RSPB

Improved communications

So, I’ve worked out that I can connect my laptop to the Forest Lodge network.  So, I’ll try and upload some pictures from the last few days.  Firstly, on Saturday before coming down the snow covered track to the lodge at 6.30pm, I went for a walk near Loch Garton, in the Scots Pine woods.  As mentioned in my previous post, I saw a Goldcrest and a couple of Treecreepers, as well as Great tits and Coal Tits.  The Loch was totally frozen over.  And I found (Roe) deer tracks in the wood.  Apparently the local RSPB deer policy is for an almost zero tolerance of the deer in outlying regenerati0n areas, but deer in the wood are left alone.


Arrival at Forest Lodge

It’s Sunday morning and the sun is shining. But it’s cold. Very cold. When I woke this morning I was in need of the toilet, but it took me a good half an hour to pluck up the courage to get out from under the two duvets on my bed.

I have a twin room all to myself, and myself and Tom are the only volunteers in a flat big enough for 6.  The flat is just a tiny part of the lodge, which harbours 3 other flats, offices, and meeting facilities.  The walls are clad with wood, and the ceilings are high.  This place was built in the 1880’s.  As a result it must take a bit of energy to heat.  There is ice on my bedroom window.

Anyway, the point of this post is not to complain about the conditions, because this place is beautiful, especially with 6 inches of snow outside; it’s to say that I don’t have internet access from my laptop.  I’m writing this from a PC in the RSPB guest access room.  So, I may not be able to update for a while, and pictures aren’t going to be easy.

Today, I’m going to walk about the place a bit, to see what’s about.  Apparently it’s minus 10 outside, and even the birds are hiding away.  After yesterday’s Goldcrest and Treecreeper, I’m hoping for big things.


Last day on the reserve

David caught the 7am ferry this morning so it’s just me, on my own today.  And there is a big RSPB get together of some sort, in Glasgow, today, so it’s just Neil and James about on the farm and in the office.  As a result I’ve been enlisted to help clean up the cows this morning.  It’s physical stuff, which is great, having not done too much of this kind of thing over the last couple of weeks.

Most of the rest of the day is dedicated to cleaning up the bothy.  This process is interrupted by James, at 3 in the afternoon, who calls by to tell me that a Sea Eagle is down by the Loch.  We head down to the viewing platform, just above the hide, and spot the Eagle on the Salt Marsh.  It has a yellow tag, on it’s wing, with a black spot.  It’s, apparently, a juvenile, and so does not have a fully developed white to its tail.

After watching the Eagle for some time, myself and James move around Gruinart for a Hen Harrier roost count.  The rest of the day is spent cleaning, eating and taking Ghilean (we’re looking after Catherine’s dog while she is away) for walks.


Bird of Prey species no 7!

After working on some dry stone wall on Smaull Farm, myself and David take a little time to walk the nearby cliffs. As we approach we notice a white bird perched on the seaward side of the top of one of the nearby high points. Our first glance is a casual one, but it looks like a bird of prey. Is it really that white, or is it somehow shining in the sun?

It seems to be facing us and it looks like a Falcon of some sort, but neither of us has seen anything quite like it before. We take it in turns to watch it whilst the other one moves into a closer position, with a better view.

Eventually David has climbed the hill between us and the bird. It still hasn’t moved, but from my position I can see that it isn’t just the front that’s white. It’s turned to the side, and it has pale wings, with dark flecks down them and it’s front. At the bottom of each wing is a darker tip.

David is in place so I make my dash for the hill. As I get to the top he’s standing up. Apparently, in the small amount of time it took him to shift position, the bird has flown, and we don’t know where.

We head over to the house of Ian & Margeret Brooke, local RSPB volunteers, and author of an Islay bird blog. Ian has some photos that he shows us from the last time such a visitor was seen nearby, and it confirms David’s suspicions that we have been watching a Gyr Falcon, the white form, probably a visitor from Greenland.

On the way back to the farm we see two Hen Harriers and numerous Buzzard and a decent sized group of Geese (although the groups about now are small in comparison to the numbers that arrive together, in Autumn).


I’ve been counting geese…and an otter

For two days now, all I’ve been doing is counting geese.  Geese, geese and more geese.  25 White Fronts here, 3040 Barnies there.  I turn around and more geese are flying over.  Some land, some don’t, they’ve all got to be counted as being somewhere.  Every goose counts, for the International Goose Count.

It’s great!  On the first day we count over 10,000 barnies, and hundreds of White Fronts, and on day two we count more.  On day two my co-counter, Fiona, is some kind of counting master.  My “Oooh, look, there’s some there, hiding in the rushes!”s are invariably met with a “yeh, I’ve already done them”.

And when we hit a big flock I give it a scan and say, “maybe a thousand or so, do you think?”, but she’s not listening.  She’s setting her scope up on the wound down window and grabbing her “clicker”.
Fair enough, I think to myself, these counts have got to be accurate in order for them to be effective.  I imagine she will click every 10 or 20 geese, and give me a number to the nearest 10/20.  After just 14 clicks I’m told, “1419”.  I scribble the number down in silent awe.  Although, of course, she could just be making numbers up for all I know.

