Monday, July 21, 2025

One good Tern deserves...

 ...yes, another.

On Friday, Druridge and East Chevington played host to a moulting adult White winged Black Tern for the day. Luckily for me I was able to drop in on my way home from work. Even though I only had my scope in the car ( must leave a pair of bins in there), the bird was easy to get as it dip fed around East Chev North Pool.

This site is THE place in the county to find WWBT from May to August with birds being noted not annually but certainly every other year or so. I've seen a few here over the years.

Just a shame the Caspian had not returned....


 

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

A flurry...

 ...of bird activity in recent days in the county.

First of all a Night Heron ( ok, Black crowned for goodness sake) was found at Marden Quarry Whitley Bay, while a Caspian Tern was briefly at East Chevington.

Ive only ever seen one Night Heron in the county and have never seen Caspian Tern here so I was on alert.

As I was at work, half the way to Whitley Bay yesterday I thought it was worth a lunchtime trip into the 'burbs' for the Heron. It was a doddle to get although it was mostly obscured as it roosted in a willow on an island in the pond. Still,it gave great scope views and did occasionally crawl about the bush a bit while yawning before nodding back off the sleep. I gave it an hour then left for work.

I had just got back to the office when news came of the Caspian Tern back at East Chev. Unfortunately I had a 4pm office appointment so couldnt get away til a bit later but intended to drop in on my way home. Its a very short detour.  Work finished at 5pm so I checked the WhatsApp messages. Bugger, the tern flew S at 4.30pm. Hey ho.

Back home, 14 miles N of East Chev and didnt the tern turn up at Cresswell then back at East Chevington again. After work and driving about a bit, I couldnt really be arsed with another 30 miles round trip only for it to fly off again while I was on route. I should have really as it remained at Chev until 8.14pm when it flew south.

Never mind, I might finish work a bit earlier today and go down to Chev on spec in case it comes back in at high tide...It has not been seen so far today...

Black crowned Night Heron, Marden Quarry, Whitley Bay.

 

Monday, July 14, 2025

Its all a frenzy.


 This weekend has been another sunny and warm one, though not to heat wave levels experienced elsewhere. The North Northumberland coast doesn't do heatwaves.

Over the last week or so, the patch has had a taste of the Mediterranean Gull influx that seems to be a thing across the country. Not big numbers but these are still a scarce bird here so any at all is good. 

06/07/25 Med Gull first summer N along the coast.

12/07/25 1 adult summer plumage and 2 first summer birds N along the coast.

13/07/25 2 adult summer birds flew N straight over our village, calling.

Not bad.

On Saturday I had a short seawatch from here 6.30pm - 7.30pm. Its a handy spot as its only a five minute walk up the lane and across the field to view.

Sea passage was slow but local birds on the sea gave something to look at - 

Puffin 358+ the commonest bird, scattered all along the view, close in to about half way out in small rafts.

Goosander 6, Whimbrel 1, Arctic Tern 61+, Common Tern 52+, Sandwich Tern 15+, 1 Little Tern N  Manx Shearwater 10 N , and around the field were 5 Skylarks, 32+ Sand Martins sitting on fence, 1 Chiffchaff, 1 Whitethroat and a juv Stonechat.

Last night, Sunday I did the same as above from 6pm - 7pm.

There were fewer birds but a large frenzy in the video above was good. 3 Roseate Terns were new for the year, 2 Manx Shearwaters N and the 2 adult Med Gulls mention above flew N over the village.

Early in the morning a juv Sedge Warbler was just over our garden wall. I dont see them around the garden very much so that was nice. 3 Chiffchaffs were by our shed too, looked like a family party. 

Apart from the birds, 2 Hedgehogs were in the garden on Saturday night too, a second brood Comma was on the kitchen wall by the window on Saturday teatime too.


The moth trap has been on - 

Dingy Footman in good numbers.

Dioryctria abietella

Lesser Wax Moth

Plenty of Lobesia abscisana

Ruby Tiger

White Satin.



  


Monday, July 07, 2025

Bit of a catch up....

 Time for a catch up about what has been happening on the local patches.

22nd June 2025

Overnight on 22nd, a thunder storm broke the spell of warmer weather. 

