Monthly Archives: October 2010

Spain Catalonia 16th to 24th of October 2010

Spain Catalonia 16.-24.10. 2010

To Barcelona

After we (me and Miika “potu” Suojarinne) had spent already 4 weeks birding in Britain, we had in this day already travelled from Shetland Sumburgh to Scotland Edinburgh and from there to London and there by 4 metros from airport to another, finally got our flight tickets that Iberia had somehow lost, we were now finally in a right gate waiting for our flight to Barcelona. We were a bit worried because it was already time the plane to go but nothing was happening. Soon the gate opened and we got into the plane. But then we sat in the plane for ages and nothing happened! Time was passing and I started to get really nervous, our schedule was extremely tight! We had spent too many pounds to change to this flight so I could make it to Barcelona-Valencia football match in the evening. After all the plane was already an hour late when it finally left, so I thought it’d be in Barcelona airport only 30 minutes before the match!

Even thought the flight seemed to take long it surprisingly landed a half an hour earlier than we thought and I still had an hour before the match – but then we had to wait for our luggage for ages! My bag came after some 20 minutes but then it took still at least 10 minutes before potu’s bag finally came! So after all we were out and calling a taxi just 22 minutes before I had to be in Camp Nou stadium!

Luckily we got the taxi right away but of course the driver didn’t speak any English. So I used all Spanish words I knew to tell him to get to Camp Nou gate 18 and quickly! On that gate my friends from Parikkala were waiting with my ticket and also the key to an apartment where potu could go because he wasn’t coming to match.

It was exactly 8 p.m. when we made it to Camp Nou, but we were on the wrong side of this huge stadium. Somehow the driver managed to get through a couple of closed roads and finally we got to gate 18. But my friends were already inside. I called them and pretty soon one of my friends came with my ticket, but unfortunately he didn’t have the key for potu. So another call to another friend and soon potu could continue with the same taxi to La Rambla where we had our apartment and I could run to Camp Nou! Finally I was on my place when only 8 minutes had been played and luckily the result was still 0-0.

The match itself was pretty boring in the beginning. The biggest star of the field Leonel Messi was almost invisible and actually the whole Barca team was in big troubles with Valencia. And the first goal was made by Valeancia and it was very close that they didn’t lead 0-2 before the half-time. In the last minutes of the first half Barca started to take control of the match and the in the second half there was only one team playing! Word cup hero Andrés Iniesta made it 1-1 in the beginning of the second half and finally the captain Carles “tarzan” Puyol made 2-1 in middle of the second half. After this goal there was a great atmosphere in Camp Nou, I had thought there’d be like that all the time. When the match ended we took some pictures of us in the Camp Nou and then started to walk towards our apartment. But my friends had been celebrating already for a couple of days so after all they had no idea which direction to walk. So we asked some help and then went a couple of stops by a metro and finally found our apartment. Potu had got big problems to get into the apartment as the keys weren’t really working. After some 45 minutes trying he had finally managed to get in and then managed to see the second half of the match in a pub nearby with a well deserved cold beer.

After a short visit in our apartment we went to eat to the closest small pub and after that continued to see nightlife to La Rambla. I was absolutely too tired after an extremely long and stressful day, but anyway we were back into our apartment only at 4 a.m.

Walking in Barcelona

On the 17th of October we woke up at 9 a.m. even though the previous day had been one of the longest and toughest in my life! We took it easy for a couple of hours and then decided to go to have a long walk to see all the most important tourist places of Barcelona. My old Catalan friend Oriol Clarabuch had been in a bird-race in Baski-country, so we had decided to stay this day in Barcelona and then travel to meet him in the evening. About at 11 a.m. when my other friends started to wake up, we left to the city with potu. We had been walking enough in Shetland so we were ready for a long walk!

First we walked to harbour and from there through the old town to gothic town. Of course we went to see Sagrada Familia and then walked down along La Rambla where many Gaudi buildings were. We also saw some birds: 40 Monk Parakeets that were a lifer to potu and also 2 Serins and Yellow-legged Gulls, but not many other birds.

After 6 hours walk we were back in our apartment where we talked with my friends for some time and then packed our luggage and took a taxi to Sants railway station. Oriol had called and told us to take a train to Girona from where we’d continue to his place to Olot with him. The train to Girona was fast and we were there at 9:36 p.m. Oriol had send me an SMS that he’d be a little bit late but soon he walked to the station and it was very nice to see him again! Outside the station there were also Oriols partner Maria and another couple that had been in the race. So Oriol had just arrived from Baski-country. Of course they had won the race there.

Somehow we managed to get our luggage to Oriol’s Peugeot and soon we were on our way to Olot. After a half an hour driving we were in Oriol and Maria’s apartment and after a Catalan evening meal we were ready to go to sleep.

Relaxed day

On the 18th of October we slept long. We had been extremely tired and of course we had to let Oriol to sleep as much as he needed after a bird-race and before a longer race with us. We had planned to go to PNAE (Park Natural del Aiguamolls Emporia) to do bird census, but the weather forecast had told that there would be more than 120 km/h wind, so we had decided to stay near Olot. So in the morning we walked on the hillside forests near Oriol’s apartment with his dog Sula (Gannet). Potu got his first lifer already on the balcony when a Short-toed Treecreeper was calling in the closest trees. On the hillside we found some Short-toed Treecreepers more. A Mandarin Duck that had been on the river nearby wasn’t found but Nuthatches, a couple of Cirl Buntings, a Wood Lark, Sardinian Warblers, a calling Iberian Green Woodpecker, Marsh Tits and Stonechats etc. were found. Also a Firecrest was heard which was another lifer for potu.

During the mid-day we visited a ringing station nearby where a local ringed had just done a round and we got an opportunity to see some common passerines in hand. Robins, Chaffinches, Dunnocks, Blue Tits, a Song Thrush, a Blackbird and so on were of course photographed too. We still made another round but nothing new was caught, so soon we continued back to Oriol’s apartment.

In the afternoon we went to La Vall de Bianya where was a small pool with reed-beds and nice forests. Sula flushed a Red-legged Partridge which was again a lifer for potu, and soon Sula was swimming in a pool and walking in a reed-bed where it flushed a Water Rail – a good dog! Also Serins, some Reed Buntings, a Kingfisher, a Black Redstart and again a couple of Firecrests were seen. In the late evening Maria offered us the best meal of the trip. It included some mushrooms that we have also in Finland.

PNAE bird-census

On the 19th of October we woke up soon after 6 a.m. and headed towards the coast and PNAE. It was really freezing outside, only +2 degrees! While we were driving towards PNAE the wind started to rise and near the cost there was still very windy. We were there when the sun started to rise and it was still really cold. So we had even more clothes than on Foula in the coldest days!

Right behind Estany del Cortalet information centre there was a hide from where we found quite a lot of birds and one of the first waders was a Lesser Yellowlegs that Oriol had found a week earlier. Other birds seen were 22 Flamingos (lifer for potu) and many common waders and ducks. From the next hide we saw the same birds in better light, but there were some horses that had escaped from the owners and they were disturbing birds, so I couldn’t get any good pictures of the Lesser Yellowlegs. Fom the other side of the area we saw a Spoonbill (lifer for potu) together with the Flamingos, a couple of Western Swamphens (wp-tick for potu), 3 Pochards and on the sky we saw some Pallid Swifts. We continued to Depuradora d’Empuriabrava sewage ponds where we saw a Mute SWan, Green Sandpipers and a Common Sandpiper and more Pallid Swifts. I also saw a Turtle Dove flying with a flock of Wood Pigeons.

After we had done the bird census the weather had warmed up and now it was really hot! We headed to Rose to Vall de Muntjoi valley, where we were checking the bushes and trees for vagrants but found only big numbers of Blackcaps and Sardinian Warblers, a Great Spotted Woodpecker, a Crag Martin and a couple of Firecrests. The wind was almost stormy but it was good because we were going to do seawatching to Cap de Creus. The drive to Cap de Creus was long and on the way we saw some very nice birds when the road was climbing on the high hills. In Pla de Gates we saw 3 Alpine Accentors (lifer for potu), a Ring Ouzel and also briefly a couple of Thekla Larks (lifer for potu).

In Cap de Creus we parked next to the restaurant and then walked the last couple of hundred of metres to the rocky shore. The wind was extremely hard but luckily we found a sheltered place for seawatching. And there were amazing numbers of bird on the sea! Balearic and Yelkoyan Shearwaters were moving all the time in big numbers! Also some Gannets and Yellow-legged Gulls were seen but in the beginning we counted 100 shearwaters passing us in a minute and about 70% of them were Balearic and the rest Yelkoyan Shearwaters. Also some Mediterranean Gulls and a lonely Shag were found. There were also plenty of shearwaters swimming and we really didn’t need anything else to be very pleased! After an hour I found a strange looking skua coming towardds us and it immediately looked like a Long-tailed Skua with only white in the bases of two outer primaries. But it somehow looked too white-rumped. Otherwise the bird looked very dark. It was flying with a couple of Black-headed Gulls and it seemed to be smaller. When it was closest I decided to get some video of it through the scope because Long-tailed Skua would have been the first ever in Cap de Creus and a lifer for Oriol. When the bird was gone we were sure it was a Long-tailed Skua, but when we looked the video I had got, it really looked different! In my video there was a pretty pale looking young Arctic Skua-like bird! I have no idea how the bird had looked so different in live? Without the video we’d been misidentifying the bird! I once again learned how important it is to get some kind of documents of difficult birds like this!

When it was already getting darker and there were only 20 shearwaters passing us in a minute, we decided to leave. When we were back in Olot we just ate and went to sleep.

