Once again I was destined to spend the week working away down south, which meant I spent the second half of bank holiday Monday completing the long and tedious drive necessary to reach Suffolk. However, it was not a complete loss. As with last week, there were options available in the Aire Valley reserves to have a stop and look, which would break up the long journey. This time it was a very dapper Ring-necked Duck drake, which had arrived the previous day at Fairburn Ings. Presumably, this is the same long-staying bird that has been at Old Moor for the months preceding.
From the description, the best place
to view would have been from the hide at Lin Dyke, so that’s where I planned to
go. However, its been a long time since my last visit here, and I helpfully
overshot the car park there. This actually worked out great, as a few hundred
metres further up the road a group of four Fairburn regulars were scoping the
New Flash from the roadside. I quickly pulled over and asked if this was the
best location to view the Ring-necked Duck from, and they promptly pointed me
in its direction, not too far away diving in the company of a group of
Pochards.
Over the next half an hour or so, I watched the bird move slowly closer to me, before it once again began to move away. The light was not in our favour, but the bird itself was great, a really smart drake. This is my second time seeing this species in the UK, the other also being in West Yorkshire, on Anglers CP. There was not much of a supporting cast, it being late in the afternoon, but a flyover Marsh Harrier and Red Kite are always appreciated.
RSPB Fairburn Ings: Greylag Goose, Canada Goose, Mute Swan, Northern Shoveler, Gadwall, Mallard, Common Pochard, Ring-necked Duck, Tufted Duck, Great Crested Grebe, Common Wood Pigeon, Common Swift, Common Moorhen, Eurasian Coot, Northern Lapwing, Black-headed Gull, Great Cormorant, Little Egret, Western Marsh Harrier, Red Kite, Eurasian Magpie, Western Jackdaw, Carrion Crow, Common Reed Warbler, Common Whitethroat, Common Starling, Common Reed Bunting,
No comments:
Post a Comment