Yesterday, which was a beautiful weather day, with almost no haze, I was able to watch a male Hen Harrier fly fairly close by for some time.  Hen Harriers have a distinctive white bar across the top of their tail, and this fella was a striking pale grey with dark wing tips.  He was also extraordinarily agile in the air, twisting and turning a few feet above the heather with barely a wing flap.

Then, whilst down by the other side of the Loch (from the farm), Louise points out an otter.  It’s swimming about in the water less than 50m away.  It comes up and then climbs out onto a rock to eat something.  Even though the dogs are running about nearby, and we’re not exactly quiet, it seems unperterbed, and I get a chance to watch, rather than see, an otter.  Fantastic.

Today, Fiona and I spotted three Golden Eagles together, up in the fields behind the farm.  Two adults and a youngster, the same youngster that myself and David saw last week, I assume.  Later a pair fly right over us while we are driving around Ardnave looking for geese.

And then I get a chance to watch a female Hen Harrier down by the sea while Fiona nails a gaggle of around 3000 geese.  Unfortunately, this log does not do these sightings justice.  My time in Islay has made me realise that I can’t keep using my phone as my only camera.  Unless they’ve created a (decent) camera that can act as a phone?  Have they?  Anybody?


Islay in the Sun

Saturday – Islay in the sun
I don’t sleep well, probably as a result of too much alcohol, but get up at 7.30.  David gets up, although it looks a bit like he maybe shouldn’t have, having not left the party until 1am.
We eat breakfast, which includes cheese and biscuits left over from last night, before driving to Loch Gorm to see if the Sea Eagle is still about.  It’s not, but it’s an amazing morning and there is plenty of life on the lake, although nothing new.  We also see a young Golden Eagle, with the white markings on it’s wings clearly visible in the early morning sun.
Afterwards I drive to the other side of Loch Gruinart and then walk North to Gortantoid Point.  I can see Mull, then mountains on the mainland in the distance, and plenty of other islands dotted about in the sea.  I see Red Breasted Merganser and Great Northern Divers, and I see lots of otter tracks.
Sunday – Islay in the Sun, day II
I sneak a bit of a lie in today, having had probably the best night’s sleep since being here.  I drive to the South of the island, past Ardbeg, before parking up near Ardtala.  The coastline down here is spectacular, lots of craggy rocks bursting out of the sea creating a beautifully jagged landscape.  There are seals basking in the sun with birdlife in every cove.
I walk up Beinn Bheigier, where it is possible to see the whole island.  But the best part of my day is sitting eating my lunch, near the top, in a dent in the hill, looking down on a young Golden Eagle practising it’s moves.  It flies into view, gliding and swooping, then lands on the hillside below, before taking off over Gleann Leora and gracefully gliding out of my line of sight.

The Loch Gruinart Christmas party (and the Paps of Jura)

The last couple of days work include removing a fence, repairing a gravel woodland path with disabled access, painting signs, checking a deer fence and repairing a dry stone wall.  Pretty much all with great views, and in cold but clear weather, around Loch Gruinart.

In between jobs we’ve managed some time to check out the flooded fields by the hide, and the mud flats on the loch.  Plenty of Pintail and Shelduck about, in addition to the regulars.  And loads of waders, such as Bar Tailed Godwit, Dunlin, Curlew, Redshank, Sanderling, Oysterchatcher, Turnstone, Heron and Ringed Plovers.  And maybe some other stuff that we couldn’t pick out.  Apparently there have been some Black Tailed Godwits about, for example, but we didn’t knowingly see any.

This afternoon we receive a call, from Louise, a local warden, to say that a Sea Eagle is hanging around Loch Gorm.  So we (myself and David) jump into the Landrover and Twitch our way over there at high speed.  Even though it had apparently been there for an hour, and we pass by a couple of cars containing local bird spotters, we do not see it while we are there.  We curse Louise and head home to cook roast potatoes.

Things are still rather messy on the house sale front.  I was expecting exchange today, but the buyers solicitor has gone on holiday without exchanging.  If you are the buyers solicitor, I hope you have a very pleasant holiday.

With that in mind I have a Christmas party to go to tonight.  Myself and David have been tasked with taking along Roast Potatoes.  Not much that can go wrong there, you might think.  And with some justification.  We mix it up, pretty much half peeled, and half unpeeled, and they all seem to go down well.  Other people have brought along soup, vegetables, turkey, lots of great cakes, and cheese and biscuits.  I have a few drinks, eat well, and talk to the nice people working for the RSPB, and their partners.  When I leave, at just gone midnight, there are a select few making their way through a bottle of Tobermory Malt.  Apparently it’s rough, but getting better…


Down at the Oa

The last couple of days have been spent down at The Oa reserve on the South of the island.  Yesterday the wind was strong and was occasionally accompanied by stinging rain.  We managed a limited FBS, although it was not a day for birds to be out in the open.  However, we still saw a pair of Peregrine and a hardy flock of Reed Bunting/Twite/with some possible Linnet.  I wonder how David can tell the difference, even more so after I check my bird book.  He also thinks we saw a Tree Sparrow in amongst them, quite a rarity.