In the morning we took a walk through one of our neglected upland patches, Corby Woods, to the Pond to look for dragonflies. Unfortunately the weather was overcast and breezy so it was an Odonata no-show apart from a couple of Large Red and Common Blue Damselflies but we did see a few things of interest.

 Butterflies were undaunted by the weather. We saw 3 Large Skipper, 7 Red Admiral, 6 Speckled Wood, 1 Small Tortoiseshell, 4 Ringlet, 1 Small Skipper and  1 Common Blue, while Moths included 10+ Brown China Mark, an aquatic breeding moth around the pond, and a Bordered White.

Large Skipper

Ringlet

Small Skipper

A few birds were also added to the notebook – 4 Crossbills, 4 Redpolls, 3 Tree Pipits, 9 Willow Warbler, 1 Buzzard and 2 Garden Warblers, one of which was unusually showy. It seemed to mob us as we walked past so there may have been a nest of newly fledged young nearby.


Garden Warbler mobbing us on the path so we moved along.

The last week of June at home had ups and downs. The down just about out weighing the up!

28th June 2025.

We were coming back through our village with the dog when we bumped into a family of Spotted Flycatchers. This was the first local breeders here for about a decade so it was great to see them. My first thought was how have I missed the adults when I am out several times every day here? All I can think is that they have been in the grounds of the Old Rectory, a place without access.



Spotty Fly family, with adult at the top.

A Peregrine was seen on a couple of days too, once low overhead carrying prey of some kind, looked like a young Jackdaw maybe?

Now, on to the downside. Tim Dean the Northumberland County Recorder advised that a visitor to the area from Lincs had seen and photographed a female Honey Buzzard coming in-off the sea at Seahouses Farm at 11am this morning! Ive never seen one in the county and it is 30 years since my last in the UK, so that one smarts a bit...A first for my patch.

 29th June 2025

After a short visit to the Aln Estuary first thing where it was nice to see a brood of 3 Avocet chicks teetering around their pool, a sight that would have been considered unthinkable here only 10 years ago we moved up to Alnwick to look for White letter Hairstreaks.

We didn’t have to look far. As we parked beside the Denwick Bridge bottle banks, 3 were flitting around the top of an elm on the edge of the car park but they stayed up top while we were there. 

Downstream, through the wood a damp field corner was home to a pair of Broad bodied Chasers that gave great views when the male was pestering the egg laying female. A few Banded Demoiselle were on the river.





Back home, a Hummingbird Hawk-moth was nectaring on the valerian especially planted for the purpose.


Hummingbird Hawk-moth.

1st July 2025

Let the Seawatching commence...
An hour at Cullernose Point this evening in torrential rain, never been so pleased to have the fishing brolly. 61 Manx Shearwater N, 1 Puffin, 71 Sandwich Tern, 1 Little Tern, 4 Arctic Tern, 22 Common Scoter, 1 Whimbrel, 6 Lesser black backed Gulls. Not earth shattering but it is always good to make a start.

6th July 2025

The morning started with a Raven calling from Hips Heugh outside our garden.

I headed off toe Seaton Point to wait for John. While loitering I had good views of an immature Peregrine hunting the 300 Linnets in the weedy field, a male Kestrel and a Barn owl hunting too.
We wandered to the bench on Seaton Point and put the morning in watching the tide back in.
In calmish conditions we had - 
 
Shelduck 16 inc with 2 broods of 6 and 8.
Goosander 2 N
Golden Plover 3 sum plum on the rocks
Whimbrel 2
Bar tailed Godwit 2 S
Common Sandpiper 1 on the rocks
Dunlin 2
Puffin many, 50+ all over the place.
Lesser black backed Gulls 13 N
Roseate Tern 12 N
Sandwich Tern 111 N
Arctic Tern 5 N
Common Tern 4 N 
Manx Shearwater 17 N
Sedge Warbler 1
Whitethroat 9+   


Mothing update - 

Few Dark Swordgrass this week.

Zeiraphera isertana a first for me.

Monochroa ctytisella

Sand Dart

Cydia fagiglandana

Freyers Pug

Large Twin Spot Carpet

Rhigognostis incarnatella, a pair of them.

Crocidosema plebejana about 5th for the county.

Standard and dark forms Slender Brindle.