Port Sunlight, 1st May 2016

16 Sunlight view

The Gingko trees in Williamson Square are just sprouting and the leaves of my neighbourhood Whitebeams are coming out like hands clasped in prayer.

16 Sunlight Whitebeam

Despite these signs of advancing spring, there was a fine drizzly rain all day. We started in the Dell at Port Sunlight, first taking note of a droopy conifer on the bank at the southern end. Was it a  Brewer’s Spruce? A Morinda Spruce? These conifers are very hard!

16 Sunlight Dell and droopy conifer

The famous big Tulip Tree by the bridge had its leaves just coming out and we also looked at the Honey Locust with the spikes on the trunk. There is said to be a Wollemi Pine in the Dell, near the bridge, but despite us looking very carefully for little lime-green conifers, there was no sign of it. But there were many young saplings, none with much foliage to identify them by, but some of them still had their labels on. There was a Grand Fir, a Mulberry and our Tree of the Day, the uncommon Antarctic Beech Nothophagus antarctica. It’s native to Chile, and also grows on Hoste Island in Tierra del Fuego, so it has the distinction of being the southernmost tree in the world. It’s a narrow sapling, about 10 feet tall, at the top of the south-east facing bank, behind the Lyceum Club, standing in a Daffodil bed. You would take the dark brown bark for some kind of cherry, while the leaves look rather hawthorny.

16 Sunlight Antarctic Beech

The only birds out and about in the rain were a couple of Robins and a Blackbird.  Around the corner was another Tulip tree, with low branches near to the bank and a flower bud easy to see.  It would be a good one to look at when it’s in flower.

16 Sunlight Tulip tree bud

We walked up past Hulme Hall and noticed the wonderful green leafy hedge along Queen Mary’s Drive. It isn’t Beech, because that’s not out yet, so it’s probably Hornbeam. John, as a professional gardener, admired how carefully it had been trimmed, with no sign of machine “thrashing”.

16 Sunlight Hornbeam hedge

Then we looked at the Hillsborough Memorial garden on the balcony overlooking the War Memorial , which today had fresh flowers and messages, following the recent conclusion of the “Truth and Justice” inquest.

16 Sunlight Hillsborough tributes

There is a Judas Tree between 32 and 33 Greendale Road and we went to look at it, hoping it would be in flower, but we were too early. There were some lovely young Maples along the pavement though, with thin pink and gold leaves. There’s a bewildering variety of Maples in the book, and I wouldn’t like to hazard a guess what they were.

16 Sunlight Maple foliage

We cut through some footpaths and came out by the Lady Lever Art Gallery.  By now we were quite bedraggled but we couldn’t think of anywhere to sit in shelter to have our sandwiches. We knew none of the available cafes would allow us to eat our own food. Perhaps the lobby of the Lady Lever would let us sit there? I must have looked pretty pathetic, because as soon as I told the man on the desk about eight wet pensioners needing shelter, he sprang into action, rang a manager and they opened up the “Sustain Room” in the basement for us. Thanks very much, guys!

Afterwards we looked around the Art Gallery. I like to spot wildlife even there, and here is a detail from a painting called “The Garden of the Hesperides” by Lord Leighton, apparently showing a Little Egret and a Great White Egret.

16 Sunlight Egret painting

The New Ferry Butterfly Park was having an Open Day with some fund-raising stalls. I got some home-made cakes, some note cards with drawings by our old friend “local artist Bob Hughes”, and a small Feverfew plant. Some of the others bought Strawberry plants, while John bought a Tombola ticket and won a large scented candle, said to be good for romance! They had a Cowslip meadow, and sprouting amongst the flowers were hundreds of spore-bearing stems of the Common Horsetail Equisetum arvense. These brown shoots are only found in spring, while the sterile green feathery ones grow the rest of the year.

16 Sunlight Cowslips and horsetail

There was some odd-looking Mistletoe on an Apple tree, which one of the helpers said was African Mistletoe. Alas, there were no butterflies on the wing today, they don’t like the rain either, but the Marsh Marigolds by the pond put on a good show.

16 Sunlight Marsh Marigolds

Public transport details: Train from Central at 10.15 towards Chester, arriving Port Sunlight at 10.30. Returned on the 14.41 train from Bebington Station, arriving Central at 3.00.

 

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Churchtown Botanic Garden, 24th April 2016

15 Churchtown lake view

We had a long run on the bus this morning, almost the whole route of the 47. My goal was to see the magnificent pink Cherry trees on Preston New Road, planted in the last half mile before the Crossens terminus. There are over 100 of them lining both sides of the road, and when they all come out together they make a magnificent pink tunnel. Sadly, we were about a week too early.