On the 20th of October the morning was similar than on the previous day and we were again in PNAE when the sun rose. On the way we had seen a Little Owl (a lifer for potu) in St. Pere Pescador. It was perched on a roof of one building. We started the census in La Masrona where were much less birds than on previous days places. The weather was still windy and the morning was extremely cold again. In El Matá pools we found Greylag Geese, Pheasants, 6 Red-legged Partridges, a Peregrine, a Sparrowhawk and a Goshawk. While we were walking on a sandy beach in Platja Can Cornes it started to get really hot. We were stripping our clothes but it didn’t help because it was soon more than 20 degrees! On the shore we saw some Grey Plovers, Kentish Plovers, Ringed Plovers and a Curlew, a Black-necked Grebe, Fan-tailed Warblers, a Bluethroat and a couple of Southern Grey Shrikes (again lifer for potu). The most common bird on the reeds was a Cetti’s Warbler and they were singing loudly. When we were walking back along the beach we saw a Hen Harrier migrating over us. We walked back towards our car along a garden of a camping area but only vagrants we found were a couple of Goldcrests. We still climbed to a high view-tower from where we had nice views to the area that we had been counting for two days. A Lesser Spotted Woodpecker was calling nearby on the trees.

After we had eaten a really good lunch in a small village restaurant we had 3 still places to count. We did it so that Oriol dropped potu to one place, me to one place and went by himself to count the third place. So we managed to count these places in a little bit more than 30 minutes. After that we managed to start our way back to Olot earlier. And we needed time because we had planned to go much further in the evening.

In Olot we packed our luggage and soon started a long drive to west. We dropped Sula to Maria’s parents and then we still had a 3 hours drive to the border of Catalonia ans Aragon. We were finally in Mequinensa late in the evening and there we went straight to Oriol’s friend Juan. Potu tried to find a Barn Owl from the village while we were discussing (unfortunately in Catalan) with Juan. Juan arranged us a nice place to stay overnight in 2 small bungalows. The small buidlings weren’t really good-looking outside but inside they were very comfortable. So soon we were sleeping and dreaming of semi-steppe birds!

Different kind of birds

On the 21st of October we woke up at 8 a.m. and there was a typical weather to Catalonia and Aragon border area, a fog. Anyway it was much warmer than in earlier mornings and many Mistle Thrushes and Spottles Starlings were flying over the plantations. Soon Juan arrived and after a coffee break in a village we continued to La Granja d’Escorp to dry hills. On the first stop we found some Black Wheatears and Thekla Larks. Unfortunately our guide was hurrying a little bit too much to the next “better” place where was no birds at all, so we never got any pictures of these birds. Anyway it was also good to hurry as my only project bird was still coming so we soon continued to a dry semi-steppe area in Secá Granja. We stopped a couple of times but found only a Dartford Warbler and a Southern Grey Shrike, but then when we were driving again we picked up a flock of 4 Black-bellied Sandgrouses flying over us. We stopped quickly and potu managed to get a couple of pictures of these 2 males and 2 females flying. A lifer for me too! Almost in same time we heard a call of a Red-billed Chough and a couple of birds landed to a roof of a building behind us. From a field nearby we still found 4 Calandra Larks in a flock of Skylarks (already the 4th lifer for potu this morning). Later we still found a flock of 7 Black-bellied Sandgrouses that also left immediately, they were probably so flighty because of the Red-legged Partridge hunters that were a lot. I hope these last Black-bellied Sandgrouses of Catalonia survive!

Soon we said thanks and goodbyes to Juan and continued to Aitona to Arrossars Fondo Lliteras wet fields where a Long-billed Dowitcher had been found about a week earlier. On the first fields we had only lots of Snipes and Lapwings, but in the middle of the area we finally found a field with other waders. There were Ruffs, Black-tailed Godwits, some Dunlins and the dowitcher! Potu had his 5th lifer of the day! These waders were pretty far and the haze was really bad so we tried to get closer but the waders were very flighty! Even thought we tried to get some kind of pictures of them for more than an hour, we really didn’t succeed. We found also a Purple Heron and 11 Little Ringed Plovers and there were some Griffon Vultures soaring on the sky.

Still to mountains

Soon we left towards the mountains; we still had one project species left for the day. We drove a little bit more than an hour towards the mountains and then stopped next to beautiful cliffs along the river, but soon Oriol decided that we’d continue still to a better place. So we climbed higher and higher to the mountains and were surrounded by amazing high and steep cliffs. We continued still 45 minutes and saw a party of Griffon Vultures along the road before we stopped to a valley.

When we finally stopped we were in the middle of huge cliffs. We started to walk and all the time watched up to the cliffs. Many Griffon Vultures were flying over us. After about 15 minutes our necks started to hurt but then potu saw a sparrow-size passerine flying very high on the cliffs, but it disappeared behind the ledge. We walked after it and now I saw it flying behind the next ledge. We ran after it and then I found it landing to a steep wall. I put my scope up and there it was – a Wallcreeper! We all managed to see the bird shortly through the scope before it disappeared. Another lifer for potu, 300th Catalonia year-tick to Oriol and my second ever Wallcreeper!

We still tried to find the Wallcreeper for some time but we saw only many Griffon Vultures, a Red Kite and a flock of Siskins and several flocks of Chaffinches that were migrating along the valley. I just wonder how many passerines there might be migrating in a good morning.

Soon we left again as we still had a long way to drive to south-east. We headed towards Ebro-delta and it meant we had to drive through whole Catalonia. Oriol was driving the whole way and somewhere we saw an amazing flock of 4000 Cattle Egrets going to roost!

Finally at 9 p.m. we were in Ebro-delta where we parked to El Canal Vell ringing-station. We carried our luggage to visitors room and then it was time to say thanks and goodbyes to Oriol who still had to drive to Barcelona to sleep to his parents before he’d continue to work at morning.

We walked a little bit outside and checked some of the places in the station before the ringer Pep came from shopping. I had met him 10 years ago in the same place and also in Vic where we’d been ringing too and it was good to find out that we were going to have a good time even though he didn’t speak English well. But he was a funny guy! We decided that Potu was going to communicate with Pep so the language was going to stay simple enough.

Pretty soon we were ready to go to sleep even though Moorhens, Western Swamphens and different kind of egrets were calling on the reeds. I almost stayed up and went to record the calls, but I was absolutely too tired, maybe next night?

Ringing in Ebro-delta

On the 22nd of October we woke up at 7:15 and soon we were out and looking up to the sky where were egrets and herons flying all the time. Surprisingly there were lots of Great White Egrets. Some bats were still flying around us even though the sun was already rising. We also checked the cages where we found several birds and in the first one was the same Black Kite than 10 years ago. On the next cage there was an Eagle Owl and then there were still 4 Griffon Vultures, a Kestrel and a Little Owl and also lots of turtles and tortoises. The first mist-net round was at 8:15 a.m. and we walked it together with Pep. The night had been warm and dry so it was the first and the last time that we were wearing wellingtons in Catalonia. There were quite a few birds in the mist-nets: Cetti’s Warblers, Robins, Chiffchaffs, Song Thrushes and a Reed Bunting. On the station Pep was ringing the birds and we of course wanted to take pictures of all species as it was far too long time since I’d been in a ringing station and handled almost any birds. Soon it was time to make the next round and now Pep took nets of one side of the station and we took the another side. Again we had nice selection of birds and when we were back in the station we could easily see that Pep got something better with him. Of course he left that one bird-bag last and while we were photographing a Reed Warbler and a Blackbird he carried us a nice Moustached Warbler! And when we were photographing this potus lifer he still carried a couple of Penduline Tits for us, I have no idea where he had them hidden. And soon it was again time to another round.

We had a good time walking the mist-net rounds and then photographing our catches until the mid-day when it started to be much quieter. But now we had time to walk around a little bit and also climb up to the bird-tower of the station to see some more birds. I was also digiscoping an Audouin’s Gull that was perched on a pole while other Audouin’s Gulls were calling on the background with their strange call. During the day we still had another Moustached Warbler which was even more beautiful than the first one, also a locally rare Sardinian Warbler, a late Redstart and the first Goldcrest and a Wren of the season were caught.

Before 3 p.m. we closed the mist-nets for a couple of hours and went twitching. Oriol had called to Pep that there had been a Black Stork found on the other side of the delta. We drove there and found the stork easily but unfortunately it flew too far to the fields to get photographed. On the pools nearby we saw lots of Whiskered Terns (do I need to say – a lifer for potu) and also a Black Tern.

When we were back in the station we put up the mist-nets again and then checked them every hour until the dark. We didn’t catch many birds but now there were lots of bigger birds in the air! We climbed up to the tower from where we saw amazing numbers of ducks gathering to the bay. There were for example 220 Red-crested Pochards! The next lifer for potu was a Glossy Ibis and when we were doing another net-round we saw the first Little Bittern (again a lifer for potu) and then a huge flock of big black birds flying around the bay. I told to potu that they were Glossy Ibises but he didn’t believe me. He said that they must be Cormorants because there can’t be so many Glossy Ibises in the whole world! But when we climbed up to the tower and saw the flock with the scope he had to believe his eyes, there was a flock of 1500 Glossy Ibises flying around! Also other egrets and Grey Herons were seen and some big flocks of Ruffs too, I also counted more than 100 Little Grebes from the bay. When it came dark the war started! There were loads of hunters shooting all the time. Pep told that they were hunting Moorhens, but we think that they were shooting everything that moved, they were shooting so much! Anyway we managed to see the first Night Heron and soon there were plenty of them. We saw maybe 40 of them and when it was absolutely dark we still heard them between the gunfire. Yep – it was again a lifer for potu. The war continued whole night so I had to forget the recordings. It also seemed that Western Swamphens were now very quiet. On the last round we caught a nice white-spotted Bluethroat. Before 10 p.m. we were ready to go to sleep.

Another day in Ebro-delta

On the 23rd of October we woke up early and I went soon out to record Western Swamphens, Moorhens, Little Grebes and also Night Herons. There were still some gun-shots, but I managed to get some recordings. Unfortunately Western Swamphens were still very quiet. Maybe all Moorhens and similar birds were already shot?

We made the first mist-net round with potu so that he did the easier side. I got almost 20 birds but potu only 4, but of course one of them was very badly stuck, so we were in the station in same time. I got one surprise in a bird-bag and I told to Pep to ring it last. Potu tried to guess what it was, but even though he could easily see it was a bigger bird he didn’t get it right. It was a Moorhen. So at least one had survived from last night.

The next rounds were surprisingly quiet; a Great Reed Warbler was anyway very nice. So we walked a little bit around the station but found only a Bluethroat and some Audouin’s Gulls.

