I headed out for a post breakfast walk around Kalloni Pool. It
was very windy and cold but the sun was shining and there were quite a few
small birds sheltering in the gardens near the playground with peeping Chiffchaffs,
Blue and Great Tits, Goldfinches, Black Redstarts and Blackbirds.
Black Redstart
Black Redstart
Black Redstart
Great Tit
Goldfinch
Both these are 'peeping' Common Chiffchaffs which I presume are 'brevirostris'
Common Chiffchaff
Common Chiffchaff
Common Chiffchaff
Common Chiffchaff
The Teal flock on the pool was now at least 240 and a Green
Sandpiper flew around calling.I could
hear a couple of Coots and a Black-necked Grebe was paddling around too.
The tide was well out and four adult Slender-billed Gulls
were in the shallows with two Great Crested Grebes while two Sandwich Terns
patrolled the same stretch.Further out
20 Shelduck were heading purposefully towards the pans and ten Pintail did
likewise.They all felt like newly
arriving birds.Two Spoonbills were
also along the beach and the Kamares only hosted about 70 Mingos and the small
wader flock.There were four Golden
Plover but no sign of the other 90.
Great Crested Grebe
Little Egret
Slender-billed Gull
Over the top to the north this time but it was too windy to
stop at the Kalloni Raptor Watchpoint so I kept going and then down to Petra
passing Anemones on the verges but they were all closed up.Kavaki was the next stop and it was
chillingly cold but out of habit required a good look!A line a Yellow-legged Gulls down below did
not contain and Audouin’s but there was a 1w Little Gull delicately picking
from the surface and foot pattering like a Wilson’s Petrel!Twelve adult Med Gulls were following seven
Yelkouan Shearwaters and stopped whenever they did.I scanned for a stray Gannet but unsurprisingly
there was not one! Five Shags were on the rocks but no Monk Seals.
I love the view and always take this picture
While scanning the sea I could hear a Dunnock calling up the
slope and set off to find it with undue enthusiasm but it stayed well hidden in
the Cistus (some of which was flowering).There were Robins and Sardinian Warblers and two Firecrests were in the
Olive grove.
French Lavender
Cistus creticus
Mithymna
Robin
On into Mithymna which was a ghost town but at least I could
drive down to the harbour to look for Seals but alas they still elude me. Seven
Shags and a Cormorant were in the calm sheltered part of the bay and fresh snow
was falling on the top of Lepetimnos. Black Redstart hopped about.
Lepetimnos
Yellow-legged Gull
Cormorant
Lunch at Perasma was taken in the car once again!The reservoir is now a complete ruin with no
water whatsoever and bits of the liner strewn across the countryside beyond its
lip.Some Serins were fizzing away in
the Almond tree and a Cetti’s Warbler poked around a damp channel.Down at the far end the Clematis cirrhosa
had already finished flowering and was going to seed but they only birds were
some grovelling Chaff and Greenfinches and the odd ticking Robin while Buzzards
and Ravens soared above.
Clematis cirrhosa
The track down to Petra is normally navigable but although I
had a 4x4 I decided that I did not have the clearance as the track is seriously
water rutted on the first down slope so I retraced and headed back to Petra that way passing a Peregrine on the way before discovering a Bakers with some Orange
Sponge (actually filo) and then a cuppa with Alison in Anaxos.
Petra prom has taken a bashing in the recent storms before we came out
It was not even 3.30pm and car lights were on.It was so grey and windy that I just followed
the coast road around and then into Fila and over the top again and down to the
KSP. With no roadside birdy stops it did not take too long!The view down to the pans was bathed in
sunshine but I should have gone with my gut and called it a day as the wind was
so bitter down at the Alykes that my hour vigil quickly became 20 minutes
before I lost the feeling in my face and fingers despite being covered up.There were birds of course with six Dalmatian
Pelicans, a Black Stork and an increase in Wigeon (310) and Gadwall (ten) but I
could not hold the scope steady and abandoned with streaming eyes.The water in the Bay was the lowest I have
ever seen and I can’t have been low tide for eight hours so I think that the
wind was driving the shallow water away from the beach in the same way that it
keeps it at bay at Snettisham sometimes.
A relatively early start saw me round on the east side of
Mesa at 8am to meet up with Eleni and some ex-students who were out doing a
full wildfowl count (Greek version of WeBS).
It was bitterly cold but by the time they arrived I had found one of the
Slavonian Grebes in The Bay where it gleamed in the early sunshine that was battling
against the lowering cloud. There was a
raft of 14 Black-necked Grebes close in and eight Red-breasted Mergansers and a
flock of three male and female Pochard surprised us all by flying right past us
and around the corner! This is a very
scarce bird here and only my third record.
Down in the Mesa Wetland channel there were two Black
Storks; a super glossy adult and brown hued 1w bird and 14 Spoonbills glowed as
they fed alongside the road with the Flamingos and a female Pintail.
