Showing posts with label Fox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fox. Show all posts

Monday, October 03, 2022

Ardnamurchan

 Hi, apologies for the dearth of blog posts over the last few weeks. I began one about 2 weeks ago and never got it finished due to one thing or another.

Last week we were away on holiday up to the Ardnamurchan, our 7th visit to this area and the 6th in the same house.

As can be expected on the west coast of Scotland at this time of year, the weather was mixed, but overall I'd say it erred on the better side. Only Friday was a write off with torrential rain and strong winds, but Weds and Thurs were beautiful calm, clear autumn days. The rest were a bit of a mix.

On the wildlife front, birding took a back seat really and it was too cool for the moth trap though I did try it on one night to justify carting it up here. A few moths were caught but it was all stuff I can get at home anyway.   This visit was mainly dominated by the garden mammals for nature interest.

Out of 7 nights we were visited by Fox on 6 nights, Badger, up to 3, on 6 nights and Pine Marten possibly 2 on 4 nights. It was unprecedented for us to see all three predators on view at one time. There was a pecking order however with a large male Badger on top of the pile, then the smaller 2 Badgers and the Fox with the smaller Pine Marten wary of them all.


The only problem at this house is that there are no outside lights and the windows are quite small, so I hunted around and found a small LED reading lamp that could be balanced on the kitchen window to light the bird table. Using a bit of stiff card to prevent back glare off the glass we managed some great views of the animals, probably our closest ever of Badger and Fox, though Pine Martens can often peer in at windows.

It was important to keep the main kitchen light off so we remained hidden in the darkness, this made cooking the tea 'interesting'. If we go back I will be taking a better lighting set up. One to think about.

Not exactly floodlit but it did the job.

Before dusk each night, we put out a mix of food. A muesli of cat biscuits, sunflower hearts, chopped peanuts, chopped apple and grapes and a small amount of jam and bread cut into centimetre cubes. A spoonful of honey was drizzled over the lot. On some nights we put out a whole egg on the table that the Pine Marten took before anything else.

Feeling a bit sorry for the Fox, we cracked an egg on to a saucer one night for him. He stalked up in the darkness to see what this oddity was and attacked. He stole the saucer, tipping the egg on to the grass! He ran off into the wooded garden with the crockery that I had to recover the next day. You might guess who got the egg. Badgers are forensic when they comb the grass for tit bits....




Pine Marten 


Fox, in dark and in daylight. Pine Marten very scared of him and was off like a rocket when he appeared....





The Badger Family



The Animals of Farthing Wood...

As if this nightly spectacle wasn't safari enough, just beyond the gate were lots of bellowing Red Deer stags with small parties of hinds and calves on the moss too...



Red Deer




Another fab week away from it all. There must be Wildcats here too surely...

Monday, March 24, 2008

Easter Sunday






Above - Glaucous Gull.

A covering of snow first thing this morning made the chance of a sand martin seem a bit fanciful so I thought I would give the Linton white winged gulls another try.

Early doors at Linton was too early for these arctic visitors so I started off at Bothal to meet ADMc, and to look for the Nordic Jackdaws again. No Jacks around at all so it was off to the the relative comfort of the hide at Linton. On the way we stopped at Old Moor farm to scan a gull flock in a field and found a juv Glaucous as it circled around towards the dump.

The next 3 hours were spent in the hide chewing the fat and generally having a bit of a laugh with Andy, ST and RPB. 2 juv Glaucous Gulls showed well here on and off the whole time, but the hoped for iceland gulls arrived 45 minutes after I left to go home. c'est la vie....

While waiting, the local wildlife kept us entertained. An old looking dog Fox snouted around the edge much to the consternation of the resident Canada Geese ( one of which has paired to a Barnacle Goose...watch this space for developments...) and a Roe buck strolled off towards his day camp. Earlier I had 5 Roe Deer in a field near Lesbury.

This afternoon a seawatch at Boulmer ( no, the sandwich tern yesterday wasn't seen by me unfortunately, I believe it was seen by Dennis Allen)for an hour had -

Gannet 77N
Kittiwake 15N
Red throated Diver 1S 1N
Common Scoter 3S 1N
Guillemot 3S
Razorbill 2N
Fulmar 1N
Eider 109 on the sea.






Above - 3 of 5 Roe Deer and Fox ( can you see him looking at the glaucous gull?).

I forgot to add, 9 Lesser black backed Gulls flew N at Boulmer the other day.

79. Lesser black backed Gull.