We knew that Pep was going to leave to a ringer meeting to Barcelona (where Oriol was also going to be) during the morning and we had planned to leave in the evening, but when Pep was still around in mid-day we asked if we should leave in same train than he. It’d be easier to everyone. Of course it was ok, so at 2 p.m. we closed the mist-nets and packed our luggage and soon left with Pep’s Pajero towards Deltebre city.

To Barcelona again

From Deltebre railway station we took a train to Barcelona. From the train we saw nice views to the coast and lots of tunnels. After Tarragona we saw some Rose-ringed Parakeets flying over a reed-bed area (lifer for potu again).

The train was late but we weren’t in a hurry at all. Finally we were in Barcelona and we jumped off the train in Sants, Pep was going to the next station and change to another train there. We said goodbyes and walked to the station. There we took a taxi and asked the driver to get us to the nearest cheap hotel, but it wasn’t that easy! He told that all hotels were absolutely full because of the season and some kind of diplomatic meeting. He promised to take us to La Rambla where we should find hotels nearby and whole way there he tried to get us a hotel by phone, but everything was full! So soon we were in my worst nightmare, in La Rambla with our luggage and no idea where to go. So potu stayed there with our bags and I started to visit every hotel, hostel and so on. The first one had an empty room, but the price 210€ wasn’t what I wanted. The next 3 hotels were both expensive and full so I started to check only hostels. First 6 were full and then I found a Youth Hostel where they got space, but I didn’t really want to get into a big room with 6 other people that could do anything when we wanted just sleep. I continued along the smaller roads until the edge of the old town where I found a ridiculous small and awful hostel where I got a room for 40€. I took it even though the room was really awful. But I didn’t care anymore! The price was good and all we needed was a lock to the door, so we could leave our luggage there while we were out. I should have taken a picture of potu’s face when he saw the room, but he couldn’t complain either. We were now free to do something in the evening and also next morning.

In the evening we were walking around La Rambla and of course went to eat. We came back to our room when we were absolutely tired so we could immediately get to sleep at 11:00 p.m.

One more lifer before the end

On the 24th of October we woke up at 7 a.m. and at 8:00 we were walking to the end of La Rambla to Plaza de Catalunya station. There we took a train to Baixador de Villadrear. After a half an hour we were there and got out to the station which was surrounded by hills with pine-forests. We had got the info from Oriol to take the first road right and keep on walking towards the hill. There were some Crested Tits and Firecrests calling and after some walking we heard a birdsong which sounded like a Garden Warbler. We knew that there weren’t any Garden Warblers anymore so it must have been the bird that we were searching for. And soon we found the first red-billed bird from the tree, what ever Leiothrix? The story how we were there twitching this strange bird is so funny that I must tell it. When we were in Oriol’s apartment on the first evening he told me to have a look at his books if there was any book I wanted to read in the evening. I immediately noticed a new Birds of Catalonia book and opened it and on the first page I opened there was a strange green red-billed and red-breasted bird. “What the hell is this?”, I asked and Oriol answered: “it’s Leiothrix, a common bird in some places nowadays and you can tick it!”. Well anyway we forgot the bird but when we had decided to come to Barcelona, a night before our flight back to Finland, we had asked Oriol to find out where we could tick this bird. And there they were now at least 5 birds in front of us in the tree! Unfortunately the only camera we had was potu’s and only with the view-lens. Anyway he managed to photograph these birds. Soon we took the train back to Barcelona where we ate a good breakfast, got our luggage from the hostel room and took a taxi from La Rambla to the airport.

Our Baltic Airlines plane left at 1:55 p.m. and we landed to Riga at 6:00 p.m. in Finnish time. We spent a couple of hours in the airport queuing and eating pizza. At 8:10 p.m. left our plane to Helsinki. We landed to Finland at 9:30 p.m. and from the airport we found my father and potus companion Kirsi. We said goodbyes to each others and Potu and Kirsi started a long drive to Mikkeli and I got my fixed car and started even a little bit longer drive to Parikkala. My father wanted to try how he can get to Kirkkonummi by public transportation. Finally I was at home at 2 a.m. Potu and my father had been at their homes about in same time an hour earlier (there hadn’t been many trains or buses for my dad).

In Catalonia we had seen 158 species and 2 od them had been lifers for me, potu had got 24 lifers. I have to thank Oriol, Maria and Pep one more time! You made our trip unforgettable! During the last 5 weeks we had seen altogether 260 bird-species, 8 of them had been new wp-ticks for me, 38for potu!

J.A.

England, Shetland and Foula 18th of September to 16th of October 2010

England, Shetland, Foula from 18th of September to 16th of October 2010

5 weeks birding trip begins

We had arrived Helsinki on the previous day with Miika “potu” Suojarinne and done some birding around, for example on Espoo Laajalahti, Finno and Kirkkonummi Saltfjärden. After spending the night in Helsinki in potus relatives empty apartment we still drove my car to a garage and got a lift to Helsinki-Vantaa airport from my father. We were in the airport at 4:15 p.m. and soon we managed to get rid of our luggage even though they were a little bit too heavy and we were free to do some final shopping.

Our EasyJet plane left on time at 6:15 p.m. and 3 hours later we landed in Gatwick airport in London where local time was 7:15 p.m. A half an hour later we were in a hall with our luggage and soon my old friend Paul French arrived and soon we were driving away from Gatwick in his big Skoda. After some quick lunch in McDonalds we made decisions what we were going to do on the next day which was after all pretty easy. We chose the simplest plan, most birds as close as possible which meant that we started driving South-East.

After an hour driving we were at Dungeness in Kent, where we parked next to a nuclear power station and me and potu tried to try to sleep in the car and Paul went outside with his good mattress and sleeping bag.

Lifers right away

On the 19th of September we woke up around 6 a.m. and soon walked to the coast to do seawatching. On the sea we saw right away some nice birds: Sandwich Terns, Gannets, Arctic Skuas, Black Terns and some Little Gulls etc. A Grey Wagtail flew over us a couple of times and during the next 2 hours we still saw 3 Arctic Terns, a Kittiwake, a Mediterranean Gull, a Great Skua and 2 Common Scoters. Then we continued to some pools nearby where we saw 2 Ruddy Ducks (they aren’t all shot yet), a Yellow-legged gull and several singing Cetti’s Warblers in the bushes. A late Swift flew over us and in the bushes found a Sedge and a Reed Warbler and a flock of Long-tailed Tits etc.

Next we headed to Grove Ferry, a pool in the middle of quite badly overgrown reed-beds. There had been for some days a Wilson’s Phalarope, but when we got there we met some other twitchers who told us it had flown into the middle of the reeds some hours ago. So we waited for some time and then decided to walk to another pool where it had been seen too. When we were at the second pool all the birds from the first pool got afraid of something and flew in a flock around and we could see a strange looking pale grey wader with them. It must have been the bird. We rushed back to the first pool, had a Bearded Tit on the way, and there it now was! The Wilson’s Phalarope was feeding with Lapwings with its strange hooking style – the first lifer of the trip! Soon the bird flew again to the middle of the reeds and we decided to keep on going.

Next we drove to Oare Marshes where we parked our car in the end of one small road and started to walk towards the coast and we hoped we were going in the right direction. After a long walk we saw some pools where some birders were but we also saw lots of waders on our other side on a canal and on the seashore so of course we needed to check them first. We found 8 Curlew Sandpipers, a Little Stint, Knots, a Bar-tailed Godwit and Shelducks but couldn’t find the bird we were searching for. So we continued to the pools. The weather was extremely windy so it was difficult to identify the waders that were further. Soon I found a wader pretty close to us which looked promising but it walked behind a small island too soon. After 15 minutes Paul found the right bird and of course it was in the same place than my previous bird – a White-rumped Sandpiper – lifer number 2 of the day! We were watching, studying and digiscoping this bird for an hour but because of the wind the pictures weren’t very good. The bird was flying a couple of times so we could see the white rump too, but otherwise the bird was more difficult to identify than I had thought. When the bird had disappeared about 5th time behind the same island we decided to move on again.

Now we drove a longer way to Southend-on-Sea, where our goal was to see a Ring-billed Gull that had again returned to overwinter on the coast of the town. But unfortunately we made a mistake and there was a low tide and all the gulls were very far from the shore. Actually we soon heard that the gull had never been seen in low tide so after we had seen some Mediterranean Gulls and lots of Little Egrets we started our long way to north to Nottingham where Paul lived nowadays.
After some traffic jams around London we managed to get to higher roads and after all we were in Nottingham at 10 p.m. We were of course very tired so after some food we were ready to sleep.

In Sherwood Forest

On the 20th of September we woke up at 7 a.m. and after relaxed morning we decided to go birding nearby becouse of the wind it wasn’t clever to go anywhere further. So we drove to the most famous forest nearby: Sherwood Forest. After some walking we came to a huge tree that was told to be a home of Robin Hood. There were quite a few birds around and Nuthatches, Treecreepers and Marsh Tits were seen and a Green Woodpecker was heard.
During the day we walked in the big Woolaton Park where we tried to see and photograph a Green Woodpecker but unfortunately we saw only one bird in flight. In the afternoon we went to Attenborough Gravel Pit bird sanctuary, where we first saw just zoo-birds but later also some real birds like Bullfinches, Stock Doves and a Common Sandpiper. In the evening we were just relaxing, cooking and packing.

Towards north

On the 21st of September we woke up at 6 a.m. and at 7 o’clock we were already packed in Pauls car with all our luggage and driving north. After a couple of hours driving we were in Middlesbrough, where we went over the river by the strange hanging bridge and soon we parked at Greatham Creek where other twitchers told us to walk the last 300 metres to along the creek to see the bird we were looking for. And there it was a lifer for Paul but not for us, as we had just seen similar bird a couple of weeks earlier, a Sharp-tailed Sandpiper! We were studying and watching this bird and tried to digiscope it but it was in difficult place in black mud and the day was getting very warm so the haze and the wind made it difficult. Soon we continue nearby to Saltholme RSPB reserve which was a huge birding complex with a big park for children and another for dogs and so on. The Information centre had a good shop and a restaurant too. But the birding places weren’t that good: 2 Curlew Sandpipers, a Little Stint, 4 Pintails and so on were seen.

