1271 : Ferry Unexpected (19/6/24)

Rock Pipit

It feels like ages since I last made it out to Broughty Ferry. To be fair, there hasn't be very much reason to do so with the majority of waders having moved on to their breeding grounds and with the exception of the Eiders, most of the seabirds and waterbirds are off breeding elsewhere too. However, as last summer's boat trips showed there can be birds hiding in plain sight out on the river even in the quieter days of summer and there are already failed breeders from among the waders on their way back south again. In other words, although expectations were very low, there is always the chance of a surprise, or two.....

It was just after 0745 when I headed out the door. Herring Gull, House Sparrow, Swift and Feral Pigeon made for a fairly typical, if rather quiet, start to the day's birding. I headed for Swannie Ponds via Clepington Road. On the way to the ponds I found Carrion Crow, Blue Tit, Magpie, Woodpigeon, Oyetercatcher, Goldfinch, Chaffinch and Starling. A Lesser Black Backed Gull was perched atop a lamp-post just round the corner from the top pond. Gulls were in relatively short supply at the Swannies but I did get Moorhen, Coot, Tufted Duck, Mallard, Mute Swan and a Grey Heron. Blackbird and Dunnock were added as I headed for Eastern Cemetery.

At the cemetery, there were lots of Rabbits and a single Grey Squirrel. Bird-wise, there was a pair of Collared Doves and a Jackdaw but nothing else worthy of mention. A Swallow swept northwards over Craigie Avenue as I wandered down towards the Stannergate and the river. A surprise as I reached the bottom of that road was a Kestrel hunting above the railway line. A Grey Wagtail on the small bit of rocky shore along the eastern edge of the harbour was another slightly unexpected bird. There were a couple of Linnets around just beyond the car park at the Stannergate and a single Black Headed Gull took flight from the shore a bit further on. A single Goosander was spotted out on the water, with another 2 by the sailing club yachts further to the east, and a roosting male on the outflow pipe at Douglas Terrace was seen later. A couple of female Eider were closer in to shore by the sailing club sheds.

A flock of 6 Canada Geese which landed off Douglas Terrace were another surprise to the day's list. A flock of 7 Cormorants flew downriver past Tayport harbour. A Siskin which flew past was yet another surprise addition given I was stood by the river, and a Rook with a full crop flew in from the direction of Fife. Just beyond the lifeboat station I found a family group of Rock Pipits down amongst the shingle. I happened to look up just as a Fulmar, my first of 2024, was about to fly directly over me. Another nice, and welcome, surprise. There were a few more Rock Pipits around by the castle. As it was still before 1000 I wandered round to the rocks which rise up to meet the southern castle wall and scanned from there with the scope. I found an Osprey over towards Tayport, along with a couple of distant Shelduck on the Fife shore. A lone Common Tern was picked out as it flew upriver and was another welcome bonus bird, but I failed to refind it with the camera as it passed in front of the houses of Tayport. Still, it was another #Dundee150 species, taking me to 134 which is 7 ahead of the same time last year.

Once the castle opened I headed up into the grounds to gain a bit more height. I found 3 Ospreys perched close together on wooden posts off the western end of Lucky Scalp and a 4th bird was seen flying across the river and inland to the northwest with a freshly caught flatfish a bit later in the morning. A Sandwich Tern flew past quite close to the castle as I chatted to a council employee. I spotted a distant Bottlenose Dolphin around 1145 and spent the next 2 hours or so watching a small group of the animals out on the river. Unfortunately, they never really came very close, but there were a few breaches including a 'synchro pair' at one point. I pointed the dolphins out to a number of visitors, both relatively local and from further afield and spent a good while in the very pleasant company of a lady from Texas, Kat, who was enjoying her visit to Scotland. 

A Grey Seal popped up relatively close in a couple of times but there wasn't much else to see on the bird front, bar 100s of Eider across the south side of the river and out towards Tentsmuir Point. A brief visit to the beach found a single Ringed Plover being flushed by walkers. Around 1415 I decided to head homewards. A Turnstone and 2 Redshanks were roosting on the lifeboat jetty but things were very quiet on the walk back to the Stannergate, bar a few Rooks crossing the river. By this time, it was a bit too warm for my liking. A Chiffchaff was heard by the sewage tank at the Stannergate. I considered heading along the cycle path but instead headed up towards Eastern Cemetery. I was briefly mobbed by a (breeding?) Common Gull on Greendykes Road. There were a couple of House Martins over the Arbroath Road by Lidl which rounded off the additions for the day, taking me to 47 species of bird (of which 2 - in bold - were new for my #Dundee150 list) and 4 of mammals. Considering my expectations were pretty much zero, it turned out to be an interesting and productive visit to the Ferry.

