We are likely to be missing these two species right now :-( A 1st Summer Med Gull at Venus Pool in 2014...
Never an easy bird at Venus Pool but with the Black-Headed Gull colony building up, this 2cy (Ist Summer) Mediterranean Gull appears to be hanging around!
It's quite obliging too (when present!) but never in the feather detail range.....
Attracting curiosity from the Black-heads!
And always standing out from the crowd....
The closest approach.
Underwing flight shots.....
Never easy to land on an 'occupied' island!
Maybe somewhere else then?
Eventually allowed to settle and doze the afternoon away!
We could do with another one to settle down as a partnership?
Plus an unseasonally snowy scene at Titterstone Clee in 2008 and guess what...
Early April is Ring Ouzel time in Shropshire. Any of the highest peaks are in with a shout but Titterstone Clee is by far the 'easiest' and usually most dependable site.
The weather forecast was dire with strong Arctic Northerly winds in prospect and we could see from a distance the snow covered heights!! Amazingly however, it was probably as calm as I can remember up the top. We set to work and by a stroke of good fortune decided to concentrate the car park area first (this was not our original aim!)
We had walked round to the scree slopes which looked pretty treacherous given the snow cover so we retraced our footsteps (easy in the snow!!) back to the car park. As we rounded the final corner, a cry went up from Andy "Thrush"! Yes, flying across in front of us was not just any ordinary thrush but a Ring Ouzel!! An adult female. It settled on the slope about 50m above us, flew a bit higher, a quick look round and then was off up onto the plateau and out of sight! There were literally just a few seconds for strictly record shots only.
What - MORE Wheatears? Well they looked good in the snow and males were predominant, guite a few migrant birds without colour rings. Note the last pic - a juicy worm under that snow cover!
Black Hill was tried for Goshawk but it was 'no show' sadly. There was a distant Red Kite on view however. Then, driving through the centre of Craven Arms an emergency stop was needed - I'd spotted yet another Red Kite overhead! (This was my fourth Shropshire Kite in the space of eight days) The locals were wondering who the crazy guy with the rocket launcher was and someone tried to put me off by tooting their horn (I was parked legally off the road for once!) but I still got the shot!
The day ended where it began, at Venus Pool. A solitary Common Sandpiper present all day plus a pair of Wheatear in the paddock off the causeway were the highlights here.