Of Autumn that is.
  We used to begin our county Winter Atlas surveys after 13th November so I
  always think of that date as the end of autumn. Still, depending upon the
  weather, some tardy birds are still migrating up until the end of the month.
  The Pied Wheatear from my previous post remained faithful to its graffiti
  daubed skate park right up until Saturday 12th November, allowing even the
  most reticent of twitchers time to catch up with it if they so wished.
  On my patch things have been a bit quiet recently though a female
  Merlin across our village, well lit from early morning sunshine on the
  6th was good and even better was the Snow Bunting on the 14th that
  danced low over our garden, calling its lovely tinkling tune all the way. This
  is my 3rd ( I think) garden record. 25 Whooper Swans flew S on 5th
  while 16 Redpolls were in Village Wood the previous day. Ive seen them
  in flight a few times and suspect a couple of Mealies in there but cant clinch
  it.
  Other bits of interest around home were a Water Rail sadly killed on
  the road overnight, having just arrived on its wintering grounds and some big
  fungi on the cricket pitch, known descriptively as
  Macro Mushroom Agaricus urinascens. Apparently this is a
  widespread, but scarce fungi so I was pleased to meet with its oval, tiger bread, form while out walking Peggy.
  
    
      
         
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      | Macro Mushrooms | 
    
  
  On the invertebrate front, the moth trap has been moth balled until the New
  Year. With the rising cost of electricity units per moth well up, its not worth putting it on
  for 13 hours for 2 Angle Shades... The last Butterflies for me were a
  Small Tortoiseshell on 3rd and a Peacock on the 6th.
  I've been on holiday this week, using up annual leave before Christmas. The
  time was to be spent putting the garden to bed for the winter. There has been
  mixed success here with fine Monday and Wednesday utilised but on other days its
  just been too wet and windy.
  When the weather is stormy from the East we all know what that means to an
  East coast patch watcher - Seawatching.
  Today has been really grim. Raining most of the day, barely daylight  and
  blowing a strong Easterly.
  Although an East wind can be good, I prefer a Northerly for seawatching. My
  home spots are just too exposed in this weather, so I headed to Boulmer and
  the safety of the relatively sheltered Seaton Point, where strategically placed caravans make it just about bearable.
  From 09.30am - 11am the count went  - 
  Kittiwake 1300 N ( a gross under estimate with maybe double that in reality).
  Sooty Shearwater 3 late birds taking the 'breeze' in their stride.
  Little Auk 24 N
  Pomarine Skua 3 N
  Arctic Skua 2 N ( these 5 skuas were in one flock)
  Skua sp probably a Long tail but it was too fast and hiding in wave troughs)
  Brent Geese 2 N
  Long tailed Duck 3 drakes N.
  Gannets not counted but a light movement.
Fulmar 2N
  Hopefully there will be more moving in the morning, I'll give it a couple of hours first thing.
  Apologies for the images, I only had my 300mm lens. The pics look black and
  white but they are in full colour, honest!
  
    
      
         
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      | Kittiwakes. | 
    
  
  
    
      
         
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        Three Little Auks of the 24 seen.
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        Squint or click and zoom, these are Long tailed Drakes...
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        Arctic Skua first, then 3 Pomarines, and another Arctic at the tail end.
        Compare the sizes of the Arctic and Pom at the front.
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        Three Pomarine Skuas.
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