Wednesday, 30 October 2013
September 2013 round up
It is 6th September & I am walking around the Emirates Palace Hotel. The weather is suprisingly OK for this time of year, hot yes, but not too humid. Birding is a bit slow, but 2 Common Swifts fly over, then a third bird which shows all the characteristics of pekenensis race. 3 Tree Pipits; a lutea (Yellow-headed) Wagtail; a Spotted Flycatcher, a Marsh Warbler & a Clamorous Reed Warbler & 2 Common Whitethroats. And that was about it, definitely slow going!
I then drove over to the east coast (much quicker & easier these days thanks to the new road) for an afternoon pelagic off Kalba. 10 Wilson’s Storm Petrels; one each of Arctic & Long-tailed Skuas (both distant); 2 Brown Noddies & 3 Lesser Noddies. However, the most amazing spectacle was the assembly of over 2000+ Red-necked Phalaropes in the evening. They were swarming around, at one point being chased by both Skuas!
On the early morning of 7th I was at Fujairah National Dairy Farm.It was extremely hot & humid and quite slow going. Best were: 2 Common Swift; 2 Broad-billed Sandpipers; 3 Tree Pipit; 11 Citrine & 2 Grey Wagtails; 2 Variable Wheatears; 2 Common Whitethroat & a flock of 20 Rose-coloured Starlings along the road. Dibba Harbour held an adult Brown Noddy sat on a dhow.
I drove south along the coast to Fujairah Port Beach: the place was teaming with terns, well over 4,000 birds. 2 Brown Noddies & an adult Lesser Noddy were fishing offshore.
On 13th I was back at Fujairah Port Beach looking for Mark’s 2 Roseate Terns from a few days before. It seemed that most of the UAE birding community were there! I quickly found an immature Roseate but it flew off! This happened a second time, as it was flushed. We then had it sat on the beach & an adult came down to feed it! Amazing stuff! Some photos were taken, but I had to run back to the car to get my camera & in the meantime the adult bird flew off, not to be seen again! A Sooty Tern was literally flying around our heads over the beach (Khalifa had found it a few days earlier) & an Arctic Skua was offshore.
The afternoon pelagic off Kalba was a little quiet, with 9 Wilson’s Storm Petrels; 7 Brown & a Lesser Noddy which perched on a buoy, giving really fantastic views.
It was dawn & really humid at FNDF on 14th. Walking the fields without shade was torture! The birding was OK though: 35 White Storks were feeding like crazy on the many grasshoppers in the fields; 5 Collared Pratincoles were hawking overhead; a Namqua Dove flew by; 6 European Rollers; 6 Greater Short-toed Larks; 3 Tree Pipit; 12 Yellow & 8 Citrine Wagtails; a high total of 5 Variable Wheatears; 1 Red-backed & 4 Turkestan Shrikes; a Siberian Stonechat & a Pale Rockfinch.
A quick look at Dibba Harbour revealed an adult Lesser Noddy which had replaced the previous weeks Brown Noddy! It looks like a good year for Lesser Noddies this year.
An extensive search of the terns on Fujairah Port Beach revealed an adult Roseate Tern & possibly an adult in more winter type plumage.
Monday, 28 October 2013
August 2013 round up
After Carol's funeral, I had an overwhelming urge to get away, so I hired a car & went north. First I went to Thorne, for a night in the pub with old friends, followed by a day out on Thorne Moors (my old stomping ground, when I was a kid). The weather and the company of Bryan & Gary were superb. We saw Marsh Harrier and Peregrine as well as 2 Common Buzzards. But I really didn't go for the birding, I just wanted to experience an old familiar place again among friends. I really enjoyed the day, it brought me back, closer to nature.
I arrived back in Abu
Dhabi on 11th August, alone. It feels very strange!
The wide expanse of Thorne Moors.
It is pretty flat around here,
so an kind of height advantage is readily used!
Edge of the Will Pits area.
Bryan & me.
Gary, looking very similar
to one of the Gnomes of Dulwich!