Then we started our long way north. In the afternoon we crossed the border of Scotland and soon saw the first flock of migrating Pink-footed Geese of the trip. In Edinburgh we turned to follow the coast towards west and finally parked to Largo Bay at Rudden’s Point. Right away we heard some calls of Partridges and after some searching we found a flock of Grey Partridges on the grassy hillside. Our goal was to try to find some seaducks and soon we found some Common and Velvet Scoters but also a really good tick a male Surf Scoter! Lifer for potu! This place was actually one of the best places to see this species but we had no idea when the last one had been. We also saw plenty of Eiders, Goosanders, Red-breasted Mergansers, some Common Guillemots, Razorbills and Great Skuas and I also saw briefly a Manx Shearwater which unfortunately flew behind a spit before potu could see this lifer species.

After this we continued towards north-east and after a long drive we were in Abernethy Forest where Paul somehow managed to follow right small tracks to Forest Lodge, where we parked next to an information board and again started to sleep in or next to the car.

In Scotland

On the 22nd of September we woke up too early when it started to rain weakly, but the rain didn’t wake up Paul that was sleeping outside so we also continued to sleep. We woke up at 6 a.m. and soon started to walk in the pine forest. First Robins, Goldcrests and Crested Tits started to wake up soon.

We walked around the forest for an hour but the next better observation was a very brief grouse flying, it was probably a female Black Grouse but there are also Capercaillies around. Finally we heard the first crossbills and right away I thought they really had a different call, more Greenfinch-like. Soon we saw a couple of crossbills flying and I managed to record their flight-calls before they flew away. We walked for another hour but nothing else was found and we were already going back to our car when we finally heard more crossbills coming. 2 Scottish Crossbills landed just to the top of next trees and we could see, photograph and video them pretty well! Soon some more birds arrived and I could get more recordings of different kind of calls too. – Scottish Crossbill recording – Already the 3rd lifer of the trip for me!

Soon we continued to a skiing centre nearby and saw first Red Grouse on the way. We had planned to try to find Ptarmigans but the weather changed rainy. So we spend some time there in restaurant and shops and soon continued down by the road where we saw a family of at least 5 Black Grouses on the road. After some driving we stopped in a valley a found some Dippers and Grey Wagtails on the river before we continued to another high place where to try Ptarmigans. On the way we saw some more Red Grouse but once we were high in the mountains the weather changed to be extremely foggy! There was maybe 5 metres visibility so it was no point to get out from the car at all.

After this we continued towards Aberdeen where we visited Black. The wind was very strong so it was difficult to identify birds between the waves. But we saw some Velvet and Common Scoters, Eiders, Red-throated Divers and so on but soon we had to continue to harbour. Paul dropped us to get our tickets and continued to find a safe place to leave his car for more than 2 weeks.

After a couple of hours our ferry left towards Lerwick the capital town of Shetland. Next 14 hours were spent on the ferry. We soon found our old friend Garry Taylor, who was again coming with us to Shetland and Foula. We visited the deck shortly but now the ferry was later than last year so it was soon too dark so we couldn’t see anything interesting. So after a good meal in restaurant we managed to find a good place where to sleep in one the restaurant and started to sleep.

In Shetland

On the 23rd of September we woke up at 6:30 a.m. and were soon having a proper English breakfast. After a short visit to a deck where potu finally got his first Fulmars – it was about time – we were soon in Lerwick harbour. Surprisingly soon we had a rental car that Paul had arranged and after we had packed our Vauxhall Vectra full we continued to a Tesco to buy everything we need for the next 2 weeks! Luckily we had planned our food supplies well so it didn’t take too long. Somehow we managed to pack everything in to the car before we heard the bad news: Garry had got info that the Foula ship wasn’t going anywhere in next a couple of days because of the wind. It wasn’t a problem for us to get to Foula because we’re going by plane on next day, but it was a problem for our food that wasn’t going to fit in the plane. Anyway we drove to Tingwall airport to ask when it might be possible to get our food to Foula by plane and found out that it’d take several days too. So after all we drove to the harbour and carried all our baggage to a store and just took all meat and some light food supplies that we could get to Foula by plane so we’d have something to eat at least for a couple of days.

And finally we were free to go to do some birding. With Paul we went to check some of the best gardens in western side of the main island in Tresta, Voe and Kergord and saw a Wood Warbler, Willow Warbler, 2 Pied Flycatchers and a Red-breasted Flycatcher. In the evening we drove south to Sumburgh where we stayed overnight with Pauls friend Rob Fray. The late evening was spent in Sumburgh Hotel. Anyway we managed to go to sleep before 10 p.m.

To Foula

On the 24th of September we woke up at 6:20 and at 7:00 we had packed everything again to the car and started driving towards Lerwick to do some birding before our flight. In Helendale gardens we had found a Great Spotted Woodpecker by 8 a.m. We left our car and took a taxi to Tingwall airport. At the airport we met Garry and Gavin Thomas who had arrived last evening by plane from Manchester. Somehow we managed to get our luggage in to the plane even though Garry and Gav had already more food supplies than we had left to the harbour! Our small plane left about 10:45 a.m. and soon we could see the small island of Foula in front of us!

We landed on the ridiculously short airfield of Foula and carried our luggage to a couple of islanders’ cars and were soon ready to walk around the island. We headed south and saw right away plenty of Great Skuas and other common birds. The first Foula tick was a Wood Pigeon and in Hametoun we found a couple of Rosefinches, a Pectoral Sandpiper and a Dunlin in the wet valley. This Pectoral Sandpiper had been found already earlier, but it was good to see anyway. We continued along the Hametoun ditch and flushed a Jack Snipe too so it really seemed that there were plenty of nice birds around! But the rest of the walk wasn’t that good anymore: 105 Lapland Buntings, 25 Snow Buntings, a couple of Song Thrushes, a Redwing, Eiders, Turnstones and other normal birds were seen. Like so many times last year we walked from Ham to Ristie along the coast and saw 2 Velvet Scoters on the sea but nothing else.

When we were in Ristie where our apartment was we met Micky Maher who had came by evening plane and was going to stay with us for the next week. It was a big surprise that the evening plane had come because of the very hard wind! We made Ristie our home and the evening was spend talking and relaxing and of course we ate noodles and some fake-meat (Swedish meatballs, that were awful!). But food wasn’t the only thing we missed, all our beer was also in store at the harbour on Mainland waiting for the wind to drop down.

Race

On the 25th of September we woke up early and had an early breakfast – noodles again – and were soon out as we had a bird-race against our good friends in Hailuoto where we had been so many times earlier. My brother Pirkka, Harry Nyström, Mikko Ala-Kojola, Antti Vierimaa, Jari Kiljunen and Raine Kekäläinen had already started their race in two teams in Hailuoto but we started at 7:30 a.m. and our first species was a Twite. Next we did some seawatching but only Fulmars, Great Skuas (Bonxies) and Gannets were flying there a lot, but the only important rally-species was a young Kittiwake. We next climbed up the first hill that is always very hard and then walked down to Harrier where we walked through all the irises and along the ditch but the only bird there was a Willow Warbler. Then we continued to Ham where a Yellow Wagtail flew over us and where another group of birders, the same group as last year (Paul and Neil Wright and Kevin Shepherd) and were staying in another apartment in Ham, had just found a Bluethroat. We hammered all the irises there too and found a Reed Warbler and a couple of Whinchats before we continued south to Hametoun. There we were sitting on a fence and eating some chocolate and bread and talking with Kevin when we saw a passerine landing to a fence next to us. We all looked at the bird for a couple of seconds before we realized it wasn’t a Meadow Pipit but a bunting and a small bunting! It was Little Bunting! We saw it really well and then it called once and flew to reeds where we couldn’t find it anymore (for several days). What a nice bird and what a funny situation! In Hametoun we saw again the Pectoral Sandpiper which we managed to photograph extremely well, and also a couple of Rosefinches were seen again.

In so called France’s garden we couldn’t find a Barred Warbler that other guys had seen but a Wood Pigeon was now there but soon it flew north with the wind. On the southern cliffs we saw again Snow Buntings and also 2 Grey Herons flew over us. Then we got a message through a walkie-talkie that Neil had found a Yellow-browed Warbler on the southernmost gorge. We weren’t too far so we walked there immediately and met Neil on the way so when we were there over the gorge we knew where to look. And there the warbler was at the bottom of the gorge catching some insects. It was a good Foula-tick again.
We walked back to Ham along the coast and ticked some common shorebirds and in Ham garden we found 2 Chiffchaffs. The coastal walk back to Ristie produced 3 Grey Herons and 5 Wigeons but nothing else good. Finally we decided to take a short-cut and walked through Isobels garden to Ristie which was a good decision because there was a Redstart in her garden. Altogether we saw 62 species that was of course much less than our friends had got in Hailuoto which is a much bigger island. But for sure we had a couple of very good species that they hadn’t.

Hard work

On the 26th of September we woke up a little bit later (or at least I did) and after 8 a.m. we were ready to start the hard work again. We walked through Harrier but only the same Willow Warbler and 3 Bramblings were seen. One more Brambling was found in the first garden too. It was one of the species that I didn’t see last year at all. Before we were in Ham a flock of 4 Greylag Geese flew over us, they were a family that had been breeding in the island. Then we got info that another group had seen a possible Pallas Grasshopper Warbler in Ham so we really ran the last kilometre there. On the way we saw a Bluethroat but didn’t stop at all. In Ham the bird was already missing so we waited for the rest of our group there and then really hammered all the irises and ditches on the both sides of the bridge but only the same Reed Warbler was found again. The weather was very warm so we were only wearing t-skirts while working. In the Ham garden we found a Barred Warbler, Garden Warbler and a Lesser Whitethroat and also a Robin and a Common Redpoll and a Tree Pipit was also found nearby. Later we continued south and soon we saw a dove landing on the road in front of us – a Turtle Dove! Nice Foula tick again! The bird soon continued towards north and it was found again only in the evening just from the same place again on the road.

