thing is for sure the gm Eider was real.
Photos on Surfbirds amd Birdguides look pretty conclusive - and there's a useful thread on BirdForum that seems to suggest little doubt from those experienced in the species.
I'm hoping it stays around at least a week, after a few days off, family and work commitments keep me closer to home for a while....