Tuesday, November 26, 2024

On a short walk two days ago we spotted golden eagles. I was clicking away at one cruising across the hillside, when Greger pointed out two more in a tangle high above it - fighting, or maybe sky-dancing.



Yesterday we drove through rain and (smallish) floods to pick up my car. To get it through the MOT cost just over £2,000 - and there's also a long list of advisory items for me to think about. I drove (very carefully) to Ardmair today to celebrate. A black-throated diver, two great northern divers, and a shag with its breeding tuft were in the bay; and a stonechat and a rock pipit were foraging in seaweed on the beach.


As I walked back to my car I was aware of two men standing at the bottom of the grassy bank talking. I didn't take much notice until I got closer, when I realised they had two large shopping bags standing at their feet. As I unlocked the car they picked these up, holding the bottoms, and brought them up to the lay-by where they heaved them into a 4x4. I've no doubt the bags were full of stones.

I really don't think I can go to Ardmair any more; I get so upset about this. I try not to see what people are doing, but these men were right in front of me. The greed and acquisitiveness of stone stealers makes me sick - and they're not all tourists. What got me started on this was being on a geology walk a few years ago, when one of the group asked about the stones on Ardmair beach. The young, Scottish, female leader of the group, who had to my mind made a couple of snide comments about the English (I was the only English person there), airily replied that tons of stones from Ardmair disappeared down the M6 every year.  Well, one of the people I've approached since then turned out to be not just Scottish, but also a local, so that was rubbish. But many of the stone stealers are tourists - and they don't just take one or two!

Ringed plovers breed on the beach most years, and these beautiful smooth stones provide excellent camouflage for them, their eggs, and their chicks. It's a pity the information board by the lay-by doesn't include information like this for tourists who pull in there, along with or instead of the stuff on whales and dolphins, which the vast majority of them are highly unlikely to see anyway.

Saturday, November 23, 2024

A walk round the village and campsite brought a handful of turnstones and an otter, which chomped its way through an eel at the edge of the waves.


Apparently this is a female - the pink patches being the result, I've learnt, of the male biting and holding onto the female's nose while mating. Hmm. 

My car is ready to pick up, but we said we would leave it until Monday thanks to the warnings not to drive anywhere in Scotland today. It didn't actually snow in Ullapool - but there were (still are) high winds and rain. But of course, we've no idea what it's been like up on the Dirrie More. Yesterday, we drove to Inverness to shop - and the road conditions were very different on the high moors compared with at sea level. This is taken through the window on the trip out, between Lochs Droma and Glascarnoch, where the OS map for the area shows a spot height of 279m - the summit after the "long ascent". 


Greger pointed out that the other side of the road didn't look as clear as our side; and a bit further on, at Black Bridge, a rescue vehicle was standing in the walkers' car park in front of a gritting truck. It looked as though the gritter had reversed into a small dip or ditch and needed a tow out! It was gone when we drove back, so presumably it continued its journey to Ullapool. 

The day before that, a female blackcap was spotted at home and snapped through the kitchen window....


.....which was nice, as I haven't seen many blackcaps this year. The fieldfares (with at least one redwing) have discovered our little rowan tree and have been busy stripping it. If waxwings are on the way they'll have to hurry, or the berries will all be gone.  

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Greger saw them from the kitchen window - hundreds of winter thrushes streaming up from the hillside where they were probably feeding on rowan berries; and I snapped a few pictures from the porch.


He offered to take me to the quarry road and, despite my warnings about the ruts and potholes being concealed by snow, we sailed up to the walkers' car park without any trouble. Some of the thrushes had landed on nearby trees; they appeared to be mostly fieldfare, with only one definite redwing spotted.



On each of the last three days we've driven down to Silverbridge for a walk, and large flocks of winter thrushes were seen along the road and in the forest. Despite the snow, a pair of stonechats flitted about in a lay-by above Loch Glascarnoch, and earlier, before the snow, two song thrushes and a mistle thrush were foraging on the dam.


The only raptors seen over the three days were two red kites and a buzzard.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

A week ago, my car failed its MOT and had to be left in Inverness for a part to be ordered and some expensive repair work to be done. Two days ago, I decided to go on the ferry to cheer myself up. Hmm. Not sure that worked! The first thing of note was the passing of a doomed ferry. MV Hebridean Isles has been doing the freight route from Stornoway, but will soon be heading for Turkey to be scrapped. Sad. 


It all went downhill from there, really - if you can go downhill at sea. On three occasions I spotted a probable sooty shearwater, but there was no chance of even the poorest of record shots. I'd hoped for two things: a great shearwater (just one would do - I'm not greedy!) and another sighting of white-beaked dolphins. I saw dolphins twice - but they were common. Still, I have to say that the trip was quite exciting, with a blustery wind, a frisky sea, and lots of spray thrown onto the deck; and it ended beautifully, with the hills of Assynt softly silhouetted against a pink sky and high above them the not-quite-full moon, casting a path of light on the water.

A few days before that, a walk along West Shore brought a gruesome sight.


It looks as though the skates/rays have had their wings removed. Since coming to live here, I've learnt that some species of skate are considered to be endangered. I love seafood, but I'll never eat skate or ray wings (not sure I ever have eaten them, actually). There's no need to - there are plenty more fish in the sea! (I could add "literally" but have sworn never to use that overused/misused word.) Meanwhile, I've been trying to identify them but don't make much headway. The largest was probably under 3 ft long. 