It was quiet in the south; 3 Dunlins and the same Yellow-browed Warbler still in the gorge. On the way back to Ham we saw a Linnet next to the road and in Ham there was now also a Blackcap with other warblers and also a Rosefinch and some Bramblings. This best place on Foula was really good now.
On the shore-walk we saw many more Fulmars than on the first days even though the weather was almost calm. But of course the boat was still not coming because it was Sunday! I don’t really know why, I think the sailors had got enough holidays because of the wind already. So in the evening we had very poor food and nothing good to drink.

Good self-found tick

On the 27th of September potu left early to the nearest cliffs to photograph Fulmars. I had enough pictures of these birds already from earlier trips so I went there later just to see the beautiful views. Soon I decided to walk along the hillside towards Harrier, potu decided to climb a little bit higher to see more views. Micky had just arrived to Harrier too so we hammered it together but nothing better was found. In south the rest of our group saw a Yellow-browed Warbler or two, the same Little Bunting and again the same Pectoral Sandpiper but I decided not to walk south. I had heard one new Foula tick anyway, a Dunnock.

In the afternoon we hammered the irises in Ham again and in the garden 2 Lesser Whitethroats 6 Chiffchaffs and a big flock of 18 Bramblings were seen. Finally we decided to walk once again along the coast back to Ristie. Once again it was funny to watch seals and listen to them calling with their deep voice. When we had walked about a kilometre and were on the highest part on the hills I noticed a wader in front of us – a Buff-breasted Sandpiper! American self-found bird! We called to others by walkie-talkie meanwhile a Merlin was flying over us. Soon Garry and Gav came in hurry and soon we were trying to get neared to get some quality pictures. But the bird was surprisingly flighty so pretty soon we gave up with potu and decided to try get the info about the bird also to Paul who hadn’t answered to our calls. Finally we found Frenchy in Ristie where he had just arrived from Harrier but now it was already too late to go to see the sandpiper. So Paul had to leave this new Shetland-tick later.

Luckily there was no reason to be sad because the ferry had finally arrived with all our food and beer! We had absolutely nothing else other than meat in the freezer left and all we had eaten during the day had been 4 bits of chocolate ! So in the evening we cooked a lot of food and even though the quality wasn’t that much better, now we could do at least 3 times bigger portions! And of course it was good to have some beer finally! It wasn’t a surprise that after all we went to sleep just before midnight.

Checking the same places again and again

On the 28th of September we woke up before 7 a.m. and had a really good and filling omelette breakfast before left out. Now we walked to Ham along the coast. The wind was again very strong so the ferry had arrived on the only possible day! Not many birds were seen because of the weather, the Buff-breasted Sandpiper was probably heard (Frenchy saw it); a Dunlin was seen on the coast. Then we got a message that another group has a small “locustella” warbler in Ham and we hurried there. When we got there the situation was still under control and because we knew the rest of our group was still too far to get our messages, we decided to try to see and identify the bird right away. And we found it easily even though we had to almost step over the bird before it flushed. And it really was tiny – a really good “Lancey” candidate! After some flushing I managed to see the bird well enough from the breast so I could tell it was a Lanceolated Warbler, but we still needed some pictures. It was really difficult but finally potu managed to get one and right after that the bird had enough and flew in front of us and inside the Ham garden. And from there it was impossible to find anymore! But we still stayed there and tried until the rest of our group came to Ham but we just couldn’t see it. We still found a Reed Warbler, a Blackcap, a Lesser Whitethroat etc. Finally we decided to walk around the garden wall with Paul and check the tiny ditches and surprisingly the bird was there but of course it disappeared in to the rocky garden wall and went through into the garden and was never found again, and that was a pity because the bird would have been a lifer to Gav.

We continued south with Paul but because of the extremely hard southern wind we decided to turn west to Da Daal and go to check if there would be any shelter in the Sneck o da Smaallie. Someone should go there soon anyway. The walk through Da Daal was as awful as it always is and it was also very windy there and even windier when we reached the western cliffs. So we decided to do something very different and climb down the 30 metres deep Sneck o da Smaallie with potu. We somehow managed to climb through the narrow holes down to the bottom and found a Robin, a Dunnock and a Wheatear but unfortunately nothing rare. It would have been a perfect sheltered place to anything from the west. The place was very frightening with dead sheep and huge rocks stuck to a narrow crack-like gorge!

When we were walking back towards Ham we found a Greenshank on the pools between the Memorial and Ham, and in Ham we found a Reed Warbler again, but soon we headed back towards Ristie. On the way we talked with Neil who had been birding the whole day in the north because he thought that the wind might have pushed the birds there and he had been right. He had seen a Spotted Flycatcher, a Great Spotted Woodpecker, a Reed Bunting, Goldcrests and even a Richard’s Pipit and all near our home! We still decided to walk to the northern gorges but saw only a Chaffinch before it was too dark.

On the 29th of September we were out already at 8 a.m. and because of the southern wind we decided to start from the northern cliffs. Right away we saw 2 Purple Sandpipers and from the first gorge we found a Spotted Flycatcher. But then it started to rain so we decided to walk back to Ristie. At 10 a.m. the rain stopped and we were out again. We continued exploring the nearest gorges and found a Reed Bunting and a Goldcrest before we continued along the hillside towards Harrier. There we saw a good Shetland tick, a Mistle Thrush and while the rest continued towards south we climbed down to Harrier where we walked with our neighbour Andrew Grieve who had already been in Foula for several weeks – again. He had found the same Great Spotted Woodpecker that Neil had seen and we had heard in previous afternoon with potu. We were now sure we had heard the bird the previous evening, as the call was from where Andrew had now found the bird inside a building! The bird seamed to be pretty weak so we decided to carry it to Ham where it might get some shelter and find something to eat in the garden. Andrew turned to the road and we continued along the Burns towards Ham and soon Andrew alarmed that he had found a Great Grey Shrike. We found the bird immediately perched on one of the fence posts but then it seemed to fly inside one small garden walls but it just disappeared. We continued towards Ham and found a nice male Ring Ouzel and while we were digiscoping it we heard that Andrew and the Wrights had found a female Ring Ouzel. In Ham we saw a Hawfinch flying over us calling and together with Geoff and Donna who are living in Foula for at least the best time for birding we released the woodpecker into the garden.

On a very hard wind we continued north along the coast to Ristie and found again the same Buff-breasted Sandpiper on the highest hills. But it started to rain so digiscoping was impossible so we hurried to Ristie where the rest of the evening was spent trying to get clothes dry.

Good tick in our own garden!

On the 30th of September we slept longer. And when we woke up it was still extremely foggy but when we were out we already had a feeling that we were late. We checked first our own garden but found only a Robin and a Blackcap before we continued with Paul towards Harrier. While climbing the first hill along the road something left running almost under potu’s feet. It stopped in the grass just next to the road so that I could just see its bill – a Corncrake! We flushed it so we could see it all well and it landed just 100 metres from us. It was a good bird for me as I had missed the only Corncrake last autumn on Foula. In Harrier we saw plenty of flying Bramblings, Chaffinches and Siskins – all birds that we hadn’t seen at all last year! Just before Ham we found a Yellow-browed Warbler from some ruined buildings we had never checked before and when we were in Ham we got info that Andrew had found a Syke’s Warbler in our own garden! And we had just hammered it a couple of hours before! Now also Gav and Micky were there already and the bird was still present. So we ran to Geoff and Donnas apartment and asked if they were interested to see the bird and of course give us a lift too. And of course they were going, but Geoff was telling us something about some bunting in his garden but we were too excited to get to Ristie to see a lifer! The bird was still hiding in a bush in our garden when we ran the last downhill there and soon we saw it moving inside the bush and immediately Paul said that it wasn’t a “hippolais” warbler. Then we had to wait for 10 minutes to see it better but finally it came to a branch just in front of us and stayed there for a second but it was enough for us to tell that it wasn’t a Syke’s but a Paddyfield Warbler! So it wasn’t a lifer for anybody other than potu but only the second for me ever. We still looked at the bird for an hour before we decided to go birding again. Potu climbed along the cliffs as he had dropped his hat and gloves there, I went along the coast. Potu managed to see a Ring Ouzel, a Mistle Thrush and a new Yellow-browed Warbler, but I didn’t see anything before in Ham where a Pied Flycatcher was perched on Geoff and Donna’s fence, a Long-tailed Duck was swimming in the harbour and an Ortolan Bunting that Geoff had seen earlier and Garry after that but had just been re-found by the Wrights was now near Ham Little gorge. Actually the bird was now really identified for the first time and I managed to get a good picture of it before it flew to the other side of Ham Valley.

Kevin had come there too to see the bunting and he told us that he had seen a Richard’s Pipit near the next gardens south from Ham. Even though it was almost getting dark already we decided to try and hurried to south. The pipit wasn’t found so after all we walked back to Ristie along the road. When we could see our home we received a message that there was still a Red-breasted Flycatcher visible from the northern cliffs. We hurried there and I managed to see the bird shortly in flight far on the opposite cliffs before it was too dark to see anything anymore.

More quiet

The month changed to October and on the 1st day the weather was extremely windy. We started in normal time but pretty soon it was clear that there were no new birds and old ones were either hiding or blown away with the wind. We walked through a very wet Harrier where we saw the Great Grey Shrike and the Ring Ouzel again in Ham where the Ortolan Bunting was found again from the road. The shore was almost empty so after all we were back in Ristie already by 2 p.m. Others had been staying in Ristie the whole day, some hadn’t been out at all, and of course they had seen the best birds of the day: a Peregrine and Short-eared Owl. Micky had managed to leave by plane which was a big surprise, we thought the wind would have been too hard for the plane; he was going to Fair Isle next.

In the afternoon we used a ridiculous washing machine, cooked food for several days and so on. In the evening the wind was even stronger and it was also raining very hard again. Our window was leaking a little bit so potu got his passport washed.

On the 2nd of October we walked straight to Ham and saw a Bluethroat on the way. In Ham we saw the same birds: 2 Whinchats, a Rosefinch and so on. We were just about to continue south when we got a message from Paul that he had found a “locustella” warbler in the furthest part of Harrier. We checked that Geoff and Donna weren’t at home so we started to walk back towards north. Luckily we managed to get a lift from a young veterinary that was driving there to check water pumps. So we were there in a right place before Gav who was still in Ristie. When Gav finally arrived we walked to the irises where Paul had seen the bird going last and we found it easily. Unfortunately it wasn’t a Pallas’s but a Common Grasshopper Warbler. Soon Geoff and Donna arrived there with the Wrights and so we got a lift to the airport (potu actually went into the trunk!). We walked south to Hametoun and South Ness and found a new Ring Ouzel, 15 Snow Buntings, 7 Dunlins and so on.