From Thorne I drove a short distance up the motorway to Beverley. Here I spent the night with Martin & Amanda. It was good to see them again, but under such sad circumstances all of us were a bit subdued.
Amanda, with a friend!
Aaron
Antonia.
I then quickly moved on to Spurn & met up with a host of old friends. Some I hadn't seen for quite a while! I had a great three days here just mooching around & doing a little birding, but nothing too serious.
Roe Deer at Kilnsea, near Spurn.
Finally I went to see Jim & Ange & we had a long chat in the garden. I knew something was wrong when I saw Ange at Carol' funeral. But that was not the time to pry. Ange has cancer, she was diagnosed a year ago. She looked thin & ill, but her spirits seemed OK. I was later to find out that appearances can be very deceptive. I had a day out at Flamborough Head & nearby Bempton Cliffs. Most of the seabirds had moved on by now but many Gannets were still breeding. There are over 2,000 pairs here these days!
Looking north from Flamborough Head.
The famous seabird cliffs at Bempton.
Heavily cropped.
Back home in my kitchen,
with the fridge magnet that Antonia
had made for me!
My first birding trip is
with Simon on 16th. We do the night drive across to Dibba
& work the FNDF at dawn. The weather is surprisingly OK for this time
of year. Hot yes, but not unbearably humid. 41 Blue-cheeked Bee-eaters are
feeding above the fields; a Common Swift arrows overhead. We work the bushes
& the fields, not a lot around, but we do find early Turkestan &
Woodchat Shrikes. We take breakfast on the Goat Farm Track & are rewarded
with first a Crested Honey Buzzard over
a distant field & then a European Honey Buzzard soaring above our
heads. Simon gets some decent shots. I had my camera on a funny setting (my mistake) so all my shots were overexposed.
European Honey Buzzard
All photos courtesy of Simon.
Wilson's Petrels.
On 23rd I am in the Hamraniyah Fields. One
small area is very wet & provides a good feeding area for a variety of
waders, the best being 2 Collared Pratincoles; an amazing 52 Little Ringed
Plovers; 6 Little & 10 Temminck’s Stints. The FNDF holds a Crested
Honey Buzzard; 3 Wood Sandpipers; 2 Common Swift; 6 European Rollers; 5 Citrine
Wagtails & a Rose-coloured Starling. I stay on after dark looking for
Egyptian Nightjars but have no luck. However, on the way out I flush a very
nice Pallid Scops Owl from the track & it perches in a bush very
nicely.
The next morning I am
again back at the dairy farm. Mostly the same birds but 10 Citrine; a
Black-headed Wagtail; 2 newly arrived Variable Wheatears & 2 Rose-coloured
Starlings. I check out Dibba Harbour & find an Arctic Skua & an
adult Brown Noddy.
I am working in Jebel
Dhanna midweek so the evening of 27th sees me teaming up
with Khalifa & looking for migrants around the hotel & marsh: 6 Lesser
Grey Shrikes were all adults in full summer plumage at the marsh. There was a
Marsh Warbler in trees near the hotel. We then moved on to the Ruwais Water
Treatment Plant. Birding was quite good with a Purple Heron; 2
Black-crowned Night Herons; an early Shoveler; a Marsh Harrier; 15 European
Turtle Doves and a Namaqua Dove.
On the 30th we
were offshore from Kalba again: 35 Wilson’s Storm Petrels; 172 Red-necked
Phalaropes; 8 brown Noddy and 2 first summer/immature Lesser Noddies.The next morning on 31st
I was working the FNDF again: a Pin-tailed Snipe; 2 Common Swifts; 2
European Rollers; 2 Grey & 11 Citrine Wagtails; 2 Common Whitethroat &
18 Rose-coloured Starlings. However Jacky & I had a late breakfast on the
Goat Farm Track & it paid dividends big time, with an adult Red-headed
Bunting (coming into full winter plumage) & a Black-headed Bunting. A
great way to finish off the month!
Red headed Bunting.
Photo courtesy of Mark Smiles,
who photographed it the next day.
Sunday, 27 October 2013
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