Today turned into an excellent day out birding across Halifax with Matt Broadbent. The day started off well with a pleasant morning of thrush migration over Soil Hill, but it only turned into a day out when news broke that the Salvonian Grebe which had been seen on the canal at Todmorden a couple of days previously, but had then gone AWOL, had been relocated on Lee Dam just above the town.
I headed down there
and upon arrival we had the grebe absolutely no problem at all. The reservoir
is not large at all, and the Grebe was quite happy to come in close in shore in
order to chase fish, sometimes feeding almost directly under us. In the hour we
spent there we saw it catch at least two Perch, although it also spent a
considerable amount of time asleep in the middle of the albeit small water body.
Having seemingly missed out on this bird when it couldn’t be relocated on the
Canal, it was a very pleasant surprise to bump into it again here.
With the weather
pleasant, and with no work on the horizon, we then headed off to check some of
the other sites around Halifax. A check of Whiteholme for Water Pipit failed to
yield any birds, at all, but Ringstone Edge was a little more exciting with a
drake Gadwall feeding with the mallards under the trees on the south bank.
Presumably this is the same bird that was originally found by PD two days
earlier.
It was already
mid-afternoon, so we decided to head to Cromwell Bottom last thing to see if
the Scaup found by DJS the previous evening were still on the Ski Lake. From
the Italian restaurant we could not see anything except Tufted Ducks and a few
Goldeneye, and a bonus pair of Shoveler right at the far end, but we decided to
persevere with the Scaup and see what viewing we could get from the canal towpath.
Once on the canal,
and once we had found an opening through the vegetation, we had a another scan
of the lake and this time easily picked out the two Scaup. They were now swimming
with the group of Tufted Ducks that we had seen before, so where they had been
lurking who knows. Viewing remained difficult from the towpath so we returned
to the restaurant and from here we had excellent views of both birds showing
nicely below us.
A brilliant day out
birding in Halifax, demonstrating the best that this area has to offer!
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