15 Churchtown cherry road

As we walked down Balmoral Road there were a few spots of rain, and it was overcast and chilly. We entered the Botanic Garden at the north end, and lunched overlooking the (empty) flowerbeds outside the Fernery. We paid it a quick visit, appreciating the humid warmth inside.

15 Churchtown fernery

As we strolled around the aviary the sun started to come out. They have many small birds in the parrot / budgie line and also Peacocks, a huge black Turkey and a pair of very ugly Muscovy Ducks with some very cute cream and brown ducklings (or are they goslings?) It’s hard to believe such handsome young birds will grow up to be so strange-looking. The ugly duckling in reverse! They also had a pair of Shelduck, which I do prefer to see in the wild. Happily, they also had Mandarin ducks, and it was nice to see a pair together. When we see stray Mandarins in parks, there’s usually only a single bird, and we joke that we should set up a dating agency for them!

15 Churchtown Mandarins

They also have a pair of Golden Pheasants and a pair of Lady Amherst’s Pheasants.

15 Churchtown Lady Amherst

Nothing exciting on the lake. Black-headed Gulls, lots of Mallards, several Moorhens nesting and a pair of Mute Swans. One mother Mallard had 11 well-grown ducklings. There had been 12 of them when I recce’d on Saturday 16th April, so perhaps I miscounted, or perhaps she has lost one.

They have a mini-Arboretum, which is a low grassed area within a bank of old Beeches. They have a young Deodar (behind the cherry blossom on this picture).

15 Churchtown Deodar and cherry

There is also a row of four young conifers, and the two on the left are very intriguingly droopy.

15 Churchtown four young conifers

The leftmost one has foliage in the Yew / Redwood / Hemlock group, and I hoped for a while it was a California Nutmeg Torreya californica, but couldn’t match it in the book. California Nutmeg leaves are supposed to smell of sage or turpentine, but these didn’t. The second droopy one was some kind of Cypress. I think it might be a Nootka Cypress Chamaecyparis nootkatensis var. Pendula, described as a tree with upturned branches from which the foliage “hangs in curtains” (yes). Male flowers “abundant, massed at the tips” (yes) and cones “globular, 1cm across, each scale with a large curved spine” (yes, they have the spine, but I’m not sure if it’s curved.)

15 Churchtown cypress males flowers

15 Churchtown cypress cones

The third one was some kind of golden Cypress and the fourth one was probably a Spruce. That’s about as far as I get with conifers!

Near the lakeside was a fallen Oak, with last year’s golden brown foliage still on, but apparently quite dead. The kids are using it as a climbing tree.

15 Churchtown fallen oak

Under a stand of Scots Pines were lots of well-chewed cones. Looks like the work of Squirrels, probably Greys, but we didn’t see them.

15 Churchtown chewed cones

There’s a Tulip Tree on the lawns by the lake (with no distinctive leaves yet, but I cheated and read the nameplate) and also this old Mulberry outside the shop. The sign, which looks quite old, calls it a Common Mulberry Morus nigra, but we call it the Black Mulberry nowadays. “A small very long-lived tree which becomes gnarled and picturesque with age. Dark-green heart-shaped leaves and dark purplish-red edible fruits. Native to west Asia but has been grown in Britain since about 1500. Often found in quadrangles and college gardens.”

15 Churchtown mulberry

Before we left we shopped for pots of Tulips. They were selling pots of 6 ready-to-flower plants for £2.99 each or two for £5. A bargain!

Public transport details: Bus 47 from Queen Square at 10.10, arriving Preston New Road / Glenpark Drive at 11.25. Returned on the 49 bus at 2.06 from just outside the main entrance of the Botanic Garden, arriving Southport Monument 2.16, in plenty of time for the train at 2.28 back to Liverpool.

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Rivacre Valley Country Park, 17th April 2016

14 Rivacre Bluebell carpet

The wayside flowers were out next to the ramp up from Overpool station platform – Dandelion, Red Dead-nettle and Forget-me-Not. The way to Rivacre Valley is north along Overpool Road, first left onto Seymour Drive, and at its western end, just on the curve, there’s a path behind some garages that leads down to the Rivacre Brook. The path then crosses Rossmore Road West then carries on into the Country Park. The northernmost section is a Local Nature Reserve and appears to be ancient woodland, with native bluebells, a few Wood Anemones and carpets of Lesser Celandine.

14 Rivacre Lesser Celandines

The breaking buds of the trees were showing well in the bright sunshine. The Weeping Willows were  greening, the Horse Chestnut leaves are out and they are about to flower. The Ashes show no sign of coming out, but the Oak buds are starting to break. Does that herald a dry summer? “Oak before Ash, only a splash”. The Norway Maple trees have their acid-yellow flower tufts out, with some leaves following.