When we were back in Ham 2 Barnacle Geese migrated over us and in the garden the Reed Warbler was showing well. On the shore we saw 27 Snow Buntings, still a lot of Lapland Buntings and on the sea a couple of Kittiwakes. Near Gaada Stack we saw a couple of Purple Sandpipers and an Oystercatcher. At home we took long afternoon naps that I could have continued until morning but of course I had to wake up to eat.

The 3rd of October was a bad birding day. But we had already been in Foula for 10 days and this was the first really bad day. Last year almost all of the first 10 days were like this. Anyway we walked through Harrier to Ham and then visited Ham Little gorge before walked back north along the coast. We used as much time to each place as possible but after all it started to rain again so the last kilometre or so we were almost running. An Oystercatcher, an Ortolan Bunting, a Reed Warbler, a Grasshopper Warbler, 15 Greylag Geese, 3 Jack snipes and so on were seen. In the evening everyone thought that this was pretty similar day than the worst ones last year but after all this was much better! Last year we didn’t have a single Chaffinch, Brambling or Siskin and just a couple of local Redwings and no other thrushes than Blackbirds, but now there we lots of them.

Windy on the top

On the 4th of October we slept a little bit longer and at 9 a.m. we headed towards Harrier with Paul. A Grasshopper Warbler and a Ring Ouzel were found again. The weather was now beautiful but still too windy. So we started to think about a long walk first south to the church and from there up to the hills and to the top of them and along the tops back to Ristie. We had never been there, and now that it seemed there were no new birds, it seemed it wouldn’t rain and we would have a good following wind. The decision was easy when we got a lift from the same veterinary who was going to the airfield like almost all the islanders always had to (some were firemen and so on). So we managed to get to the church easily.

From the church we climbed up towards the 344m high Hamnafield. We climbed slowly and of course photographed views and even saw some birds. A Kestrel was even a new Foula-tick. The climbing was very easy and pretty soon we reached the highest peak of Foula, the 416m high Da Sneug. From Da Sneug we saw a view down to a huge valley that we had never seen before; there were several lakes and even ducks in furthermost lake: 22 Mallards, 9 Wigeons, 5 Teals and a Pintail. Before we had seen just some of them flying over us.

We continued to the amazing top of Da Kame from where there were stunning views to cliffs! It is the second highest, but the highest absolutely steep cliff of Britain. Then we walked down a deep hillside to the North Bank cliffs where were amazing numbers of Fulmars. Because of the wind there were also lots of Skylark, Meadow Pipits, Wheatears and even some Song Thrushes in the valley where it wasn’t that windy. The whole way until East Hoed the views were stunning and from there opened amazing views to Gaada Stack and Ristie. Now we were in Ristie a little bit earlier than normal and the sun was still shining so now we managed to get good pictures of Gaada Stack too.

We were in Ristie at 3 p.m. so we had plenty of time so we decided to do something clever – we shaved our horrible beards! When the others came back from their trip we found out that we had chosen the right day for the walk, they hadn’t seen too many birds. Gav had seen a Grey Wagtail in Ham which was good and also another Grasshopper Warbler had been found, now from Hametoun.

The most beautiful bird of the trip

On the 5th of October we were once again out before 9 a.m. and now walked straight to Ham. We had planned to go south to Hametoun before or at the same time than the others that almost every day got the lift there from Isobel when she was going to the airport.

But it was again too windy in south and the others never came there so we just walked through the wet parts and then continued back north along the coast. Now there were big numbers of Gannets very close to the shore and they are always amazing birds to watch! We continued until Ham where we found a nice bird – a Great Northern Diver was swimming near the harbour!

In harbour we met Isobel who had good news for us. We had run out of beer a couple of days earlier but now the plane had brought us 58 pints more! Amazing, first days we were starving without food, but now we had extra beer by plane!

We walked back to Ristie where the rest of us had been the whole day. They had got the beer from Isobel and it had been tasty! We already started to worry if we would run out of it again! And of course they had seen a new species, a Sparrowhawk. Our only good birds had been 3 Purple Sandpiper, a Kestrel, an Oystercatcher, a Reed Warbler and the most beautiful bird of the trip so far – a leucistic Reed Bunting, which unfortunately was too easy to identify first to something leucistic when we saw it flying and then to Reed Bunting because it was calling all the time. We saw this bird several times while we were walking south, it was clearly migrating.

Still more Foula ticks

On the 6th of October we slept longer again because the weather was stormy. From the window I saw the same Sparrowhawk and soon after 9 a.m. we walked towards Harrier and from there to Ham. The best bird was a Moorhen that we found in the ditch next to Burns garden where it was maybe trying to make friends with domestic ducks. Also a Ring Ouzel and a Great Northern Diver were still present. On the shore we saw a Red-breasted Merganser flying towards Ham harbour where it was found later.

We were back in Ristie already before 3 p.m. and I went directly to sleep. Potu still went out and climbed to the northern cliffs and an hour later he ran down to Ristie and told us that he had seen a Swift! He told it was just a Common Swift and he had seen it well, but anyway we had to check this bird – and of course a Swift was also a Foula tick. After some searching we found the bird and it was just a f)##/ng Swift. The time and the place could not have been better for almost any other species of Swift. We saw this bird very close and even got some pictures. There had been a Chimney Swift in Ireland just a day earlier, but we had a Common Swift. Sometimes it’s so wrong! A Sparrowhawk was seen again and from the cliffs we found a Black-tailed Godwit that soon flew over us. Now we had already seen 100 species in Foula in this trip with potu, last year we saw only 85 with Hanna. So the end of the day was good anyway, and most important there were some new birds in the island!

On the 7th of October we had an island bird-race! We were competing against a Finnish birders group in Norway’s best bird-island, Utsira (Andreas Lindén, Petri Kuhno, Tero Toivanen and Janne Kilpimaa) and the best Finnish bird-island Lågskär (Pekka Saikko and others). We started at 8 a.m. and 1 minute too early a Black-tailed Godwit had left towards the south from our own pools at Ristie. In Harrier and Ham we saw all the regular birds and luckily found the godwit again. While we were hammering the irises in Ham, the thing that we had been afraid of happened: I saw potu hammering the irises along the river when he fell down so that all I could see was just his hand waving when he disappeared to the deep ditch. My comment: “That’s it” maybe tells what I thought had happened to potu. He had thought to get over the ditch and fell down but somehow he had managed to fall down to the other side of the ditch and after all he wasn’t hurt at all and even more amazingly he hadn’t got wet at all! But it really had looked bad!

Some best birds of the morning were a Willow Warbler, a Reed Warbler, a Great Northern Diver, a Jack Snipe, Common Redpolls, a Reed Bunting, a Dunnock and a Goldeneye that Gav had found in the previous evening on Mill Loch. We continued to the Memorial from where we saw plenty of Razorbills and Black Guillemots and some Common Guillemots and also saw 7 migrating Pink-footed Geese. While we were walking towards Ristie we realized that we hadn’t seen any ducks! They were all up in the lakes and right on this day none of them had been flying at all. Luckily we found a Wigeon and a Teal from the lakes on the way to north, but we didn’t get a Mallard at all. Others had been in the south again and they had seen a Yellow-browed Warbler, 2 Little Gulls and an Arctic Skua and so on. But none of us saw a Rosefinch or a Moorhen, maybe they had left. Altogether we saw 80 species which was much more than the Finnish groups total of 66 from Utsira (but in whole island there had been 91 species, but it is a big island with many birding groups). In Lågskär there had been 71 species. In the evening we were cleaning the house, burning the rubbish and eating all we had left. Paul even ate 7 pork chops!

On the 8th of October our 2 weeks in Foula were about to end. In early morning we still did some cleaning and then carried our luggage to Isobels car and then started to walk to the airport. At 9.m. we were on the way and we walked along the road towards Ham. Close to Harrier we flushed the last Foula tick for us when a Short-eared Owl was seen. It was my 105th species for the trip and altogether I’ve now seen 118 species on this tiny island. Altogether our group had seen 112 species in this trip and the other group had 3 extra species. While we continued towards Ham we realized that there were lots of birds everywhere! Redwings were everywhere and we counted more than 100 birds! Also a Grey Heron, a Merlin, a Black-tailed Godwit, a Long-tailed Duck, a Reed Warbler, a Red-breasted Merganser and a Ring Ouzel were seen once again.

At 11 a.m. our plane left and a new group of birders had arrived to Foula and Ristie. Also Isobel was on her way to Lerwick. I was lucky to get the seat next to the pilot so it was really nice to watch the views again. The weather was once again perfect, it was hardly any wind!
So we said goodbyes to Foula! It had been very different kind of 2 weeks than last autumn! The weather had been really good with almost no rain at all; of course it’s always windy there. Maybe the wind wasn’t still the right direction but maybe next time? Our group already booked Ristie to autumn 2012, but I think I’m not going to be there then, but you never know!

On the Main Island

Soon we landed at Tingwall and took a taxi to Lerwick where we easily got a rental Ford for the next week. Then we tried to find a place to stay which wasn’t as easy as we had thought because the B&B that we had planned to go was full because of some music festivals. We drove around the town for an hour and it seemed all the other B&B’s were also full or then nobody was home. In Gulberwick we saw a Water Rail walking in one garden and then finally Garry called that he had found a room but only for him and Gav. Then Paul decided to call to his old friend Paul Harvey and he promised that we could stay in his home. So finally we were ready to go twitching! We headed to Channerwick, where a Syke’s Warbler had been staying for several days already. When we got there the bird had been seen just a half an hour earlier but even though we tried very hard for next 1.5 hours we didn’t find it. Or at least we didn’t see it well enough. Once we saw a very good looking bird flying over us and landing inside a big bush where it disappeared. A Red-breasted Flycatcher was found many times in different part of the area, also several Blackcaps were seen. After all we decided to give up and go to find new birds somewhere else. We’d come back in the next morning.

