Wednesday 3 July 2024

Scotland for Bird's Wildlife & Nature Tours Day 4: 19th June 2024

It did not rain all day! From Grantown we headed north-west stopping for fuel at a tiny petrol station in Carr-Bridge where there were no Dippers on the river before continuing up to Inverness, across the Kessock Bridge (memories of adult Ivory Gull in July 1995) and then on the high road over towards Gairloch.   

Carr-Bridge


Best sign ever


It was a perfect choice and the first part of the journey north gave us many Red Kites and even two Ospreys at Maryburgh before we veered inland.

An adult Golden Eagle was found with Buzzards in attendance and even circled long enough for us to pull over and get out while down the road at Loch Glascarnoch we marvelled at the post glacial landscape and the gleaming Black Throated Diver on the glassy surface.






Loch Glascarnoch

Small Pearl Bordered Fritillaries became our first butterfly along with Fox and Eggar moth cats and there were two Sundew species and Butterworts too. We even found evidence of Water Voles!

Lousewort

Sphagnum

Small Pearl Bordered Fritillary

Round Leaved Sundew

Greater Butterwort

Oblong Leaved Sundew
Water Vole latrine

On again with our first Red-breasted Merganser on Loch Droma and another pair along with a synchronised Black Throated Diver duo on the low tide of Little Loch Broom where Greenshanks scurried around the margins with bill tips in the water. The saltmarsh was full of flowering thrift and very plump lambs...

Loch Droma

Loch Broom

Going for Northern Marsh Orchid on this one

Little Loch Broom

Viola tricolor


We wiggled down through an increasingly dramatic landacape; in fact so wondrous as to to feel like it surely could not be in our own United Kingdom. It was so encouraging to see so many fenced off regeneration areas. Perhaps there is a little hope?

Lunch opposite Gruinard Island gave us a pair of Hen Harriers, Black Guillemots, Red-throated Diver, Arctic Terns across the sound, and three foreboding Bonxies giving the Gulls behind a fishing boat a hard time.

Heath Fragrant Orchids were close enough to be sniffed this time and two rather plump Harbour Seals were loafing below us as we had our lunch in increasingly chilly, windy conditions.

Downlooker Snipe Fly - Rhagio scolopaceus




Harbour Seals

Heath Fragrant Orchid

We dropped down into Aultbea to scan for Eagles and found a roof with a party of beautifully pristine Rock Doves lounging on the tiles. So clean and sharp and the first 'proper' ones anyone else had seen.

Rock Doves

Rock Doves


A pair of adult White Tailed Eagles were soon picked up and we watched them cruising around effortlessly for over 30 minutes with barely a flick of their wings. The wind was fierce but they faced into it and made headway without trying before being swept back towards the coast where the first ridge invisibly baulked their progress.




White Tailed Eagles 





Eventually they turned with the wind and hurtled towards the village upsetting the Hooded Crows, where the male did the decent thing and came straight towards and past us to much crew delight.






White Tailed Eagle - Andy Reid

A male Wheatear came to perched alongside us but failed to outshine the Eagle.

Wheatear - Pete Osgood


The now fierce wind stymied the journey back and our attempts at Dragonflying around Loch Maree were fruitless but we did have a grand day out and the mountains became more dramatic and pointy with curious lenticular cloudscapes forming above them.


Loch Maree and its Caladonian forest remnants safe on the large islands



I am not even going to guess... happy for opinions!


More Kites were seen on the latter half of the journey back and two Honey Buzzards circled over the A9 but we could not stop. There is a glorious sky this evening but I hope the wind drops for tomorrow.


Tuesday 2 July 2024

Scotland for Bird's Wildlife & Nature Tours Day 3: 18th June 2024

The hoped for dry day did not materialise but we soldiered on and starting with some distant but perfectly formed Black Grouse brought immediate smiles while a Cuckoo posed for views.



Nearby we stood on a road on Dava Moor amongst 300 or so pairs of breeding Common Gulls which was a delightful if somewhat noisy experience while brave Red Kites and Buzzards cruised the overly managed and dangerous hills. 





It is amazing how bright yellow the legs and red the eye rings are in full breeding

Common Gulls

Red Kite


The rain returned at Lochindorb but a pair of sharply attired Black-throated Divers were located and Marsh Orchids (of one sort or another), Common Wintergreen and the striking Clubmoss (Lycopodium clavatum I think!) were found around the margins.

Bell Heather amongst the Ling

Lycopodium clavatum 

So, the Orchid people have suggested that this one may well be Northern Marsh

While this may well be Hebridensis Common Spotted. Others may be hybrids. To be honest I am confused.  I liked the phrase Machair Muddlers


Coffee time added two Red Squirrels, Snipe, Curlews, Ravens and the still attached heads of a pair of Red Grouse (the only ones we saw all trip) before we retired to the woods for lunch. The rain began once again and thwarted further investigation but with a clear weather radar for the rest of the day we headed to Strath Dearn in the hope of Eagles. Kites, Buzzards and Kestrels were up but blowing drizzle once again descended and scuppered our chances.


Lochindorb



female Red Grouse - Nick Baelz







Strath Dearn may have been dreich but the views were superb


There were birds to be found though with Tree Pipits, Redstarts and Spot Flys in the woodland edges and Sand Martins, Grey Wagtails, Snipe, Oystercatchers, Common Sandpipers and Curlews along the Findhorn’s banks.





Peltigara sp - over to the Lichenologists!


Alpine Lady's Mantle

A very wet male Redstart - Pete Osgood


It did not look like improving so we wiggled back to Grantown. Tomorrow we go west for the day...

I wandered down through the Anagach Woods after dinner.  It was busy with runners and dog walkers (albeit largely on leads) and I saw almost nothing and yet I walked these same woods on my visits 30 years ago and found Capercaille, Crested Tits and Crossbills.  Perhaps it was just the time of year.