14 Rivacre Norway maple flowers

Birds included Starlings and House Sparrows along the houses, a Robin by the station, several Chiffchaffs calling, a Song Thrush, Magpies, Great Tits, Blue Tits and Long-tailed Tits. We heard two Green Woodpeckers, which seemed to be calling or “yaffling” to each other, and we heard a Great Spotted Woodpecker, too, but it was just as hard to find. Another call was a Nuthatch, also not seen. We did spot a Jay up in a tree, and a Buzzard overhead. There were lots of little bridges going back and forth across the brook, which looked like Kingfisher country. We lingered over them, but no sighting. We met a lady later who said she had seen a Kingfisher very early that morning, but they probably hide away as soon as it gets busier. On a green lawn was Corpse of the Day, a dead Wood Pigeon, clearly the prey of an early-rising Sparrowhawk. It had started to pluck it, but must have been disturbed, because the dead WP was otherwise untouched. Perhaps its owner will come back when most people and dogs have gone.

14 Rivacre WP corpse

When we first entered the valley, the Bluebells were English or hybrid, but as we went further in they appeared to be mostly native, with droopy stems, flowers just on one side, and white anthers.

14 Rivacre Bluebell

More evidence that the woodland was undisturbed was offered by the patches of Wood Anemones.

14 Rivacre Wood Anemones

The Willow buds were breaking out, too. Most Willows bear either male or female flowers, according to my book, which surprised me, and this set of “sticky-up” flowers must be females.

14 Rivacre Willow flowers

Near the closed Ranger hut there is a pond with small tadpoles, perhaps hatched a week. One Hawthorn was flowering and a bank of Cowslips were out.

14 Rivacre Cowslips

A small stand of Birch trees had their catkins and female flowers out, too. The male catkins hang down, but the females are erect before they are fertilised.

14 Rivacre Birch male catkins

14 Rivacre Birch female catkins

While I was rummaging in the Birch trees, the others saw the Sparrowhawk, but I missed it. Now that the day had well warmed up the butterflies came out. We saw a Peacock, a Small White, several Brimstones on the move and a couple of Commas, one of which sat still long enough to be photographed.

14 Rivacre Comma

Near the crossing of Rivacre Road there’s a disused tall brick tower called Borewell Station number 2, with one side covered with Ivy. High up there was a nest of a pair of Grey Wagtails. The female was well hidden, sitting in the nest in deep shadow, but the male flitted back and forth in the sunshine.

14 Rivacre Grey wagtail

While we were looking for a Mistle Thrush, a dark shape ran swiftly along a high bank. A Fox!  We only saw it briefly but we were all pretty sure it was a fox by the way it ran low with its long brush straight out behind. A Treecreeper was busy along the brook, and also some kind of little brown warbler, showing well, hopping around the branches hanging over the brook. John thought it was too round and chubby to be a Chiffchaff, but there was no other clue. The last birds of the day were two male Bullfinches flashing across a gap in the undergrowth.

Public transport details: Train from Central at 10.30 towards Ellesmere Port, arriving Overpool at 11.02. Returned from Overpool Station at 15.22, arriving Liverpool 15.55

 

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Thornton Hough, 10th April 2016

13 Thornton Hough monkey puzzle

In Thornton Hough village there’s a tall old Monkey Puzzle tree Araucaria araucana (on the right of the white house). It’s not the tallest on the Wirral, which honour is held by a tree south of Arrowe Country Park, near the junction of Pensby Road and Mill Road, but this one must be close. There’s a Rookery in the village, too, behind the corner building called The Store.

13 Thornton Hough rookery

We walked north along Thornton Common Road, noting a Greenfinch and two Great Tits, then turned left at Crofts Bank Cottages, and right onto the footpath across the fields to Brimstage. The first field was sown with grass for silage, then several fields of Oil Seed Rape, some in flower and some just coming out.

13 Thornton Hough rapeseed flower

The paths were lined with Lesser Celandine, still closed until the sun came out. A Wood Pigeon flew by and a Skylark launched itself into the air, singing its heart out. In the trees were Goldfinches, and then a Yellowhammer. Completing the yellow theme, was a clump of Yellow Archangel in a shady corner. The native plant is Lamiastrum galeobdolon subsp. Montanum, which has plain green leaves and is found mainly in the south, but these were the naturalised garden escapes, subsp. argentatum, with the white marks on the leaves. It has spread rapidly in the last 30 years and was pronounced an invasive alien in 2013.

13 Thornton Hough yellow archangel

We lunched by some ponds, hearing a Nuthatch and a Chiffchaff. There was a Robin on a gate. Back on the path, we noted a cluster of about ten Oak apples on a twig on the verge, which we thought was a broken branch, but it was a very small rooted tree. Never seen so many Oak Apples on a tree so small. The Blackthorn was out.

