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Sunday, 24 October 2010

Autumn in Derby


I took this photo of the cathedral, seen from Cathedral Green, early today (Sunday). It was a glorious if cold morning (I had to remove the ice from my car windows before I could set off).

The falcon (female) was sitting on a stone ledge just below the nesting platform preening herself in the sunshine.
Later I found a fresh pair of teal wings on the pavement below the tower. The teal is a small duck often taken by the peregrines. It moves into the Derby area in autumn and can be found on local gravel pits, lakes and reservoirs. The irridescent green speculum feathers on the wings are a giveaway......
When I got home and had eaten my breakfast, I went into the garden to take some recycling out. Suddenly I heard the sound of geese so I looked up and there in the bright blue sky above the house was a skein of over 200 pink footed geese flying East. A magic sight! These Icelandic birds had been seen an hour earlier flying over Stoke on Trent and were later seen over Nottinghamshire. They would be heading for the Norfolk coast which they would have reached perhaps by lunchtime. I bet the falcon looked up as they flew over her head!
Winter is certainly approaching......


Nick B (DWT)

Ps. Do look at the Clustrmap well down on the left hand side of the blog page. Double click on the map and it enlarges. Click again on separate parts of the map and, if you are following the blog from overseas especially, you may be able to see the red dot which represents you!
If you can do, please email us and let us know exactly where you are.
For example, I see there is a red dot in NW Spain near the Pyrenees. I was there in September and met a ranger at a wonderful wetland reserve called Laguna de Pitillas. If that red dot is you then do please get in touch - it would be great to hear from you....what have you been seeing at your reserve as the winter begins to bite? Have the cranes arrived yet?
Email wildlifeEnquiries@derbyshirewt.co.uk

Pps. Lovely email received from a keen web cam watcher in California this morning (Tuesday) - more on this later but meanwhile do please email us and let us know where you are....rest assured that we will treat your email with the utmost care and security.

5 comments:

  1. I am not on the clustermap. There is no dot over Greenock Scotland.

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  2. I know I'm not anywhere exotic but having looked at the cluster map I have found my "dot" in Suffolk!

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  3. To Greenock watcher - sorry there's no dot for you. The map changes regularly and just shows the loggers-on during the last seven day period. It could be that you didn't log on to this project blog during the period shown? Or that you have some block which prevents Clustrmap from locating you....
    Nick B

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  4. Hi Nick B...We believe that we saw a juvenile/female Hen Harrier in our garden yesterday afternoon feeding on prey which was not readily identifiable. There was an absence of any strong identification marks on the bird other than a white ring arund the base of the tail, which would indicate juvenile or female. It was a large bird, bigger than anything that we have previously seen.....Are you aware of any harriers in the area, as these are supposed to be quite rare ???? regards Mo Cole (Belper).

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  5. I've now spoken to Mo about her garden raptor. A sparrowhawk is much more likely (hen harriers are birds of open moorland) but Mo was convinced the bird was bigger than the sparrowhaweks she usually gets in her garden - so who knows!
    Nick B (DWT)

    ReplyDelete