I've noted three of pairs of Spotted Flycatcher at Chatsworth and at least one pair at Rowsley, where these photos were taken today. So it's looking like a similar number of pairs to last year in the Darley Dale area for me.
Spotted Flycatcher |
Nice to see some juvenile Redstarts starting to appear. With the prolonged spell of warm settled weather from early May to early June it looks like it will have been a good breeding season for many of our woodland birds.Common Redstart- juvenile
Fantastic views of an Osprey fishing below the first weir at Chatsworth this morning, it took two dives to catch a fairly small fish which it carried off towards Beeley Moor to eat. There have been several reports of Osprey at Chatsworth during the past week and they presumably relate to the same bird. It looks much more worn than the bird seen at Ogston recently.
Osprey |
Dipper feeding juvenile |
Dipper - wet juvenile |
Pied Flycatcher juvenile |
Pied Flycatcher female |
Although the Mute Swan is relatively easy to see locally with one or two birds usually present in the centre of Bakewell and at Caudwells Mill, Rowsley I think there are only one or two breeding pairs in the area.
One pair nested on the banks of the River Lathkill this year but only have one cygnet. They typically lay 5-8 eggs, but mortality is high with 50% failing to survive beyond 3 months old, but just one surviving cygnet now is not a good outcome for them.
The total number of birds in the area doesn't seem to vary much so I suspect one or two youngsters surviving to adulthood is probably typically, resulting in just 7 or 8 birds in the area most of the year.Mute Swan - female with cygnet
Pleased to see at least one recently fledged Whinchat at Beeley Triangle yesterday. It's a very scarce breeding bird around Beeley Moor with breeding birds more likely to be encountered a little further north around Big Moor, but juveniles often pass through Beeley in the autumn. As far as I can recall this is the first confirmed locally bred bird since 2014.
Since first posting this blog Doug Aston has been in touch to let me know that a pair bred below Fallinge Edge in 2016 so maybe some pairs have been missed, which is quite likely.
Whinchat juvenile |
I watched this adult female Hen Harrier for over 30 minutes hunting above and below Harland Edge this morning. At the end of this period it climbed until it was a dot in the sky and did two steep swoops, the classic 'sky dance' for which the male Hen Harrier is well known, before drifting off west.
An occasional breeding bird in Derbyshire it has suffered from persecution in many parts of its former range in England and there are typically less than 20 pairs nesting in northern England each year.
Why a lone adult female would be on Beeley Moor in June is a good question. It is perhaps an unpaired bird or a failed breeder from further north.
Hen Harrier - female |
Whinchat have been in short supply this spring so I was pleased to find a female close to Beeley Triangle this morning. I was even more pleased when the female was joined by a male.
I saw no evidence that they were breeding but it seems highly likely at this time of year so I left them to it.
Whinchat - male upper |
A pair of Greylag Geese with three goslings in front of Chatsworth House this morning is the first time I've confirmed breeding in the Darley Dale area. I suspect numbers will rival those of Canada Geese in a few years time.
Postscript: After publishing this post I went to Bakewell on 10th June and counted 55 Greylag Geese by the river and lake just north of the Thornbridge Brewery. At least half of the birds were juveniles so the number of birds in the area is going up rapidly!
Greylag Geese |
House Martin |
Walking through Halldale Wood this morning I noticed a movement in the very top of an Ash tree, i though it would be a Great Spotted Woodpecker which I could hear calling and was very surprised when it finally showed enough of itself to see that it was a male Hawfinch.
In the late 1990's when I first moved to Darley Dale Hawfinch sightings were fairly regular and I even saw them from the garden several times flying across the woods below Hallmoor Road, Gradually the frequency of sightings decreased until by 2010 they appeared to be lost as a breeding bird in the area.
In the winter small numbers are still recorded at Cromford but numbers have also declined there with just one or two birds present the last couple of winters.
In December 2017 there was an influx of Hawfinch in to Britain from the Continent and a single bird was found in the Whitworth Park in December which increased to 7 by the end of the year. In the New Year birds were seen at St Helens Church which were present in to March with a peak count of 51 birds. Hopes were high that some of these birds would stay to breed but all departed during the early Spring of 2018.
This mornings record of a male is therefore very interesting and is hopefully an indication that there is still at least one breeding pair in the area. Fingers crossed anyway.
Hawfinch flying in the tree canopy - not a great photo but good enough as a record |
Pied Flycatcher female, I've inverted the ring in the inset image |
Making the most of the sunshine I spent the morning with Pam orchid hunting in the Via Gellia. There were plenty of Early Purple and a few Common Spotted Orchids but most of the former were now past their best, but my main target were the rarer species.
In one area I found a good number of Burnt-tip Orchids and nearby, rarest of them all in Derbyshire, just five spikes of the Green-winged.
Green-winged Orchid |
Burn-tip Orchid |
Fly Orchid |