13 Thornton Hough blackthorn

In the sunshine on a sheltered bank there were butterflies on wing. We found a Small Tortoiseshell and this Peacock.

13 Thornton Hough peacock

There was also a Red-tailed Bumble Bee on a Dandelion.

13 Thornton Hough red-tail

We heard a Pheasant, but we still haven’t seen one. By the base of a tree a splendid patch of Lesser Celandines was open.

13 Thornton Hough Lesser Celandine patch

Near Brimstage a cowpat had several Yellow Dung Flies Scathophaga stercoraria.  They look like males to me, because the females are greener. They don’t eat the dung themselves but lie in wait and predate other flies which come visiting. The females lay eggs in dung, too, so the males have a second reason to hang around there.

13 Thornton Hough yellow dung flies

Where the path emerges onto Brimstage Road there’s an Ash tree with a huge distorted base to its trunk, where the roots have become exposed.

13 Thornton Hough Ash bole

Over the road is a straggly-looking Larch, showing its cones of last year and red firework flowers.

13 Thornton Hough larch

A Horse Chestnut flower bud, nearly ready to open.

13 Thornton Hough Horse Chestnut bud

Swallows often nest in Brimstage courtyard, in the tunnel over the stairs, but there was no sign of any today. Then we set off again back to Thornton Hough, noting Coltsfoot and Red Dead-nettle near the Maze. Some Carrion Crows were attacking a Buzzard. The path off Talbot Avenue was  very muddy, and we had to manoeuvre through the hedges around the miry bits, and why are there always spiny Bramble, Holly and Hawthorn just there?  That slowed us down, so we didn’t get back to Thornton Hough until 5 to 3, having missed the return bus by 10 minutes.

Public transport details: 437 bus at 10.30 from Sir Thomas Street, arriving Thornton Hough / Seven Stars at 11.10. On the way back, missed the hourly 487 at 2.46, so we got the 87 at 3.01 towards Eastham Ferry, arriving Spital Station at 3.15. Then the train at 3.22, which arrived Liverpool 3.40.

 

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Dibbinsdale 3rd April 2016

Spring has arrived in Dibbinsdale with the woods filled with birdsong, proclaiming territory and attracting mates for the breeding season ahead. I watched one Great Spotted Woodpecker drumming away on a dead tree and heard a further three drumming elsewhere on the reserve. A Chiffchaff was belting out its name – I’d had my first of the year in the back garden on Easter Sunday. A Green Woodpecker was yaffling, a Treecreeper spiralling a tree, Buzzard mewing overhead, garrulous Jays squabbling, Nuthatches both calling and occasionally singing – a song that to my ears wouldn’t sound out of place in a tropical rainforest, Song and Mistle Thrushes plus the usual Robins, Wrens, Blackbird, Tits etc.

MNA Dibbinsdale 2016 Wood Anemones1

Wood Anemone

It was still very muddy underfoot after the winter rains but emerging from the woodland floor was a carpet of Wood Anemones Anemone nemorosa whose plants start flowering soon after the foliage emerges from the ground and before the canopy becomes too dense. It is a good indicator species of ancient woodland as it is surprisingly slow to spread (according to Plantlife six feet in a hundred years!) relying on the growth of root-like stems called rhizomes rather than the spread of its seed that is mostly infertile.

Dog’s Mercury Mercurialis perennis was prevalent with swatches of its fresh green spear-shaped leaves and clusters of small, greenish flowers, again spreading by its underground rhizomes and often becoming so expansive that it shades woodland floors and crowds out rarer species. Dog’s Mercury is highly poisonous containing methylamine and trimethylamine – the latter a compound that can give an aroma not dissimilar to rotting fish is probably responsible for its foetid smell.

MNA Dibbinsdale 2016 Ribes1

Red Currant

Also flowering Lesser Celandine Ficaria verna, a few leaves of Wood Sorrel Oxalis acetosella, Red Currant Ribes sp. the occasional Primrose Primula vulgaris, flowering Native Bluebells Hyacinthoides non-scripta and in the boggy areas beside Dibbin Brook in Patrick’s Wood were clumps of Marsh-marigold Caltha palustris.

MNA Dibbinsdale 2016 Bluebells1

Bluebells

MNA Dibbinsdale 2016 Turkeytail1

Turkeytail

Fungi included Turkeytail a.k.a. Many-zoned Polypore Coriolis (Trametes) versicolor, Lumpy Bracket Trametes gibbosa, Bleeding Broadleaf Crust Stereum rugosum, Peniophora cinerea, Birch Polypore Piptoporus betulinus, Birch Mazegill Lenzites betulinus, Oyster Mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus and Glistening Inkcap Coprinus micaceus.

