Monday, 9 December 2013
Sunday, 8 December 2013
Goa Part 1
Thought I'd do a few posts on a trip I did to the state of Goa in India back in November 2011 on a Naturetrek organised trip.
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| Asian Openbill |
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| Intermediate Egret |
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| Striated Heron |
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| Indian Pond Heron |
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| Indian Cormorant |
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| Oriental Darter |
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| Lesser and Greater Sandplovers |
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| Greater Sandplover |
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| Lesser Sandplover |
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| Little Pratincole |
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| Pacific Golden Plover |
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| Pacific Golden Plovers and Redshank |
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| Great Knot |
Monday, 2 December 2013
Inishshark 27th November 2013
We managed to get out to Inishshark last Wednesday thanks to the extended settled spell we've been having of late. Conditions weren't too rough considering the time of the year. As we pulled into the main "harbour" we were greeted by a handful Grey Seals hauled out on the slipway including the male below. I noticed something odd stuck to the back of its head and on further inspection it proved to be a GPS Phone Tag developed by the Sea Mammal Research Unit out of Saint Andrews University, Scotland http://www.smru.st-and.ac.uk/Instrumentation/GPSPhoneTag/
We later discovered that it had been caught in NW France in early June. I got some really interesting maps and more info on its movements but have been asked not to reproduce them until the research is published. He was very interested in one particular female that remained with her pup the whole time we were on the island (that time of year for Grey Seals). I can't imagine how one would manage to catch, restrain and attach a tag like this onto an adult male Grey Seal, must be a bit of handful to say the very least! Even though it was getting very late in the season there were still a good few seal pups present.
We saw the Barnacle Goose flock here again, around 400 birds. Like every other time anyone lands on the island the majority of the geese left the island and moved out to Inishgort and Cruagh Island. The Connemara Barnacles seem far more skittish compared to mainland flocks in Mayo, Sligo and Donegal for some reason. Numbers of Barnacle Geese have been significantly increasing in recent years and they show no signs of slowing down any time soon.
We also had a pair of Chough on the day as well. Not the first time we've seen them out there and there must be at least one pair breeding out there. Must seem a few days out there in the summer to try and pin them down along with a few other breeding species.
We later discovered that it had been caught in NW France in early June. I got some really interesting maps and more info on its movements but have been asked not to reproduce them until the research is published. He was very interested in one particular female that remained with her pup the whole time we were on the island (that time of year for Grey Seals). I can't imagine how one would manage to catch, restrain and attach a tag like this onto an adult male Grey Seal, must be a bit of handful to say the very least! Even though it was getting very late in the season there were still a good few seal pups present.
We saw the Barnacle Goose flock here again, around 400 birds. Like every other time anyone lands on the island the majority of the geese left the island and moved out to Inishgort and Cruagh Island. The Connemara Barnacles seem far more skittish compared to mainland flocks in Mayo, Sligo and Donegal for some reason. Numbers of Barnacle Geese have been significantly increasing in recent years and they show no signs of slowing down any time soon.
We also had a pair of Chough on the day as well. Not the first time we've seen them out there and there must be at least one pair breeding out there. Must seem a few days out there in the summer to try and pin them down along with a few other breeding species.
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| Eoin McGreal and Dennis Strong with the RHIB and friends. |
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| Inishshark from the East end looking back West. |
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| Inishshark looking back East over to Stags of Insihbofin and Westquarter on Inishbofin. |
Thursday, 28 November 2013
Grebes & Divers
Some shots of the Black-necked and 2 Slavonian Grebes that are currently in Ballynakill Harbour at the moment. The Black-necked Grebe was a long overdue county tick for myself. Up to ten pairs formerly bred at Levally Lough near Tuam from 1949 - 1956. Since then there have only been a handful of records. Up to 250 pairs bred at Lough Funshinagh, Co. Roscommon at one stage but these are all since long gone. I managed to get some record shots of the grebes as we were passing by them yesterday on the RHIB on the way out to Inishshark for the annual Grey Seal pup census (a little late this year). The Great northern Diver was photographed the previous day off Tully.
| Black-necked Grebe |
| Black-necked Grebe |
| Black-necked Grebe |
| Slavonian Grebes |
| Slavonian Grebes |
| Slavonian Grebes, adult on the left and first-winter on the right. |
| Slavonian Grebes |
| Great northern Diver with flatfish species. |
| Great northern Diver with Shore Crab. |
| Great northern Diver |
| Great northern Diver |
Wednesday, 27 November 2013
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