Spoonbills & Flamingos
Spoonbills
Spoonbills
Spoonbills
adult Black Stork
1w Black Stork
Spoonbills
I soon left them to their counting and headed back for
breakfast seeing a ringtail Hen Harrier near the Spoonbills on the way.Another Hen Harrier – an adult female was on
the Kamares with a pair of Pintail and three Spoonbills here too.The Golden Plovers were absent again.
The sky was getting darker but the forecast was for better weather
out West so that was the way we headed. The Sunday roads were empty and there
was a suggestion of some snow dusting on the tops and a few flakes drifted down.Perivolis Monastery was dark and even colder
but I still had a short walk.The 26
Siskins were still in the Plane trees and the Ivy berries were being feasted on
by many Blackcaps, Song Thrushes, three Mistle Thrushes and several Blackbirds.Everything bar the Siskins was skittish once
again and despite counting 30 Song Thrushes I have not got close to getting a
picture of one. As they flew across the river they all called and suddenly one
call was that of a Redwing and there it
was flashing those underwings! It dashed into the Ivy opposite and did not come
out again but I was happy.
Same view and a very different sky
Siskins
Cypress cones
Upwards and across to the Petrified Forest road for no
particular reason.There were several
more water filled hollows alongside the road but the only birds bar Ravens and
Buzzards were several Corn Buntings, Crested Larks and Rock Doves.Back down on the main road there were five
Rock Sparrows around the next sheep shelter.
The sea looked very dark and rough as we descended to Sigri
with Ravens alongside all the way down.Yellow-legged Gulls were in the bay but the drive down to Faneromeni
only produced flocks of Crested Larks, Chaffinches, Goldfinches and House
Sparrows around the sheepy areas and 30 Meadow Pipits came up from the big crop
field. Forty Rock Doves flew through.
The Sigri Oak Grove looks a little different in January
The Upper Ford was absolutely bone dry on the seaward side
and had just a few puddles above and not one bird and yet down at the beach the
pool was so full that it had swamped the track to the river mouth all the way
up to the wall and was completely unpassable. A chunky vole with a visible tail shot across the road and I seem to remember that down on the coast Harting's Vole is the more likely.
For the first time ever lunch was taken in the car rather
than standing around outside looking for birds! Some Yellow-legged Gulls moved
offshore and a single female Wigeon flew by but that was it.The thing is that January is an unknown out
here for most of us so I was determined to visit regular spots to see how they
were this time of year.
I have noticed that most of the Palms on the island are now dead having been destroyed by what I presume is Palm Weevil. You could see the exit holes in the heart of this one.
Back over past Ipsilou and then down towards Gavathas before
taking the track to Ancient Antissa.Robins,
Cirl Buntings and Chaffinches were seen on the first section and once down in
the valley bottom there were Meadow Pipits, more Chaffinches andflock of 35 White Wagtails in one field.The river was high and a quick look (it
really was that cold. 2c and windchill) gave me a calling Reed Bunting and four
Cetti’s Warblers but no hoped for Moustached Warblers although I bet they are
here. A flock of eight Jackdaws were the first of the trip and a high skein of
duck turned out to be Mallard which of course will be winter migrants here.
Squirting Cucumber -Ecballium elaterium
Wavy Mullein - Verbascum sinuatum
The Willow and Reed filled area just below the ford
Perivolis Monastery is upstream from here
Senecio anulatus - a South African climbing - trailing Ragwort with Ivy-like leaves
Senecio anulatus
Senecio anulatus
Wavy were found once the rocky landscape
reappeared but with the sky blackening I opted to head out and back towards
home taking the Anemotia road back down once again.The cloud base was lowering once again and it
was snowing on the tops but there was a sharp cut off point and it looked like
a Christmas cake had been dusted with lots of icing sugar.
Back down at sea level the sunshine returned and it seemed
that the Bay itself was keeping the blackness over the hills at bay and with
that a foolish hour was spent down at the Alykes Sheepfields once again
although despite four layers I was chilled through and numb by the time I gave
up.The light was strange with sunshine
and blackness making any bird with white on them positively glow.
Not your normal Lesvos attire
I did count 20 Spoonbills and a new high of 25 Dalmatian Pelicans and the two adult Black Storks were not those I saw it Mesa in the morning.Lapwings and Starlings were being blown around an the 70 strong Greenfinch flock contained some Linnets and two Serins again.
Ruddy Shelducks and a Raven
I re-found the six Gadwall on one of the pans - a good bird here
Wigeon feeding unit
illuminated Spoonbills
Windblown Lapwing
Lapwing
The tups are looking magnificent at this time of year with incredibly long thick coats down to the ground. At the risk of repeating myself from my March visit - they remind me of Bantha from Star Wars.
The Bay itself was unworkable for which I was very grateful as I could not have stayed out a moment longer!