MNA Dibbinsdale 2016 Broadleaf Crust1

Bleeding Broadleaf Crust with Peniophora cinerea

I had been on the look-out for Scarlet Elf Cup Sarcoscypha coccinea and found a number on a branch pile at the Bromborough end of Otter Tunnel. They were a bit past it and had lost their cup-shape but when emerging from the tunnel I spotted some fresher specimens on a mossy log amongst the flowering Opposite-leaved Golden-saxifrage Chrysosplenium oppositifolium.

MNA Dibbinsdale 2016 Scarlet Elf Cup1

Scarlet Elf Cup Fungi and O-l Golden-saxifrage

MNA Dibbinsdale 2016 Scarlet Elf Cup2

Other sightings included blotches on Holly Leaves Ilex aquifolium caused by the Holly Leaf Gall Fly Phytomyza ilicis and long sinuous larva mines on Dog Rose Rosa canina caused by the Rose Leaf Miner Moth Stigmella anomalella, an Orange Ladybird Halyzia 16-guttata, and Pincushion Moss Ulota sp.

MNA Dibbinsdale 2016 Pincushion Moss1

Pincushion Moss

If you are interested in the wildlife of the north-west of England and would like to join the walks and coach trips run by the Merseyside Naturalists’ Association, see the main MNA website for details of our programme and how to join us.

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Leasowe, Sunday 3rd April 2016

12 Leasowe lighthouse
In the Crosby suburbs as I set out my local Weeping Willow was shading from light gold to pale green, although the Weeping Ash outside Saints Peter and Paul church was still bare and grey. Bright yellow Forsythia was well out, new leaves of Privet were budding amongst the old, the Magnolias were almost fully out and the first leaves of Horse Chestnut looked droopy and delicate.

12 Leasowe Magnolia

12 Leasowe horse chestnut leaves
As we walked down Pasture Road past the old Cadbury’s factory there was a big bird high above us, being mobbed by a single Herring Gull. An Osprey! It headed off south-westwards, towards the River Dee and North Wales. What a very good start to the day! Some birders we met later said it was probably the one that had been reported on Hilbre the day before.  We turned into North Wirral Coastal Park along the Birkett. Flowers seen today included Winter Heliotrope (just leaves now), Green Alkanet, lots of  Lesser Celandine still closed up, one very forward Cow Parsley just starting to bloom, Greater Periwinkle, Coltsfoot and Alexanders.

12 Leasowe Coltsfoot

12 Leasowe Alexanders

There was a flowering bush that ought to have been Blackthorn, but it wasn’t very thorny.
12 Leasowe Blackthorn perhaps

Another flowering shrub was some kind of upright Cherry, definitely not Blackthorn or Hawthorn.
12 Leasowe cherry type

The Hawthorn blossom isn’t out yet, but the older branches are covered in a lichen that was probably  Xanthoria parietina. It has many common names, but I like “maritime sunburst lichen”.

12 Lichen on hawthorn

We had heard reports of several Ring Ouzels that had been in the Leasowe area that morning. There were little knots of birders scattered about, concentrating on particular spots, but they all said one HAD been there, but had just flown off. We were really looking for Wheatears, which pass this way at this time of year. We met Barrie B, who said he and his friend had seen several Wheatears that morning, but we had no luck. Towards Lingham Farm there are plenty of House Sparrows. In the hedgerows and around the farm buildings were Collared Dove, Wren, a Dunnock singing high up, Goldfinches and a Robin. There was a black bird on the Birkett. Was it the Ring Ouzel? No, just a Blackbird. At Lingmere Fishery there were only a pair of  Canada Geese and a single Lesser Black-backed Gull.  Near the pond we saw a little brown job hopping around the lower branches of a tree. A Willow Warbler or a Chiffchaff? John whistled the Chiffchaff’s call  to it and it responded with the same notes, so it was definitely a Chiffchaff.  A broken Elder branch bore a cluster of Judas Ear fungus.

12 Leasowe Judas Ear

We lunched overlooking the beach, with a Skylark singing overhead. There were two or three Little Egrets fishing, as well as Shelduck, Redshank and Oystercatchers.

12 Leasowe Little Egret

Then we walked westwards along the grassy bank overlooking the beach. A Kestrel was hovering and we heard a Cock Pheasant but didn’t see him. I love the colours of the yellow sand and the blue sea reflecting the sky, shading out to a darker blue in the distance near the wind farms.

12 Leasowe sand and sea

Then up the Bridleway into the horse fields then returned along the single-file path towards the Lighthouse. The hedges held Great Tits, Greenfinches, Goldfinches and Long-tailed Tits. Red Dead-nettle was flowering, as well as one small clump of Red Campion. One of the paddocks held a flock of Linnets, and a single white butterfly flew in the distance, probably a Small White. We headed back past the Lighthouse, still looking for Wheatears, and in the field opposite we found a pair of Stonechats perching up on grasses and bushes, then dipping down into cover. This is the female.

