As intimated in my last post, I was irresistibly drawn back to Earlswood this morning in the hope that the Caspian Gull might drop in again.
Sadly, it didn't. The morning was nevertheless spent staring at gulls. Unfortunately the hole in the ice around and on which almost all the birds were gathered was closest to the north-west side of Engine Pool. This meant watching from that the closest observation point left us (me, John O, and Matt) looking south-east in the direction of the sun. There was some cloud cover, but probably not enough.
We all like looking at gulls, and the main feature was another good count of Common Gulls. In the context of Earlswood our best tally of 27 was pretty decent and I now know that John's count of 30 yesterday and the one made today both beat the previous record of 26 flying over in April 2018. Thanks to John O for the heads up.
| Eight Common Gulls in this shot including three 1st winters |
The fifth calendar year Yellow-legged Gull was once again present, but the Little Grebe seemed to have departed overnight.
Inevitably we soon found an "interesting" gull to look at, in this case a Yellowish-legged Gull. White-headed and somewhat darkly grey mantled with legs which it could be argued were straw coloured it was tempting to consider it as a possible Yellow-legged Gull or a hybrid. Eventually it wing-flapped allowing us to see that the fifth primary had a narrow black band across it. This feature meant Yellow-legged Gull could not automatically be dismissed, but at the same time didn't prove it was a Yellow-legged Gull. Gulls eh!
We also had trouble assessing the colour of the orbital ring. It generally looked dark, but in the photo shown above looked more yellowish (bad for Yellow-legged Gull). Looking again at the photo of it flapping its wings, is there too much grey extending into the bases of the sixth, seventh and eighth primaries?
I think the identification was left as indeterminate. I headed to my sister's house in Tidbury Green where I added a year-tick. Coal Tit, definitely.
PS: Actually, the adult Yellow-legged Gull got the thumbs up from my fellow observers so I was clearly being too cautious.
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