Saturday, 1 January 2011

2010 Review

January.
A very slow start to 2010 with the first couple of weeks spent in Cheshire. Once home a very early Hawfinch was unexpected on patch and an overdue pair of Greenland Whitefronted Geese in front of the house. Off isle a Black-bellied dipper put in a good show around Scalloway, oh and there was a small matter of a patch yearlist with entries from Messrs Minton, Fray, Bell, Haywood and Harvey.

February.
As tradition should dictate a very slow month. A male Snow Bunting on the 3rd was a welcome patch tick and an Iceland Gull at Hamister proved to be the only one of 2010. Roll on March. 

March.
An Egyptian Goose of unknown origin was a  slight distraction from the weekly Tesco shop on the 2nd. A Little Gull on the 21st was a cracking patch lifer which eventually relocated to Hamister, thankfully for decent photos.
A fruitless trip to Yell for a Bearded Seal on the 23rd and Spring arrived on the 25th with the first migrants trickling through. The month ended with a cracking day out in the company of Brydon photographing Otters.

April.
No April fool here with a patch tick male Black Redstart on the 1st and i eventually caught up with the Bearded Seal on the 9th on my 3rd attempt.

Caught the Northern Lights show on the 11th and the migrants filtered through slowly adding to the patch yearlist.

May.
Hmm, May shouldn't be like this? Very slow going on isle so a seawatch at Wats-Ness at least provided some distraction 3 Pomarine Skua and a Manx Shearwater. A Long-eared Owl Showed well on patch on the 13th and a Wood Sandpiper was a good find down at the Houb on the 15th.

A trip down south with Dougie was put in place for the Oriental Pratincole down at Frampton Marsh. Also south was the Iberian Chiffchaff, Great Reed Warbler a Purple heron and the Ythan King Eider.

June.
Finally a month of quality? The first Icterine Warbler of the year was up at skaw on the 2nd. A Black Stork on Unst was to good a bird to miss on the 3rd and probably my bird of the year, an adult Long-tailed Skua seemingly on territory on the 4th around Burra.

A male Red-backed Shrike at Skaw on the 6th and a patch lifer Osprey over the Houb on the 11th.

Another trip south with Dougie was crap with just upgraded views of the Ythan King Eider to show.

My personal photo of the year was this pair of Red-throated Divers on isle on the 25th.

A singing Marsh Warbler also on the 25th and a pair of very showy Crossbill on the 29th up at Skaw.

July.
The summer lull. Distant Orcas from Toft on the 7th ended a very enjoyable day on Unst. Lots of Otters dominated and a trip back to Cheshire was just about it.

August.
Storm Petrel ringing on the 6th brilliant with 10 birds processed.

A Basking Shark just offshore on the 8th was a lifer and a local highlight. Good news on the 15th as i found out my Little Stint from last summer was actually an adult Semipalmated Sandpiper! Also a lifer. A visit to the Birdfair was very enjoyable in some brilliant company and a trip out on one of the local Pelagic boats was truly breathtaking on the 29th.

September.
The first 3 weeks were spent frustratingly in Cheshire, although i did manage to witness the annual Leach's Storm Petrel wreck on the Merseyside coast on the 15th.

Autumn migrants were very evident on my return home and a Red-flanked Bluetail caught up at Skaw on the 30th proved to be the pick of the lot.

October.
A patch lifer Richard's Pipit on the 2nd was brilliant but the Red-throated Pipit found whilst trying to relocate the former was better, my patch lifer for 2010.

A Red-breasted Flycatcher showed well on the 3rd hanging around for a few days. A trip off isle with Dougie was a good decision with Radde's Warbler at Sumburgh, Buff-bellied Pipit at Tangwick and a pair of  tame Buff-breasted Sandpipers at Eshaness.

Another Radde's Warbler, this time on isle was at Skaw and a Corncrake was at Sandwick on the 8th.

A trip to Out Skerries on the 9th produced a Citrine Wagtail and a Little Gull at Laxo on the way home.

Personal highlight of 2010 was my photo of the Staine's Moor Brown Shrike being chosen for the front cover of the Rare birds in GB edition of British Birds.

November.
Caught up with the American Bittern on the 3rd down in Cornwall. A sad day on the 10th as we said farewell to Shetland moving back down to Cheshire. Though the Pied-billed Grebe at Hollinworth Lake numbed the pain on the 12th.

I also opened up a new chapter in my hobby as i applied to become a trainee ringer.

December.
Other than  my near obsessiveness with ringing down at Woolston Eyes NR not a great deal of birding has happened oh and the fact i have been working! My patch yearlist ended on a quite respectable 113, not bad for a couple of square miles.
Well that's 2010, here's to a bird filled 2011.

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