12 Leasowe Stonechat

I saw what I thought might have been a Wheatear in the bushes near Pasture Road, but nobody else could see it, so that will have to be a “maybe”  Then back up towards Moreton, noting a clump of Speedwell in bloom by the factory railings. There was an unexpected setback at the station. Following an incident on the line at Hoylake, all trains were suspended, so we had an unplanned walk up to Moreton Cross and a long “scenic” bus journey around obscure parts of the Wirral to get to Birkenhead bus station, then a bus back to Liverpool.

Public Transport details: West Kirby train from Central Station at 10.05, arriving Moreton at 10.25. We should have got the 2.41 train from Moreton, arriving Liverpool 3.05, but the trains were suspended. Got the 423 bus at Moreton Cross / Hoylake Road at 2.58, arriving Birkenhead Bus Station at 3.40, then the 437 at 3.45, arriving Liverpool Whitechapel at 3.55. In retrospect, we probably should have got the same number bus in the opposite direction, which takes nearly as long, but goes all the way to Liverpool.

 

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Marshside, Sunday 20th March 2016

We got off to a very good start with a Peregrine Falcon flying over Bank Hall Station, heading into town.  It was the Spring equinox, the sun was shining, the Magnolia buds were just breaking, but there was still a chill in the air.

11 Marshside junction pool

As we walked along Marshside Road towards the car park, we spotted Canada Geese, Greylag Geese, Pink-footed Geese, Shelduck, Shoveller, Redshanks, Moorhens, a pair of Teal and many grazing Wigeon.

11 Marshside Wigeon

Five MNA members were there, and there were eight of us in the Sunday Group, although four of us are also MNA members. On the way to the Sandgrounders hide we noted Lapwings, a Coot and what appears to be a breeding colony of Black-headed Gulls on an island. There was supposed to have been a Mediterranean Gull mixed in with them recently, identified by its darker head, but nobody spotted it today.

11 Marshside BHG island

We lunched in Sandgrounders, admiring a pair of Avocets right in front of us.

11 Marshside Avocets

There were also Black-tailed Godwits probing the water, a pair Oystercatchers and two Jackdaws. Way over to the left of Polly’s Pool was a flock of Golden Plover. They were hard to make out, even with Alexander’s telescope. There was said to be a Little Egret, but it was hiding in a ditch. A pair of Mallards slept in the reeds, a pair of Gadwall dabbled for food, and a Shelduck caught the bright sunshine.

11 Marshside Gadwall

11 Marshside Shelduck

As we left the hide, I spotted Green Alkanet in bloom, and a large fly inside a blooming Daffodil. It was quite still and appeared to be hanging on to the daff’s pistil for dear life. It’s definitely a Drone Fly, Eristalis sp., but it’s hard to tell whether it was the Common Drone Fly Eristalis tenax, with a dark face stripe (impossible to see) and curved fourth segment (tibia) of the rear leg, or whether it was the Tapered Drone Fly Eristalis pertinax, which is identified by its pale front legs, also impossible to see. Since that back leg looks completely straight, I guess it’s the Tapered, but I may be wrong.

11 Marshside Drone Fly

There were Tufted Duck  and Little Grebe on Junction Pool, and as we were walking along to Nel’s Hide, we spotted Mute Swans. A Little Egret posed by an island, looking very photogenic, but it moved as soon as I got my camera out, drat it!  From Nel’s Hide we could see Pintail, Redshank, a Lesser Black-backed Gull, a flotilla of Shelduck and more Teal.

11 Marshside Teal

Some of us spotted three Brown Hares on the far bank, but not me.

11 Marshside hide view

We had 14 new ticks today on the Sunday Group’s Bird list for the year, now standing at 68.

Public transport details: Bus 47 from Queen Square at 10.10. (We would normally get the train to Southport, but there were rail engineering works from Hunt’s Cross to Sandhills, so we were avoiding and outflanking the dreaded rail replacement bus.) Arrived Stanley Road near Bank Hall Station at 10.20, and got the 10.31 train to Southport, which was the one we would have been on from Central, if it had been running. That arrived Southport 11.05, then bus 44 from Hoghton Street / London Street (opposite the Little Theatre) at 11.17, arriving Elswick Road / Presall Lane at 11.30.  Returned from Marshside Road / The Fog Bell at 2.29 (the 2.15, late) arriving Southport at 2.38, and we got the 2.58 train back to Liverpool.

 

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Neston and Parkgate, 13th March 2016

Rather than going right through to Parkgate, we got off the bus in Neston, then walked through the churchyard and onto the Wirral Way.

