Saturday, 18 April 2026

East Haven birdlife survey April 2026

   
From the top down, my East Haven Webs Count for the BTO, Osprey, Black Swan and Ruff at the Lurgies, not much at St Cyrus, and a Swallow photo from Mains of Usan.


White Wagtail from my Webs at East Haven


Ringed Plover


Bar-tailed Godwit


Great black-backed Gull ringed yellow X-068


Redshanks and a Turnstone


Curlew


Redshank


Teal, male left, female right


Oystercatcher




Goldfinch at the Lurgies, Montrose Basin


Shelduck drake


Song Thrush in the car park


Osprey


Red Kite


Ruff with a Redshank, near to the Slunks


Whooper Swans in the Slunks


The first Canada Geese I've seen this year, and an accidental capture of the Black Swan top left




Fulmar at St Cyrus


A "wabbit" looking female Stonechat


Two Stock Doves appeared to be fighting high above the clifftops, it continued for around 5 minutes



Swallow on the wires at Mains of Usan

Saturday, 11 April 2026

Spitfire and P-8 Poseidon, Auchmithie - and some wildlife

   
A look back on the last week where I didn't travel far, with photos from East Haven and Hatton, Auchmithie, the first insects of the year in Olive's garden, and the Lurgies at Montrose Basin. 

I suppose the highlight was the fly past of a Spitfire and Boeing P-8 Poseidon which were touring the country. They were scheduled to fly from Leuchars to Lossiemouth (I think), when I saw them the P8 looked to be checking visibility on it's own when it flew a few loops, it then did two more passes with the Spitfire in formation. A separate plane GSOL Spitfire.com was also seen, assumed to be filming? Olive has a tenuous connection with Spitfires, her Mum worked on Merlin engines during the war, could you imagine young women today.....

The garden insects were photographed on my P1000, a sighting of what appeared to be a Hummingbird Hawk Moth wasn't photographed as I couldn't keep up with it as it flew over neighbours gardens. Info from Butterfly Conservation, click here 

Some insect videos, something I don't usually attempt. Note ID's are "best attempts" for some of the potter, mining and nomads...

Greenfinches      Peacock Butterfly      Ruby Tiger Moth      Common Carder Bee Queen      Gooden's Nomad Bee


Wheatear male at the Dowrie end of the Hatton field



Skylark



Curlew



Linnet male



Meadow Pipit



Goldfinch collecting sheeps wool from the barbed wire fence for this years nest



Stonechat male at East Haven



Spitfire and Boeing P-8 Poseidon Auchmithie


Fulmar



Puffins, 14 or 15 counted at low tide



Rock Pipit on territory near the harbour




A Peacock Butterfly in Olive's garden



Common Carder Bee Queen



Gooden's Nomad Bee



Buff-tailed Bumblebee Queen



Honey Bee



Seven-spot Ladybird



Wolf Spider species unknown


Ruby Tiger Moth newly emerged



The very clever and adaptable Rooks have found how to get the fat balls, the feeder hangs on a long string and one bird tried to raise the feeder into it's reach by pulling the string up, the string was too long. They've settled for precarious wing beating and hammering the fat balls to knock the fat to the lawn



Still two pairs of Yellowhammers



Five Shelduck drakes chasing a female at the Lurgies



Gadwall drake



Red-breasted Merganser male


The only one of 14 Black-tailed Godwits showing summer plumage coming in

Monday, 6 April 2026

Redshank with "Bling"

   
The Redshank below was ringed at Welwick Saltmarsh on the north bank of the Humber estuary (53.6494, 0.0169) on 28th February 2025 when it was aged as an adult.  This is the first re-sighting.

Photo derived from a video frame














Redshank, right blue over red and metal, left green over black flag Maryton Ditch   

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