Sunday, 15 March 2026

Let It Rain, Let It Rain, Let It Rain

 Since my previous post we have had copious amounts of rain. Last Monday everything was drying out nicely, but a downpour overnight put paid to that and the fields were once again under water. Here we are on Sunday and more rain has fallen to swell the steadily growing puddles.
 
At the end of February, Yorkshire Water's reservoirs were at 99% capacity and I can't imagine that they've reduced much in the 15 days since that figure was published. I'm still not putting any money on there not being a shortage come August 😉
 
I said we had lots of Roe Deer sightings in the previous update, and things have moved onwards and upwards since that. I saw 12 yesterday morning in groups of 8 and 4.
Eight Roe Deer
Four Roe Deer
Roe Deer in Heslop's, but what is the bird in the background?
With longer days the  local flora is growing in abundance and we are getting a bit more colour with the bursting open of Blackthorn flowers. We should have more hedges in blossom than we do given the hundreds of yards of hedgerow we have hereabouts.  Most trees and shrubs in hedges only produce flowers, nuts and berries (such as haws and sloes) on year-old twigs, so cutting hedges every year means that they provide little food for insects, birds and mammals. Research suggests that a three year cycle of cutting works best.
 
Blackthorn blossom appears before the leaves (leaves before blossom on Hawthorn)
Bird song is now heard each morning (volume and numbers very much weather-dependent) and Yellowhammers are joining Dunnock, Robin, Chaffinch, Song Thrush, Great and Blue Tits plus  (latterly) Wren. Their song comes in at number two in my chart of hit makers, with Song Thrush number one of the early Spring singers.
 
Yellowhammer
We still have the long-staying good numbers of Scaup at the Mere with 12 or 13 seen most days. Even without a scope I had six yesterday morning just off first field.
 
Six Scaup off first field
I was watching a Treecreeper feeding on a tree trunk the other day and clearly saw how it put its head on one side to get its bill under the bark leaves to extract insects. It adaps its feeding style depending on what species of tree it is feeding on.

Treecreeper with head on one side to get its bill under the bark

We had a clear blue sky today and it makes the views so much more beautiful than the usual steely grey. 

Monday, 9 March 2026

Spring, plus Red-necked Grebe and Smew

 Time rolls on and spring is gradually uncoiling itself. It's beautiful to watch each day as plants slowly emerge and birds wake up to start their breeding cycle. Gradually, very gradually, green expands to overtake the dominant brown, "softly, softly, catchee monkey" as Lord Baden-Powell quoted from the Ashanti origins of the phrase.
 
Nettles
Lords and Ladies
Hogweed
Cleavers
Lesser Celandine providing much needed colour
 All these plants and more will grow into the greenery that provides so much of the back drop and support for spring and summer, without which the main player's roles would be severely diminished - and in some cases they would disappear altogether.
 
All well and good, but has anything exciting been seen? Well, not exactly exciting, but certainly expected and welcomed with open arms when they did appear.
 
A Red-necked Grebe dropped in last Saturday and drew several birders to visit the Mere to see it once word got out. As usual these days the light was poor but a few shots from distance were taken:
This and three below - Red-necked Grebe on the Mere
 
 A red-head Smew has also been seen since Saturday (although a sighting was also recorded on Wednesday but no follow ups). I got it this morning at the hide in mist and grim light, but I'll take what I can get right now.
 
Red-head Smew at the hide today
As noted above

Siskins are still being sighted and heard in small numbers around the Mere - this one was with a few others in Heslop's copse last week.
Siskin
As you can probably tell from the photo I had to over-expose the image by a lot (+2 stops) to get anything at all apart from a silhouette as the bird was back-lit. It wasn't sunny (surprise surprise) but it was bright enough to cause problems - I like a challenge every now and again, but every day is getting a bit wearing 😂😂
 
Common Buzzards are joining the other birds in getting together with potential partners, and last Tuesday when the sun was out there were five of them soaring above Wassand.
One of five Common Buzzards (note the blue sky!)
Common Buzzard
A personal favourite bird, the Treecreeper, has become less and less common around my local patch. Three years ago I found three Treecreeper nests in spring and followed each one to the end of the breeding season. Two were succesful but one failed as the dead tree it was in fell down (after the nest had been predated by a Woodpecker). The host tree of one of the other nests also fell down a few months later. Subsequently I have seen far fewer Treecreepers through each year. 
 
These photos are of a bird found near Weatherhill last week. 
Treecreeper
Roe deer are being seen more and more and I had eight the other day along the south side of the Mere.
Six of eight Roe deer
One of the other two

I'm hoping for better weather and light in the coming weeks and I know it will arrive, it just seems a distant light at the end of the tunnel right now 😉

Monday, 2 March 2026

Meteorological Spring is Here

Meteorologists generally define four seasons in many climatic areas: spring, summer, autumn (fall), and winter. These are determined by the values of their average temperatures on a monthly basis, with each season lasting three calendar months. The three warmest months are by definition summer, the three coldest months are winter, and the intervening gaps are spring and autumn. Meteorological spring can therefore, start on different dates in different regions.

In the USA and UK spring months are March, April, and May.

Of these bee species we have at least three here in Hornsea - Buff-tailed Bumblebee, Early Bumblebee and Tree Bumblebee. I haven't seen the other two, but you never know...

 

Saturday, 14 February 2026

The Sun At Last

Last Sunday I walked along the cliffs in beautiful sunshine (see later).
 
It's been almost a week since we saw the sun last.
 
Monday to Friday was just grim every day - rain/drizzle, Easterlies or North easterlies, deep cloud cover making everything grey and dark. I didn't even go out walking on Thursday and Friday as I was just fed up of having rain on my glasses and not seeing anything of note anyway.
 
So this update covers just last Sunday (8 Feb) and today (14 Feb).
 
A walk through Rolston and back on the cliffs last Sunday boosted my mood as the day was sunny and dry with minimal wind. There were some good birds in Rolston but none were obliging enough to hang around for my camera to capture them. These included a singing Chiff Chaff (I assume it was an over-wintering bird rather than a very early migrant) a hooting Tawny Owl and a noisy Jay.
 
Along the cliff tops Skylarks and Meadow Pipits were moving in good numbers - all southward. Several hundred gulls were bobbing around on the sea, but I couldn't pick out anything other than the usual mix of our common species.
 
Looking North to Hornsea
Great Black-backed Gull and two youngsters wanting food on the beach
Meadow Pipit
Mipit
Mipit
Skylark singing over South Cliffs
Skylark  (and the six below)

Fast forward over the rest of the week (apart from one photo of the Oystercatcher) and we come to today.

Oystercatcher at the Mere 

Today was so much better, I breathed a sigh of relief this morning as I stepped out of the house into sunshine and no rain. I walked along Southorpe Road and past Weatherhill and then came back, as the ground is so wet that wellies are a better choice of footwear to go any further - I'll do that tomorrow morning. 

Lots of birds were singing, with Blue and Great Tits being particularly active and Dunnocks out-singing Robins. Three Song Thrushes were singing too but not on my Mere BirdTrack patch.

Blue Tits possibly pairing up already
Blue sky!?!? I'd forgotten what it looked like
Singing Dunnock
I cut short my walk in the morning as I had some work to do at home and went out in the afternoon, but only down to first field at the Mere - again the ground is too wet without wellies.
 
We've had up to 17 Scaup in the last ten days or so and I saw seven trhis afternoon.
Male and female Scaup
Female Scaup
Two male Scaup
Well, that's it for this update. A poor week really, although the Great Northern Diver stayed at the Mere and was seen again this afternoon. I am hopeful that next week will be better 😀