10 Parkgate Neston church

There were lots of birds tweeting and singing, and it sounded like spring all of a sudden. Dunnock, Crow, Wood Pigeon, Great Tit, Chaffinch. There was a Grey Squirrel on a fence, and some of us spotted a Goldcrest in a clump of Ivy, but it flew off as soon as it was seen. Most of the Hawthorns are now leafing, and one or two aberrant bushes were starting to put out their flowers. Another sign of spring was the Lesser Celandine.

10 Parkgate lesser celandine

Other flowers were Periwinkle, Green Alkanet, Euphorbia and this Flowering Currant.

10 Parkgate flowering currant

We lunched on the benches outside the Old Quay pub, and the sun came out. We had come to Parkgate for a 10m high tide, due at 2pm. This was the third day of the high tides, and John had been there yesterday and saw a Short-eared Owl patrolling up and down the marsh, so our hopes were high. On the marsh we saw a Great White Egret, three Little Egrets, Shelduck, Mallards, Black-headed Gulls, and a Heron. Over by the pool there were Canada Geese, about a dozen Redshank and two Oystercatchers.

10 Parkgate pool

Then we walked along to the Old Baths, where the birdwatchers had assembled. The tide came past its height, but not much happened. There were no owls, no other raptors and not much water. Perhaps all the raptors were already stuffed from the previous two days’ hunting and couldn’t be bothered to do it all again.

10 Parkgate birdwatchers

But there were more signs of spring amongst the gorse. Two wasps were visiting the flowers, and I saw my first Ladybird of the year, a Seven-Spot, sitting motionless in the sun, warming up.

10 Parkgate ladybird

Both of the famous ice-cream shops were doing a roaring trade, with queues out into the street, but we resisted, and sat in the sunshine in the garden at St Thomas’s church, admiring the wide-open Tulips.

10 Parkgate tulips

Public transport details: Bus 487 at 10.29 from Sir Thomas Street towards Parkgate, arriving Neston Tesco Express at 11.18. Returned on the 487 from Mostyn Square at 3.30, arriving Liverpool 4.20.

 

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Rimrose Valley Country Park, 6th March 2016

From Seaforth and Litherland Station we went over Princess Way by the footbridge and into the southernmost area of Rimrose Valley. Wayside trees were showing small flowers, but they weren’t Blackthorn and the bark didn’t look like Cherry, so perhaps more Cherry Plum.

09 Rimrose path

There were Long-tailed Tits and Great Tits in the hedges, and then a Kestrel flew overhead, scattering the small birds. We’ve had some heavy rain in the week, and the paths in this wilder low-lying section of the Rimrose Brook valley were quite muddy and some quagmires were quite hard to get past. There’s a Ranger station here, and they’d been netting birds to do some ringing. One ranger went inside, collected a little cotton bag, and drew out a Kingfisher. It was a female, and much tinier than some of us expected. They said it was only the second one they’ve ever had in the park.

09 Rimrose kingfisher

Then we got to the wide open area with the tarmacked paths. There were plenty of Magpies, a Jay flew across, and we saw a Greenfinch. High above us a female Sparrowhawk cruised about. They have large territories, so she might be the same one as was in my garden a year or two ago. I spotted a Sparrowhawk kill site last week in Victoria Park Crosby, looking like it was the plucked feathers of a Collared Dove, which might have been her work too. A pair of Canada Geese flew over and not long afterwards five Mute Swans came over in the opposite direction, south westwards, towards Seaforth or even New Brighton. What a wonderful creaking sound their wings make!

09 Rimrose swans

There was a very scruffy-looking clump of yellow flowers on the grass. Could it have been Charlock, also known as Wild Mustard?  The flowers and seed heads look like the pictures in my book. It is said to be an annual, flowering from April to November. This was too well grown for this year’s germination, so perhaps it was a survivor from last Autumn.

09 Rimrose yellow brassica

North of Ford, where the path curves eastwards, there was lots of standing water on either side of the path, with reeds, Alder and Willow, and looking quite swampy. Frogs had been spawning already.

09 Rimrose swamp and reeds

Near Cookson’s Bridge there was a Wren in the bushes and one dead tree had this white blobby “fungus”, looking like someone had thrown a tablespoonful of rice pudding at it. Was it the delightfully-named Dog Vomit slime mould?

09 Rimrose slime mould

We walked back to Seaforth along the canal. The water was very high and the barge Pride of Sefton 2 passed us on the way into Liverpool. There were Goldfinches in the trees and a Dunnock was sitting out in the open and singing its spring song. Blackbirds, Chaffinches and Collared Doves were also about, and a Robin with a BTO ring on its right leg watched us from the hedge. Did the local Rangers ring it?

09 Rimrose Robin

There seemed to be more Moorhens than Coots on this stretch of the canal, although the Coots were chasing them aggressively. A pair of Mute Swans were also getting territorial, with the cob chasing the Canada Geese. About a dozen Black-headed Gulls and some Mallards congregated where a family with a toddler was “feeding the ducks”. A Cormorant flew northwards, low over the water, in full breeding plumage.