Later, whilst shopping in the Co-op in Bowmore, there was a House Sparrow flying about inside the shop.  I nailed the id on that one.

Anyway, today the weather was fine.  Still a bit of wind, but mostly blue skies.  We finish the FBS, as well as a WEBS (wetland bird survey) of the Astle Lochs.  On the loch there are Tufted Ducks and Goldeneye, and what looks very much like a Scaup.  We see plenty of Buzzards, a Kestrel, and then I see an Otter.  It seems big to me, and is moving from the shore up a burn on the Eastern side of the loch.  I give David a shout but by the time he looks it’s gone.

Then we see a Golden Eagle, pretty close, fly over the loch.

After finishing the surveys we go to hang a gate, and watch a Hen Harrier fly up to and swoop down through the field we’re about to work in.  The gate hangs, and works (!) after only a little adjustment.  A fine achievement given the slope we’re on.

So that’s six different types of bird of prey in just four days.  Woaw, that’s special.  Even more so as I’ve not knowingly seen a Merlin or Hen Harrier before coming to Islay.


Chough Count

Islay is home to a significant proportion of the UK’s Chough population.  The Chough is a charismatic bird with a distinctive call.  Rare in this country, maybe 10% or more of the 4 to 500 breeding pairs in the UK live here on, or around, the island. So I was very pleased to find out that we’d be counting Choughs on my first day of ‘work’ on the island.

David turned up late last night, from his stag weekend in Edinburgh, but is up in time for sunrise this morning, as am I.

Catherine pops in to inform us of our jobs for the day, and then we’re on our way for 8.30.  We spend the day performing a Farmland Bird Survey (FBS) at Ardnave, the peninsula North of where I’m staying, and finding Choughs to identify.

Most of the 29 Choughs we see have rings, and we manage to identify colours in a number of cases.  These will be reported back to a special Chough watch information centre by the RSPB, to provide information on their movement.

We then count 26 of them into their roost, although one flies off as it gets dark, and, as far as we can tell, doesn’t come back!

We also see a good many birds on the Loch at Ardnave, and by the sea (where the Choughs were feeding), including Goldeneye, Hooper Swan, Bar Tailed Godwit, etc, and plenty of Twite and Reed Bunting around the farm.  By 4.30 I’m tired, and I nearly fall asleep in the passenger seat of the Landrover on the way back to the bothy.  Later I write up our results for the day and eat, before going to bed.  What a great way to start my stay.


So many birds! It’s like being 10 all over again.

When I was 10 or 11 I was in something called the YOC.  Martin Andrews used to take a whole bunch of us out to see birds.  I can remember fairly well a trip to Pembrey where we got very excited about seeing Widgeons.  Since then I’ve not spent a huge amount of time bird spotting.  I see birds like Crossbills and Ospreys when I’m working in the Highlands, but I’ve not been in an environment where I’ve been able to relearn some proper id skills.

So, yesterday, my first full day here at Loch Gruinart, I went out for a look around, and to spend some time in the hide down by the loch.  And I saw Widgeon and Teal, and a Little Grebe, and a Shoveler, and thousands of Barnacle and White Fronted geese, and some Greylag geese, and that’s not to mention a whole bunch of other birds, like Heron, Mallard, Mute Swan, a Little Egret (yes, this far North!) and Pied Wagtails, that I see more regularly.  And to finish off my day, I saw (although I wasn’t sure what it was at the time, having not knowingly seen one before) a female Merlin flying low over the site.

As you can imagine, I was very excited.


Islay

I’m up and away by 8am, after making Jane, who’s sleeping on the living room floor, with Steve (a dog), a cup of tea.  She didn’t seem to be in a hurry to drink it, but then it was pretty cold, and dark…

The drive to Kennacraig goes well.  Kennacraig is, literally, just a ferry terminal.  Although it does seem to be relatively busy.  When I initially park up the van, in one of the car parks, I notice some movement in the, initially seemingly empty car, parked next to mine.  Closer inspection determines that a Robin is flying about inside the car.  Is it possible to accidentally shut a bird in your car without noticing?

The crossing is smooth, and Islay alternates between looking sunny and brooding.  I pick up some food in Bowmore and then find the reserve.  my home for the next two weeks.  The RSPB reserve at Loch Gruinart.  Yes, indeed, we have a winner!  Hopefully.

Eion, the farm manager (cattle and sheep are kept on the reserve to maintain habitat for various birds, which I’ll probably mention over the course of the next couple of weeks), shows me the bothy, where there is a kitchen living area, a number of bedrooms and a couple of toilets/washrooms.  No one else is about until Catherine, the warden, shows up to give me an induction.

I carefully choose the bedroom that doesn’t overlook the cow shed.  There is a room upstairs which is already occupied by David, another volunteer, who’s away for the weekend.  He will be my house (bothy) mate for the next two weeks.  Apparently, he’s nice.

First impressions are good.  If I have a gripe, and it would be a small one, it’s that everything seems to smell ever so slightly of cow shit.