Friday, March 6, 2026

Two Sides to Littleferry

With both the dawn sky and the weather forecast promising a fine day we drove, once again, to Littleferry, first for....

....a brisk walk along near-deserted sands, spoilt by finding the object at bottom left in this picture....

....a dead guillemot.

Sadly, within a few metres of this, we found two other corpses, both razorbills. To make matters worse, there was little in the way of living birds to see beyond a small flock of oystercatchers, some unidentifiable ducks, a single sanderling, and a carrion crow....

....so, in the hope of finding something to cheer us, we crossed the road to the western side of the Littleferry 'peninsula' where a walk through a coniferous plantation led to good views of the....

....inner pool of Loch Fleet where, along with a good number of ducks - too distant to be identified for certain - a couple of dozen gulls and some waders, we found....

....the Littleferry seals looking as fat as ever, basking on sandbanks which were being rapidly inundated by the rising tide.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Still Waiting for Spring

I walked this morning up one of the estate tracks until I was above the planted forestry and onto the open moorland on a morning with....

....the puddles in the vehicle tracks frozen solid after another night's hard frost.

I was hoping for more signs of spring but, despite the warm sunshine during the day, there was little to see beyond the....

....tracks which show that there are still some deer around, deer which are very determined not to be seen.

If spring refuses to perform I have little choice but to continue to enjoy the animals and birds that have been with us all winter, like.... 

....the red squirrels which have benefitted so much from the food put out for them and....

....the chaffinches which are doing fine on the strength of the peanuts and seed we've been feeding them...,

....and the dunnocks which, while usually the most retiring of birds, are surprisingly noisy at this time of year.

Not all are doing so well. This is, I think, a siskin, which almost made it through to spring, and then there are the....

....pink-footed geese which are being constantly disturbed by the fighter jets which are practising their killing skills out of the nearby Lossiemouth base.

Monday, March 2, 2026

Yellowhammers

With the skies clear blue and a light southwesterly breeze I was off up the hill this morning with, as always, a particular aim in mind, which was to see if the first....


....yellowhammers were active, their favourite singing sites being the tops of flowering gorse. The local gorse is increasingly in flower but, disappointingly and perhaps a bit worryingly, the yellowhammers were nowhere to be seen or heard - this is a 'library picture'.

There was no shortage of some species. The most abundant by far were the chaffinches, but there were plenty of tits, robins, blackbirds, crows....

....and even a couple of gulls but nothing of particular note until I was almost home when I spotted....

....two, but only two long-tailed tits.

Long-tailed tits usually go around in families of six or more, but the other day I saw only two, again near our house, suggesting that these are the only ones left as we head towards the end of winter,

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Mozambique

We were digging around in the back of a little-visited cupboard the other day when we came across these two wooden bowls, each about 10" across but one slightly deeper than the other. They brought back a sudden flood of memories. We had bought the bowls on an expedition, probably in 1969, when we were staying with good friends in Umtali, the town which stood almost on the border between where we worked, in what was then Ian Smith's Rhodesia, and the Portuguese colonial possession of Mozambique.

Mozambique at the time was suffering in a bitter civil war between FRELIMO, which was fighting for an independent Mozambique, and the Portuguese colonial power, yet the strategic importance of the road and railway line linking Salisbury, the Rhodesian capital, with Beira, the major port on the Mozambique coast, was such that we felt quite happy to take a day trip from Umtali into Mozambique.

There was no purpose to our expedition, which took us to a Mozambique town not far from the border, other than to find a small hotel which had a swimming pool beside which we could enjoy a few beers or glasses of good Portuguese wine, and a pleasant meal. In this we were very successful, the Mozambique currency being weak against the Rhodesian dollar; and, while we were there, we bought the two bowls and some bottles of wine.

That wine was to rather mar our day because, when we tried to cross the border back into Rhodesia, we were charged a huge import tax, which suddenly made our pleasant day out an extremely expensive one.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Sunny Littleferry

We needed to clear the frost off the car this morning before we could set off for what promised to be a beautifully fine day at Littleferry, mainly in the hope that we would see rather more in the way of birds than we've been seeing elsewhere recently.

We were disappointed. While there was no shortage of oystercatchers we saw two female - or are they juvenile - eider and....


....one very fine male, the only other birds of note being....


....the skylarks and six pretty little sanderling.

One thing that did not disappoint was the weather, which was warm enough for us to follow the example of....

....the oystercatchers by sitting for some time doing nothing but soak up the warmth of the sun.

Friday, February 27, 2026

A Dispiriting Walk

This morning we walked the coast path that runs northeastwards past Dunrobin Castle, pushed along by a stiff and rather chill westerly wind which brought plenty of gaps in the clouds so we could sit on one of the benches, if only for a few minutes, and bask in the late February sunshine.

If the sunshine was cheering, the wildlife wasn't. In the field below the Castle the winter barley concealed a flock of about a dozen curlew, and along the shore we spotted small numbers of....

....oystercatchers, but otherwise, in a two mile walk, we saw precious little, the only bright spot being a small flock of long-tailed ducks chasing each other some distance offshore.

What really highlighted the dismal state the birdlife was in is illustrated in this picture - one of only five gulls we saw.

When we first came to Golspie this section of coast used to be an exciting walk for the wealth of birdlife it supported. What's happening that we find ourselves hunting for....gulls?

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Recovery

This is our sparrowhawk yesterday evening, soaking up some sun after his near-catastrophic collision with the glass balustrade of our balcony. He looked fine and rather laid-back but by this morning he was....

....out hunting with focussed determination. Here, he's on one of the chaffinches' favourite stopping-off points on their way to a hearty meal at our feeders, and....

....here he's looking down onto one of the main feeding areas.

Whereas before we counted ourselves fortunate to see him once in every three days or so, today we spotted him no less than six times - here he's sitting on top of the sunflower feeders in the front yard.

One wonders why he's so frenetically active, whether he didn't feed while he was recovering yesterday or whether he's building himself up, in our present almost springlike weather, for a busy breeding season ahead.

Whatever the reason for this burst of activity it's a relief that he's come through this unhappy episode with no apparent harm.