09 Rimrose canal view

We had already seen some Hawthorn leaves coming out, but one aberrant bush was already just starting to flower. The blossom is called “May”, so this plant is two months early!

09 Rimrose hawthorn early

Our Tree of the Day was a European Larch Larix decidua in flower. The female flowers are crimson fireworks about 2cm (under an inch) high. They grow upright, of course, this one is at an angle because I pulled the branch down. The male flowers look like unripe blackberries about 1 cm (less than half an inch) across. They grow on the same tree, but branches bear either mostly male or mostly female flowers.

09 Rimrose larch female flower

09 Rimrose larch flowers male

We amused ourselves on the way back to the Red Lion by admiring the decks and steps on the other side of the canal. Are they all legal? we wondered. One householder had decorated his fence like the side of a narrow-boat.

09 Rimrose narrowboat fence

Public transport details: Bus 53 at 10.05 from Queen Square, arriving outside Seaforth and Litherland Station at 10.31. Most of us returned from Bridge Road / Linacre Road on the southbound 53 at 2.25, but I caught a bus in the opposite direction to get back to Crosby.

 

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Grosvenor Park Chester, 28th February 2016

Chester FC were playing Tranmere in the Conference Premier league, which counts as a ”derby” match, so the train to Chester was very full and the station was teeming with yellow-jacketed policemen and women, one armed with a video camera. We walked down City Road, Russell Street and Dee Lane, and into the north-east corner of Grosvenor Park. It was cold and still with occasional brilliant sunshine.

08 Chester park view

Birds spotted in the park were Blackbird, Song Thrush, House Sparrow, Wood Pigeon, Long-tailed Tit and Robin. Grey squirrels were all over the place. We heard a Great Spotted Woodpecker drumming and a Great Tit and a Greenfinch calling, but we didn’t see them. The best bird of the day was a Raven flying high overhead, which is the 46th bird species on our modest year list. There wasn’t much doing in the way of spring yet, although this blooming Quince was a welcome splash of colour.

08 Chester quince

I stopped to look at this bush, which said “Alder” to me at first because of the profuse catkins. It caught my eye because of how tortuous the branches were. But of course it isn’t an Alder, it’s a Corkscrew Hazel Corylus avellana ‘Contorta’, also known as Harry Lauder’s Walking Stick. They have a special visitor direction sign for the one at Bodnant, but this one was just sitting quietly and uncelebrated beside the path.

08 Chester corkscrew hazel

I also took a good look at the Yews. I know the male Yews are covered with obvious small globular male flowers at this time of year. Here they are.

08 Chester yew male flowers

But what are the female flowers like? After much rummaging around the apparently bare trees, which must be the berry-bearing females, I found these inconspicuous little structures, rather like infant acorns, but only two or three millimetres across.

08 Chester yew female flowers

A large number of trees were pruned rather oddly into a tall narrow tufty shape. They had “sprouty” areas at the bases of their trunks, also carefully trimmed, so I think they must be Limes. They have a famous “Lime and Holly avenue” leading to the statue of the Second Marquis of Westminster, and you can see them in leaf on the Cheshire Now website.  It shows what the strange pruning is for, to give a double row of contrasting nicely-shaped trees.
08 Chester lime and holly avenue

Other interesting trees were a Weeping Beech, several Blue Atlantic Cedars and a couple of Himalayan Cedars (Deodars). There’s probably a Cedar of Lebanon there too, but we didn’t come across it. This Deodar has a very complex branching heart, which must be a great temptation to climbing children.

08 Chester deodar trunk

After lunch we strolled down to the River Dee and The Groves.  Nothing very exciting on the river – Black-headed Gulls, a Cormorant, a Moorhen, two Mute Swans, some Mallard, juvenile Herring Gulls, and this Common Gull posing on the prow of yacht. They are very like Herring Gulls but have greenish legs, not pink ones, a dark eye and a gentler expression.

08 Chester common gull

In the porch of St John’s Church stood the Chester Giant, set on a wheeled base and dressed in the livery of the Freemen and Guilds. It is used in their processions.

08 Chester giant

I tried to claim this Golden Eagle for our bird list, but was shouted down.

08 Chester golden eagle

In Bath Street one of the houses appears to have a fruiting lemon tree growing outside its blue door. Is this another result of last year’s hot summer?  (And as a nod to Game of Thrones theorists –  here’s the evidence Lemon Trees DO grow in Braavos!)

08 Chester lemon tree

Public transport details: 10.15 train from Central to Chester, arriving 11.00. Returned on the 2.00 train, arriving Liverpool Central at 2.45.

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