Friday, October 25, 2024

A lull in the stormy autumn weather, coinciding with the Isle of Lewis standing in for the Loch Seaforth, prompted us to go for yet another pelagic. We saw a few dolphins from the observation lounge before we'd even left Ullapool, and as things turned out, the day would belong to dolphins. Still lingering "indoors", Greger spotted and I managed to snap through glass, seventeen whooper swans flying high on a south-easterly bearing.


Up on deck, we enjoyed as usual the sense of space and the relatively unobstructed views you get of the sea from the old ferry. However, fewer tourists and a cold and persistent wind meant there was no competition for "rail room" anyway, while the strong vibrations (worse in some places than others) made using the camera (and even the binoculars) difficult. Greger didn't have a problem with the latter as he'd forgotten to pack his bins!

The ferry took the alternative route, and in the shelter of the Summer Isles there were suddenly loads of birds. I scanned madly but could see no shearwaters or petrels among the gulls, kittiwakes, and shags. Several pods of dolphins were seen out on the Minch, some coming very close and being easily identified as common dolphins.

The journey took almost three hours, and we'd not long disembarked before we were called to board again. We sat in the observation lounge and watched the vehicles driving on below the raised bows of the ship.


Before going back out on deck, we called in at the Coffee Cabin and had a slice of their very nice raspberry and coconut cake each, Greger with his usual black coffee, me with a comforting hot chocolate. Thus fortified, we returned to the field of battle!

Greger's good at spotting things, and he would call out whenever he saw a bird; it was just unfortunate that there was nothing unusual (and very little that was usual, come to that!) to be seen. Once again we had several sightings of dolphins, and I clicked away at them just in case some were Risso's. 

In one small pod (at 15.25 - one hour out from Stornoway) the animals were extremely active, leaping and splashing in one spot (presumably feeding) to the south of our route. I felt they were different from common dolphins, and when I took a quick look at one picture through the viewfinder, I thought I could detect a pale band across the animal's flank.  Also, I couldn't make out the distinctive hourglass pattern of the common dolphin - so I took as many pictures as I could until they'd been left far behind. I kept thinking of white-sided dolphins - but having blown up the poor pictures at home and done some research, I'm certain now that these were white-beaked dolphins.








This, we'd agreed, was to be our last pelagic of the year. Still, I s'pose we can always change our minds!    

Monday, October 14, 2024

The Met Office continues to frustrate with forecasts that promise fair, calm weather for the following day and then, on the morning of that day, change it to probable rain and strong winds. I know they often get the weather right, but just lately, for this area anyway, they're getting it wrong fairly often.

The forecast for tomorrow was also good, so should we just wait a day? But what if that, too, changed by tomorrow morning? In the end, we decided to go on the ferry as planned; and under a dark sky threatening rain I walked down to the harbour while Greger diverted to Tesco to buy a newspaper.

While still among the Summer Isles and before we reached Priest Island, I was following a gull flying up the loch when I spotted just below it a tiny bird darting about over the surface of the water. "Petrel!" Greger got onto it but we both then lost it and there was no chance of a pic. The bird had a markedly black-and-white appearance so I'll put it down as a storm petrel.

We had passed under at least two bands of slightly spitting cloud on the way out, and when we reboarded the ferry at Stornoway it was quite definitely raining - so we sat for a while in the area between the coffee shop and the children's play-room. Given the number of children on board, I think it must be half-term - and what with them, scolding parents, and two hysterically barking dogs, the noise was terrific! After a while, feeling slightly battered, I went up; and when Greger joined me later he was amused to see that I was entirely alone. Bliss.


The rain petered out and we applied ourselves once more to searching for birds that just didn't seem to be there. A few gannets, goodish numbers of kittiwakes, the odd group of guillemots, and several great black-backed gulls were all we could spot - until Greger pointed out a flock of birds flying low over the sea. They turned out to be twelve barnacle geese.


These and the storm petrel saved the day. I've been fretting that others spot petrels while I seem to miss them, so this sighting boosted my birdwatching self-confidence a bit. I just wish I'd attempted to snap it - but there wasn't time. Is there ever?          


Sunday, October 06, 2024

Greger, having received his card for ChargePlace Scotland (enabling him to use other chargers than Tesla's own), wanted to try it out at Knockan Crag. I said I'd go with him for the ride and to look for possible migrants in the trees there. Having successfully plugged in, we walked a short way up the trail and I spotted what looked like a chunky bird on a treetop in the small conifer plantation that surrounds a house down near the road. It was a male crossbill - the first crossbill I've seen here.


Leaving the crag car park we pulled into a lay-by quite close to the trees but failed to see the crossbill again. We drove home (where I discovered I'd lost a glove) and after lunch I drove back to the lay-by (where I found the glove!) and eventually a crossbill flew up to do lookout duty.


She disappeared, and quite a long time passed before a male bird briefly showed.


I wondered if they are wandering further from the coniferous plantations "east of Ledmore", that have recently been drastically harvested, in search of food - but crossbills are known to roam about, and in any case, what was a first for me is not necessarily a first for them! It was only by chance that I happened to spot one today.


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