Newbridge,
20th January 2016
Half-roll Raven and
a grebe that’s
greedy
Hard
overnight frost, bright, cold and calm, a perfect winter morning in which to check
the Smestow brook as it winds its way through the rough grass fields south of
Windmill Lane at Wightwick, followed by a walk via the canal towpath and old
railway back towards Compton and Newbridge.
Over Castlecroft canal bridge (no sign of Gareth’s Corn Bunting), and nothing
much is showing, save a hunched Buzzard
perched by the brook nearer to Pool Hall, and a few Robins, Wrens and Dunnocks calling from along the hedgerows. Back along the edge of the brook, and a Kingfisher arrows its way low over the
grass by the canal run-off, a Collared
Dove joins Magpie and Woodpigeon in bushes by the stream, and
a Grey Heron lifts off from the water’s
edge just south of Windmill Lane. A pair
of Jackdaw are indulging in mutual
grooming high in tree by the road when the largest of their relatives appears over
Wightwick ridge in the angular shape of a single Raven, making its way purposefully towards the north east, the low
sun giving it a dull sheen as it half-rolls twice over Compton. No time today, it seems, for the full barrelling
display, it’s just letting the bird world knows it’s there. After that, nothing of real note, save a Stock Dove low over the Compton
barleyfield and yet another Coal Tit
(they’re everywhere!) busying itself in a bush by the Smestow south of Tettenhall
Road.
A
walk along the Wightwick section of the Smestow last Saturday (January 16th)
produced a Jay flying towards the
Bridgnorth Road with an acorn in its bill, a single Fieldfare on a phone wire, a
Kestrel over the rough grass fields, a female Pheasant flushed from the brook margin just south of Windmill Lane,
and a male Goosander flying
westwards along the canal before changing course northwards towards Tinacre
Hill.
Sightings
in recent days include a singing Goldfinch
by Newbridge allotments on 17th, a pair of Bullfinch in Newbridge wood on 17th and three Buzzard circling low over Stockwell End
in misty conditions at lunchtime on 18th.
A female Blackcap on a feeder
by Newbridge playingfield on 17th was very likely the bird seen in
the same garden on January 5th.
PS
A Little Grebe seen trying to
eat what appeared to be a roach nearly as long as itself by Tunstall Water
Bridge on 15th eventually gave up the struggle and let its victim
drift off down the canal. This wasteful bird
could be in breach of EU fishery discard regulations, even though the rules apply
to catches that are too small, not too big . . .
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