Showing posts with label Grey Seal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grey Seal. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 December 2017

Donna Nook

Time to burn off some christmas pudding. A quick jaunt around Gibraltar point turned up practically nothing (other than a Barn Owl just as we were leaving) so we took a nice diversion through the Lincolnshire Wolds and went to see if there were any Grey Seals left at Donna Nook. Luckily a few were still sleeping off the Yuletide excesses. A handful of pups still around, last one had been born about a week before.

Turbines at Gibraltar Point (making lots of electricity in the strong winds)

Male Grey Seal stretching before some more snoozing

Grey Seal youngster

Grey Seal pup
 One pup was lounging on a hillock and having a good stretch and scratch.
Grey Seal pup

Grey Seal pup

Grey Seal pup

Ferry passing more offshore wind turbines

Grey Seal pup

Grey Seal pup

Grey Seal female rushing to defend a pup from a nearby male

One too many whiskies the night before

Sunday, 15 May 2016

Ardnave

Our first visit to Ardnave and Ardnave Point, just up the road from the Gruinart RSPB reserve.

Ardnave

The weather had flipped from cloudless blue skies and blazing sun to thick, grey cloud. Saw a Hen Harrier many times along the way, but always too far away (or frustratingly just behind a slightly too tall wall).

We tried to see the Corncrake near the RSPB visitor centre but still couldn't find it. No problem seeing or hearing the noisy Sedge Warbler, though.

Sedge Warbler
 Ardnave Point itself is a reasonably long walk along farm tracks and grassy fields, quite sandy in places.

Young Rabbit
I went for a wander down to the shore on the east side, quite a long way out while Gill waited and watched some Rabbits. There were Seals, Sand Martins, Shelduck and possibly more but everything's a long way out.

Gill waiting patiently
We settled down by a rocky shore looking over to Nave Island. There were hundreds of Grey Seals snoozing on the beaches and rocks opposite but too far away to photograph. Lots of Divers flying back and forth.

Great Northern Diver

Grey Seal
Near the farm buildings a Corncrake was calling away. We spent ages trying to spot it and finally saw it, once, as it fluttered from one patch of long grass to another. Meanwhile a Chough perched behind us.

Chough

Juvenile Barn Swallow

Meadow Pipit

Twite
While wandering around the dunes a male Hen Harrier sailed past out of nowhere. It hung around just long enough to get some rough shots.

Male Hen Harrier

Male Hen Harrier
A lot of Ringer Plover and Dunlin were resting on the rocks.

Ringed Plover

Ringed Plover

Flock of Dunlin on the beach

Flock of Dunlin and Ringed Plover snoozing on the rocks

Ringed Plover

Greylag Goose
One of the many cows grazing had what looked like a complete set of mismatched white socks.

"Socks" the Cow

Meadow Pipit

Information at the car park

Bands of rock next the beach and sea


Monday, 8 June 2015

Strumble Head

After a lazy weekend (dragging big cameras all over Pembrokeshire is tiring!) we head quite a long way north-east to Stumble Head. There is an unmanned lighthouse (as used in the EE advert with Kevin Bacon; which is a sham, there is no lighthouse keeper there and the mobile phone reception is rubbish), on a small island next to it. Nesting birds are on an even smaller island, neither of which are accessible.

Saw Chough again, failed to get a good photo again. Also Fulmars and various gulls. Struggled to see much as usual but some nice views from a rocky perch at lunchtime. Gill saw a lizard (most likely Common Lizard) briefly before it scurried away.

Strumble Head route

Fulmar

Grey Seal

Spot The Gill

Gannet

Ahh, a nice sit down (any chance of a cup of tea and biscuit?)

Orchid (possibly heath or common spotted-orchid)

If there are no birds, just enjoy the scenery

Strumble Head Lighthouse 

Painted Lady

Painted Lady

Strumble Head Lighthouse

Pesky Chough again

Adonis Blue Butterfly

Friday, 5 June 2015

Ramsey Island Part 2, Caerfai Bay

A second visit to Ramsey Island. This time going around it on a boat. The weather had taken a turn for the worse, with choppy waves, heavy cloud and drizzle. If only we could have gone the previous afternoon!

Finally got to see lots of the cliff-nesting birds, sometimes at eye-level, and lots of Razorbills flying to and fro, floating on the sea. Regularly saw Grey Seals having a nose, and a pair of Choughs again.

Ramsey Island boat route

Boat was rockin' so we just sprayed-and-prayed with the cameras.

Rush hour in Pembrokeshire

Bloody-nosed Beetle, saw these everywhere

Juvenile Cormorant

Razorbill

Pair of Guillemot

Kittiwakes on nests

Razorbill

Curious Grey Seal

Colony of Guillemot

Guillemot

Razorbills

Pair of Chough

With an afternoon left to soak up, we went round to Caerfai Bay, starting at Caer Bwdy Bay, to see what we could see. Very rocky shoreline, covered in weeds. The tide was slowly coming back in. Lots of gulls flying past the cliffs. Very lush, green vegetation covered in caterpillars but way too hot under the sun again. We came across a thick clump of Oxeye Daisies on the way back.

Caerfai Bay route


Lush vegetation leading to rocky Caer Bwdy Bay

Waiting for birds, but tide's coming in

Photographing rocks, it's something to do

Lots of weed in Caer Bwdy Bay

Lots of purple rocks in Caer Bwdy Bay

Fulmar

Herring Gull on rock

Waves on rocks

Linnet on Foxglove

Oxeye Daisies

Oxeye Daisies

Buckled rock formations forming an arch

Herring Gull

Juvenile Gull