We checked an empty garden on the way to Quendale where we walked on a irises along a ditch for on hour or so and found several Chiffchaffs, a Yellow-browed Warbler and a Merlin. On one lake we saw a Little Gull and then we still had time to go to twitch a Red-flanked Bluetail in Geosetter. The bird was found easily and it was a Shetland tick also for Paul. It was already dark when we continued to Sumburgh and to Paul Harvey. Paul and his wife were very nice to meet and we had a good lunch and then still went to Sumburgh Hotel for the rest of the evening.

On the 9th of October we had breakfast with Paul Harvey and then left again to Channerwick. The Red-breasted Flycatcher was found easily and a Grey Wagtail and a flock of Pink-footed Geese flew over us. But finally also Syke’s Warbler was found! We had walked through the area already once when it suddenly jumped just in front of me to the patch of balsam. The bird was extremely flighty but after all we all managed to see it well enough! It was always flying at least 50 metres and always disappeared into the bushes or other vegetation. When Garry and Gav came there we still managed to find it pretty easily but then it disappeared again, and we decided to continue towards north with Frenchy. Anyway this was a good lifer!

To Out Skerries

We drove to the N-E corner of the main island to Vidlin, where we got a ferry to Out Skerries which is almost as remote an island as Foula but on the eastern side of the main island. A Pallas’s Grasshopper Warbler had been found there the previous day so there was also another car full of twitchers on the ferry. Soon after the ferry left we started seawatching. We saw some Cormorants, a Great Northern Diver, first Harbour Porpoises and a Minke Whale.

In the harbour in Out Skerries we heard that the Pallas’s Grasshopper Warbler hadn’t been found during the morning so we decided to go birding around this island complex that is actually 2 islands very close to each other connected by a bridge.

Next 4 hours we walked around these islands which was surprisingly difficult because of many bays to go around and rocky areas that had almost no birds at all. But we managed to see some very good birds: we found a Blyth’s Reed Warbler and a Black Redstart and twitched a Lanceolated Warbler that was found very close to us. This Lanceolated Warbler was a typical island Lancey, it was hiding in a stony wall and after all we managed to see it only once very well for 10 seconds before it disappeared inside the wall again. Altogether we saw 53 species on Out Skerries, but unfortunately Pallas’s Grasshopper Warbler wasn’t found.

On the ferry we seawatched again and saw another Minke Whale, a Puffin flying with a Razorbill and then potu suddenly said: “What the hell is that wader?” and it was a Grey Phalarope! A lifer to potu and a good local rarity again. And soon after we still saw a Short-eared Owl migrating over the sea. Very nice!

When we were back on the main island we drove straight to Lerwick harbour where we dropped Paul and said goodbyes. His holiday was coming to an end. He still had a long way to Nottingham to go. Soon we found Garry and Gav that had been birding in main island and quite successfully: they had found a Dusky Warbler and a Nightjar. Now it was my time to start driving so we followed them to the Bed&Breakfast where there was now room for us too. First we took a room only for a couple of days but even though the price was a bit high, the place was so comfortable and breakfast so good that we decided to stay there for the rest of the trip.

After a shower we went to eat to a Chinese restaurant nearby and after that we went tot a pub. But anyway we were back in B&B early and went to sleep at 10 p.m.

Unst

On the 10th of October we woke up about at 6 a.m. and an hour later left with Garrys “big red” towards north and Unst. After more than an hour driving and two ferries we were in Unst and we could start birding. First we tried another Dusky Warbler that had been found in one very big garden, but we found only a Yellow-browed Warbler. Next we went to the northern end of the island where we tried to walk through good looking areas but local fish-farmers pretty angrily told us that we weren’t welcome. Anyway we walked through the best looking areas and found a nice flock of 200 Snow Buntings but nothing else. So we decided to change to other places. We checked some more gardens and had 3 more Yellow-browed Warblers, a Reed Warbler, some Barnacle Geese altough the best ones were a Hornemann’s Arctic Redpoll and Siberian Chiffchaff.

We met an old friend Shetland Natures Brydon Thomason a couple of times during the day but he seemed to be extremely busy, also some other birders were met but nobody managed to find anything better. In the evening we drove very fast back to Lerwick and had Indian curry nearby and were out late as it was the last evening together with Garry and Gav.

Lifers

On the 11th of October we had a good breakfast and after 7 a.m. we left birding with Gav. Garry was soon leaving to Tingwall because he was going to Fair Isle for a week. I was driving and first we headed to Geosetter, but we saw nothing there. On the way we passed again that good looking lake where we had seen a Little Gull earlier and we decided to come back soon to check it with potu. After a couple of empty gardens we headed to Quendale where we checked another side of the road and found again several Chiffchaffs and Goldcrests, a Grey Wagtail and a Rosefinch and then on the road back we found a Black Redstart.

We then checked Virkie willows before we dropped Gav to Sumburgh airport. He had a flight back to Manchester. We decided to buy flight tickets to London to last possible day so we could do birding in Shetland as long as possible. So we would fly from Sumburgh to Edinburgh and from there to London on Saturday 16th of October. And from London we’d start a new adventure…

From Sumburgh we went twitching! Garry had found a Spotted Sandpiper near Tingwall just before his flight. We got info how to find the right place from Paul and soon we were in Strand Loch. Some local birders were there so the bird was found easily. Lifer to potu! After we had got some pictures and video the bird flew further. We were just thinking what to do next when the locals came to tell that a Bonelli’s Warbler species had just been found in Lerwick. Unfortunately these guys weren’t going there straight and Hugh Harrop had already gone so we were on our own again. Paul gave us some kind of instructions how to find the place but it wasn’t that easy. I was driving first day on left side traffic and we were going to Lerwick town, somewhere behind the Tesco.

Somehow we managed to find the place and soon met Paul Harvey and Hugh Harrop and other twitchers. The bird had been missing for some time but luckily it was relocated very soon. The bird was too active but we managed to see it pretty well a couple of times so next thing was to hear it so we could identify which one it was – a Western or Eastern. But the bird was silent. The size of the bird seemed to fit better to Western but it’s not enough. Potu managed to get some kind of picture of it too, but still it was quiet. After all Hugh came to tell us that now they had heard it and it had said “tsip”, or at least that’s what we understood he had said, so no lifer for me – an Eastern Bonelli’s Warbler.

We bought something to eat from Tesco, even big chocolate cakes and continued to Wester Quarff, that we had told to be a good garden area. There we immediately found a Turtle Dove next to a school and in the gardens we saw about 100 Bramblings. But soon it came too dark so we left back to Lerwick. In the late evening I got a message from Frenchy that the Bonelli’s Warbler had just called in late evening and after all it was a Western! So I had got a lifer! We had bought the lifer cakes in right time! After fish&chips we were ready to take it easy already at 8 p.m.

A lifer and a really good self found tick!

On the 12th of October after a breakfast we headed to south again. I was very worried as I had got a message from my friend from Catalonia, Spain that a football match Barcelona-Valencia had been changed one day earlier than it was supposed to be. I had tickets to this game with several friends of mine from Parikkala, but our flight from London to Barcelona would be there a couple of hours too late. The game was the main reason why we were continuing our birding tour also to Catalonia!

But luckily we soon got something else to think when we heard that a Radde’s Warbler that had been found on previous evening was still present. But unfortunately Paul didn’t know the place. So we decided to drive until Sumburgh and sooner or later we’d meet some birders that could tell use the place. We did some seawatching there near the lighthouse but there was nothing interesting on the sea. Only a Red-throated Diver was found. Soon we met some birders that could tell that the Radde’s Warbler was in Sandwick so we decided to drive there. We were already pretty close to Sandwick when Paul Harvey called to me and gave us really good instructions how to find the place. Thanks to both Pauls! I’m sure that Frenchy had asked Harvey to call to me. The place was really difficult to find but finally we found this so called Sanick burns and there were already several familiar looking twitchers. Hugh Harrop had seen the bird just some 10 minutes earlier but it had somehow disappeared. We checked all the gardens and other places nearby and also hammered a long ditch several times without success. After 1.5 hours search the bird was finally found and friendly locals ran to tell us where it was. We ran there and soon this beautiful bird jumped in sight! A lifer! The bird was very active and flighty but potu managed to get a couple of really good pictures of it! Soon the bird disappeared but potu found it in a cemetery nearby after some searching. Then it flew back to gardens so we decided to keep on going somewhere else.

We now decided to head to the lake that we had passed a couple of times without stopping. On the way we found a Great Northern Diver on a beach at Spiggie and on Loch Spiggie we saw big flocks of Wigeons, Moorhens, 6 Slavonian Grebes, Tufted Ducks, a Scaup and a Long-tailed Duck. Then we saw lower down near the lake a couple of people walking near a good looking ditch and photographing something. We decided to go to ask what they got. I stopped the car and asked what they got, but before I got any answer I saw a shrike perched on a pole just 20 metres from us and what a shrike – a Daurian Shrike! It took less than a second to identify this bird, I had seen plenty of them in Kuwait. We got out from the car and I had my scope and camera out very soon. I started to try to get a picture of this rarity but this man came to stand in front of me and started to walk towards the bird! I asked nicely that could he move a little bit so I could get a picture of this rare bird but he said: “find your own birds” and kept on walking towards it! He didn’t even try to photograph it, just walked too close and flushed the bird! Luckily the bird landed to the other side of the road but maybe 100 metres from us and I managed to get a couple of pictures of it before it continued further and landed 200 metres of us. I still got a couple of pictures and a short video before a big flock of passerines attacked it and it just disappeared!

I said a couple of well chosen words to this man so he’d understand what he had done. I think he just had realized that the bird hadn’t been a Red-backed Shrike. I told him to call someone and sent an SMS to Paul Harvey while he was calling. Surprisingly I soon got a message from Frenchy about the bird so this man had finally done something right. Unfortunately the message was about an Isabelline Shrike as I didn’t know that Daurian was the right name for isabellinus. Soon Hugh Harrop came there and I decided to tell him what had happened as I was afraid that this crazy man could just get thanks instead of what he deserved! Hugh wasn’t surprised at all, he said that it was just what this man does! He also told that this man had been on his birding tour to Finland where a local guide, my good friend Harri Taavetti, had almost killed this man; he had been so annoying also there! I just told him that I wasn’t very far from killing him now.