Goldfinch
Eider
Oystercatcher
Canada Goose
Siskin
Starling
Rook
Rock Pipit
Grey Heron
Fulmar
Grey Heron
Osprey
Black Headed Gull
Osprey
Pied Wagtail
House Sparrow
Rock Pipit
Rock Pipit
Sandwich Tern
Bottlenose Dolphin
Grey Seal
Herring Gull
Bottlenose Dolphin & Herring Gull
Bottlenose Dolphin
Rock Pipit
Ringed Plover

Birds - Blackbird, Black Headed Gull, Blue Tit, Canada Goose, Carrion Crow, Chaffinch, Chiffchaff, Collared Dove, Common Gull, Common Tern, Coot, Cormorant, Dunnock, Eider, Fulmar, Goldfinch, Goosander, Grey Heron, Grey Wagtail, Herring Gull, House Martin, House Sparrow, Jackdaw, Kestrel, Lesser Black Backed Gull, Linnet, Magpie, Mallard, Moorhen, Mute Swan, Osprey, Oystercatcher, Pied Wagtail, Redshank, Ringed Plover, Feral Pigeon, Rock Pipit, Rook, Sandwich Tern, Shelduck, Siskin, Starling, Swallow, Swift, Tufted Duck, Turnstone, Woodpigeon.

Mammals - Bottlenose Dolphin, Grey Seal, Grey Squirrel, Rabbit. 

1270 : Say Hello, Wave Goodbye.

Waxwing

I seem to say that it has been a bit longer than intended every time I post a round-up of my sightings on my walks to and from work, but I think this might be the longest gap yet (I think it is something like 15 weeks!) since the previous round-up post appeared. Back then, the winter migrants were starting to head back north and the incoming spring migrants weren't too far away. A lot has happened since then with some obvious changes and some not quite so obvious. Among the more obvious has been the dispersal of the Black Headed and Common Gulls to their breeding grounds, with the Black Headeds going first and the Common Gulls dwindling to zero a little later. The Pink Footed Geese, Redwings etc headed northwards and the warblers came in from the south....

Redwings were still around way back in March with sightings on the 11th and again on the 19th. There were still some Pink Footed Geese around on the 12th, 18th and 22nd of March, though as with the Redwings I did have later sightings elsewhere in the city. Waxwing was a species I had only previously recorded once on my walks to and from work, with a single bird in flight back in November 2023. However, that changed over the course of around 6 weeks, with multiple sightings in the Ancrum Road area in what appeared to be 4 very distinct spells with gaps of varying duration in between. A flock of around 20 in a tree behind houses on the opposite side of the road (ruling out use of binoculars) were dismissed as Starlings as I walked home on the 18th of March (they were also seen in the same tree on the 19th). I actually heard the birds calling on the 20th on my day off and realised my mistake. They were still around on the 21st and 22nd, but there was no sign on the Saturday.

I was surprised to find more of the birds in the same general area again on the 2nd and 4th of April, which promptly vanished. However, there were more around again from the 8th until the 12th. I assumed that would be my last Waxwing sighting of the Spring, but a very familiar (by then) sound as I walked home past Lochee Park got me a flock of 25 or so which landed in a tree across the road for a few seconds before they flew off again. Numbers of Black Headed Gulls at Lochee Park dwindled to zero with the last sighting (bar a surprise sighting on May 10th) on the 25th of March. The Common Gulls held on a little longer with the last birds at the football pitches on the 15th of April. There were however a couple of the species between the football stadiums on my way home on the 17th of May.

The first of the incoming migrants noted were overflying Meadow Pipits between 14th of March and 19th of April. The first of this Spring's Chiffchaffs was found on the 18th of March around the bottom end of Loon's Road. The species has been heard (or sometimes even seen) on most of the days since. The 8th of April was the date of my first Blackcap on my walks to work for this year and as with the Chiffchaff they have been fairly regular ever since. A week off work at the start of May meant that the Swallows had returned by the time I was back at work on the 9th though further sightings of the species have been rather sporadic. House Martins are relatively uncommon along my normal route to/from work, though there were a few sightings in late May/early June. Swifts are generally the easiest of the 'fork tailed four' to get on my way to/from work, and although insects have been in very short supply, Swifts have been relatively easy to see around both ends of my journey, though numbers have mostly been low single figures, since the 10th of May.

