Friday, 9 October 2020

Goose and Wildfowl Bonanza

  
An early morning visit to Tayock at Montrose Basin coinciding with the correct tidal stage and a sunny morning, albeit a very low sun to start with. 

All photos and any videos were taken with my Nikon Coolpix P1000 as it was never likely I'd see any birds close in.The rich colours were in the low sunlight, later on the sun was more harsh.

Birds seen over a 3 hour plus period were:
Russian White-fronted Goose (obvious pink bill), 3 Barnacle Geese, 9 Brent Geese (pale-bellied), circa 20,000 Pink-footed Geese, 45+ Pintails, 90 Knot, 60 Dunlin with one leucistic, Wigeon, Teal, Redshank, Shelduck, 3 Great Black-backed Gulls feeding on PF Goose, and a Red Admiral!






More videos on my Flickr pages at the "My Flickr" link above


Brent pale-bellied Geese at Tayock, two adults and an immature, a family group


The two adults


Barnacle Geese, photo taken at 0750 hrs




Pintail drake



I think this is an immature drake, I'll check later



Leucistic Dunlin







Knot



Pink-footed Geese



Carrion Crow, stalks my garden




House Sparrow with a distinct white fleck behind its eye. Sometimes I see something in just the perfect light and pose, so I have to photograph it




Again



Not the ringed Starling but it's still around the garden daily



2 comments:

  1. Interesting that you've had the leucistic Dunlin at Montrose this week. I found one in Invergowrie Bay on 25th September which was assumed to be the same bird seen at Montrose Basin the previous Sunday. I had the Invergowrie Bay bird again on Tuesday this week, so either we have 2 leucistic Dunlin in the area, or the same bird is shuttling between the 2 sites despite the distance between them. Which, I wonder, is more likely?

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  2. Surely two birds, I blame Climate Change!!

    ReplyDelete

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