Soon there were more and more twitchers coming and most of them were just standing next to a place where the bird had been first seen. After some time we decided to drive around the lake and check all the other possible places, the whole lake was surrounded by farmlands and fields were full of good places. About an hour later when we were on the other side of the lake potu saw all birders running near the first place, so we decided to drive back there. And there the bird was in one garden in a place where we had been checking the ducks. The bird was flying a couple of times between the bushes but soon landed to one bush where was a reason why it had been missing for some time, it had a passerine hanging on a branch there and it started to eat it again. Now we managed to get really good pictures and also videos of it eating a Blackcap! Amazing! There were about 40 twitchers and more were coming all the time. I still told to a couple of twitchers the whole story what had happened. And it was funny that crazy man was still standing in the original place some 300 metres of us and watching to those bushes while we were enjoying the bird! What a weirdo!

We were watching the Daurian Shrike for more than an hour and still more people were coming. Finally we decided to leave south and to the airport to find out what we could do with our flights. There we found out that the only clever possibility was to change our London-Barcelona flight a earlier, but it wasn’t very early either, we’d be in Barcelona only 1.5 hours before the match. And the change of the tickets was ridiculous expensive! Only that we changed the flight cost as much as our original flights! And new tickets were horrible expensive! But we had no choice!

While we were driving towards Lerwick we still stopped to see the shrike and there were still plenty of twitchers. Paul Harvey and Rob were there too so after some talking we left to Lerwick where we ate again in Chinese before went to sleep very tired but happy!

Visitor from taiga

On the 13th of October in the morning the weather was very bad. So first we just went to Scalloway to see a small castle before we checked some garden areas nearby. But almost nothing was found. When the rain stopped we were driving around Lerwick along the main road when 2 Red Grouses flew over us. We headed to Tingwall where we checked a couple of lakes and found a Coot and a Slavonian Grebe. We also checked Strand Loch where we stopped to photograph a Swan Goose that we had already seen earlier but hadn’t been interested in it at all. Then we headed to Quendale, where had been found an Olive-backed Pipit. When we had parked in front of the Quendale Mill a big bearded man came to talk with us and told that there was “a little biRRd inside the mill”. We followed him and soon saw that there was a Goldcrest inside a mill store. I managed to catch this tiny bird very easily and released it out to the garden. The big man was very happy!

Then we walked along the hillside towards the Quendale valley and soon found the first pipits. But they were all Meadow Pipits. Near so called Rifle Range we saw many other twitchers but it seemed they had lost a bird for some time ago. So we continued further along the valley. But soon we saw that other twitchers were running and waving to us so we walked back. There one birder had seen a good looking bird and he had managed to get a picture of it. After he had found the best picture he walked straight to me even though there were 15 other birders there and asked if it was the right bird, and yes it was. So we decided to wait in that place because that was also the place where the bird had been found. After some waiting we saw a lonely pipit flying towards us and it landed to some kind of feeder – there it was, an Olive-backed Pipit! We managed to see this bird for some seconds with telescope before it dropped behind a feeder. Soon it flew up to the valley with Meadow Pipits but luckily it landed so that we found it from the ground with scopes and I managed to get a couple of pictures before it flew further up and disappeared. We still waited for some time for this, potus one more lifer to came back and saw a Polecat coming to the feeders, but the pipit wasn’t coming back anymore so we decided to leave. While we were walking back we saw other twitchers flushing the pipit one more time and now it flew over the whole valley and landed very far to the other side. We hammered all the irises along the ditch but didn’t find anything so soon we were back to our car.

We still continued south and walked around Scatness for some time but then it started to rain. We were just thinking what to do next when Frenchy sent a message that a Rose-coloured Starling had been found in Cunningsburgh. It was pretty close and because we knew the road where the bird had been seen we found the place easily with my navigator. So after less than 15 minutes we were there. But the bird had been seen already 2 hours earlier and was now missing. There were plenty of Starlings everywhere so we started to scan through them in the fields. This young bird had been seen on a feeder where plenty of Starlings were but even though we tried to find it for 1.5 hours we couldn’t find it. Only interesting observation was a Hedgehog that we rescued from the middle of the road. After this we drove to Lerwick where we managed to arrange our car rental until our flight and we managed to arrange that we could leave the car to the airport. In the evening we finally found a good European restaurant, Italian, where we could get service in good English and get pizza! So potu didn’t have to worry how much coriander there is in his food – he can’t eat it at all!

On the 14th of October after breakfast we headed west and checked a couple of bays and lakes that we hadn’t seen before and some garden that we had checked with Paul before Foula. But only Red-breasted Mergansers, a couple of Slavonian Grebes and a couple of Red-throated Divers and so on were seen. In Tresta garden we had nothing and it seemed that there was a big rain cloud coming from the west so we turned back. We headed to Kergord garden where we soon found a couple of other birders that were waving us and saying: “the bird is just in front of us, come here”. We sneaked there and asked what they got, but right then we saw a Red-flanked Bluetail jumping in front of us! This bird was extremely tame and it was catching some insects just on our feet! Unfortunately the weather was very bad and there was no light at all, but still we managed to get some pictures of it. I think it was getting close to us on purpose because Robins were attacking it always when it went further. Also a couple of Yellow-browed Warblers were seen and heard, but soon the rain started and when also several cars full of twitchers arrived we decided to leave. We went to our B&B and walked to an internet cafe to check if everything was ok with our flights. We had got all the booking references but we still hadn’t got the e-tickets to our flight from London to Barcelona. This was a bit strange but I thought that this was one of the flights that the ticket is not necessarily needed, at least I hoped so.

The rain had stopped again so we still went birding. We drove to Seafield but the Bonelli’s Warbler wasn’t found. A Hawfinch was seen and also a Merlin. On the sea we saw a Great Skua that was only the 3rd after Foula. Then we drove to Cunningsburgh even though we hadn’t got any info about the starling. We parked to a bus-stop and immediately realized that there was a photographer photographing something on the feeder and there it was a young Rose-coloured Starling! The bird had been seen from mid-day but none of the birders we had met had heard about it. For about an hour we were photographing this potus 14th lifer of the trip on the feeder or inside the bushes but it never was showing very well and then it started to rain again. Of course then the bird landed for the first time to the grass, but even though the rain was very hard we got a couple of pictures where the bird was on the ground too. In the evening we went to eat at the same Italian and had good hamburger meals before it was time to go to sleep.

Last day on Shetland

The 15th of October was our last day in Shetland so we decided to go birding where the most birds were – in the south. We drove straight to Sumburgh where we watched the sea for some time again, but saw only a 2 Merlins, a Great Northern Diver and 40 Long-tailed Ducks.

Soon we continued to Toab where there had been a Radde’s Warbler the previous evening but we couldn’t find the bird even though we heard that it had been relocated later on the other side of the village. On Pool of Virkie we saw again Dunlins, Ringed Plovers, a Black-tailed Godwit and also 2 Sanderlings that were our 136th species in Shetland and 196in Britain during this trip. Also another Great Northern Diver was seen in flight. When we were driving to Quendale we saw the same Black Redstart again and in Quendale we hammered the irises very well but found nothing! When we were back to our car we saw the same Grey Wagtail again. It really seemed that the best birding season was over; it was so quiet in Quendale!

On Lake Spiggie we saw a Little Gull and a couple of hundred Wigeons. The Daurian Shrike was found from the irises along the ditch where it was first found. Luckily the bird now landed very nicely to the irises and we could get perfect pictures. Soon it took a mouse from somewhere and started to eat it, but now it was behind the bushes. But luckily it changed soon to a passerine and landed very beautifully in front of us and started to eat its prey. A big van parked behind us to a parking place and we were wondering why anyone was getting out. Then we noticed that there was maybe the bravest and toughest twitcher we had ever met, a paralyzed young man sitting on a wheel chair with a scope attached with a thin stand to arm of the chair. I went to help him to find the bird to his scope as it was really difficult because of the too thin stand. It was really nice to help a birder like that! And the bird was showing better than ever, it was feeding the passerine just 15 metres from us! We looked at this show for a half an hour before we decided to leave it finishing its lunch.

We still stopped in Cunningsburgh but the Rose-coloured Starling wasn’t found. In Wester Quarff we had again plenty of Bramblings but nothing else. In the afternoon we went to see landscapes in West Burra and the fjord-like views were pretty nice. In the evening we had pizza again and then went to B&B to pack our luggage and to sleep.

And the journey continues

On the 16th of October we woke up at 5 a.m. and at 6 a.m. we were on our way to Sumburgh airport. We left our car to a parking place (amazing that I had survived one week on left traffic without any mistakes) and at 7:40 our flight left to Edinburgh. We said our goodbyes to Shetland – we’ll be back!

On Edinburgh airport we were an hour and 20 minutes before our flight to London. The London city airport situated on the other side of the town than Heathrow, so we had to take a metro. After more than an hour and 4 changes we finally were in Heathrow. I had been too scared of the time that only then I watched what the time was and we had just a little bit more than an hour to our flight to Barcelona. And if the day had been already awful it came much worse when in check in our flight tickets weren’t found at all! I had booking references on my email, but they didn’t help. After some time there were 3 women doing their best but nothing helped, they asked us to buy new tickets! We had already paid more than £600 for this flight so my Visa account was already used too much! I had just managed to increase my limits to my Visa when one of the women told us that Iberia had made a mistake and our tickets had been found! So they just told us to run to the gate, the plane was about to leave very soon! So we ran down the long corridors to the gate and surprisingly there was nothing happening yet.

We were finally on our way to Spain, Catalonia and Barcelona!

I have to thank Paul French who made everything so easy for us again, he even checked this trip-report and made it much better, but also Garry Taylor, Gavin Thomas, Micky Maher, Paul Harvey, Rob Fray, Geoff and Donna, Kevin Shepherd, Paul and Neil Wright, Andrew Grieve and many other amazing helpful birders around Shetland must be thanked! Thanks and see you again!

J.A.