I have had 5 records of Willow Warbler this Spring with a singing bird on the 15th of April, followed by 3 more in May, and 1 in June (mostly around the north side of the Law, though heard from Byron Street). Another summer visitor to the area was noted on the 7th of June as a small skein of Canada Geese headed north low over Lochee in the morning as I wandered down Loons Road. During the period covered in this post, Bullfinch has been very regular, though not quite every day. Both Pied and Grey Wagtails have been noted several times, with Pied not surprisingly having been noted the most. Another bird spotted more than a handful of times, without being almost daily, has been Siskin, though there have been Coal Tits making very similar calls of late. Treecreepers and Nuthatches sightings have been fairly hit and miss with the latter being most vocal in April then going very quiet since then.

Of the larger species, Jay, Stock Dove, Rook, Collared Dove and Great Spotted Woodpecker have all turned up multiple times. The escaped Saker Falcon was seen perched on Cox's Stack on the 25th of March, the 8th of April and also the 18th but hasn't been seen since. The Law's male Kestrel was seen on the 14th of March flying over Byron Street towards the hill in the morning and also on the 17th of May round the other side of the hill as I walked home in the rain. Sightings of Sparrowhawk were into double figures during the time covered here, though Buzzards only appeared 4 times. Other larger birds seen were a single Grey Heron on 18th of March over my work, 2 more flying along the north side of the Law on the 15th of April, with another over Ninewells Avenue on the 17th of May. A Cormorant headed south over Balgay Hill on Tuesday the 11th of June as I headed into Balgay Cemetery on my walk to work.

There were a trio of species of birds which I only managed to see once during the time-span covered here. An unexpected Lesser Redpoll flew over Ninewells Avenue as I headed home after work. A small flock of 6 Linnets were perched together atop a house next to Dens Park on the 4th of April. I have seen this species once or twice in the same wider area in the past but the overgrown area behind the football stadium at Dens Road which looked quite favourable for them has been cleared up, as has most of the suitable Linnet habitat in the city (Stannergate - nursing home site, behind Clatto where gorse has been ripped out, Broughty Ferry along the dunes where most of the gorse was removed to make way for the 'new' path for all - except for the wildlife that already lived there!). The one new species for my 'on-foot commute' list that I managed to add was a Raven (number 85). Given how many sightings I've had over the past couple of years, mostly around the Law, it was just a matter of time when I'd get one. I didn't expect to get one circling over South Road, which was where I spotted it on the 24th of May.

During the time period covered in this post (11/3/24 - 14/6/24) I managed to see, or hear, a total of 55 species of bird, as well as 2 of butterfly (Orange Tip on 9/5 and Small White on 10/5) and 1 of mammal (Grey Squirrel numerous times, mostly in Balgay Cemetery). All photos here are from my archives - though the Waxwings pictured are from the Ancrum Road area flocks mentioned above, though taken at weekends.

Song Thrush
Common Gull
Pied Wagtail
Grey Heron
Lesser Black Backed Gull
Robin
Goldfinch
Swift
Kestrel
Carrion Crow
Magpie
Sparrowhawk
Swallow
Chaffinch
Collared Dove
Woodpigeon
Buzzard
Jackdaw
Waxwing
Great Spotted Woodpecker
Wren
Siskin
Waxwing
Waxwing
Waxwing
Coal Tit
Greenfinch
Nuthatch

Birds - Blackbird, Blackcap, Black Headed Gull, Blue Tit, Bullfinch, Buzzard, Canada Goose, Carrion Crow, Chaffinch, Chiffchaff, Coal Tit, Collared Dove, Common Gull, Cormorant, Dunnock, Goldcrest, Goldfinch, Great Spotted Woodpecker, Great Tit, Greenfinch, Grey Heron, Grey Wagtail, Herring Gull, House Martin, House Sparrow, Jackdaw, Jay, Kestrel, Lesser Black Backed Gull, Lesser Redpoll, Linnet, Long Tailed Tit, Magpie, Meadow Pipit, Nuthatch, Oystercatcher, Pied Wagtail, Pink Footed Goose, Raven, Redwing, Robin, Feral Pigeon, Rook, Siskin, Song Thrush, Sparrowhawk, Starling, Stock Dove, Swallow, Swift, Treecreeper, Waxwing, Willow Warbler, Woodpigeon, Wren.

Butterflies - Orange Tip, Small White.

Mammals - Grey Squirrel.