Friday, 17 November 2017

Strumpshaw Fen: A Murmuration


A bright afternoon with billowing white clouds sending smoky tendrils onto a base coat of sapphire blue, had slowly but relentlessly given way to a lowering sky of rain laden grey. The light that was so crisp two hours before was now retreating before the early gloom of dusk, bringing the day to what felt like a premature end. With the pattering of light rain, refreshingly cool, spotting our faces we sought sanctuary in the Hide. Here we could sit in relative comfort and watch the spectacle that was about to unfold. A true wildlife drama, one that would grace any Attenborough programme watched by millions, played out here to an audience of perhaps a dozen. A starling roost: a murmuration.


The dank murk seemed to have triggered an early gathering and by 3.30 there were already several thousand dark shapes, tightly massed, swirling over the reed beds. They twisted and turned as one, each bird reacting instantaneously to the movement of its near neighbours. The flock rippled and morphed; first a solid dark host and seconds later a graceful, rippling pulse. Ever changing; one moment a dark round ball, the next elongated waves; always flowing as a single entity. And then without any obvious cue the whole mass would plummet into the reeds as smoothly and swiftly as water flowing over falls.


But the starlings were not alone. As streams more arrowed across the broad to join their brethren, sharp eyes of sparrowhawks awaited their chance. From the vantage point of a dead tree one of these ace predators scrutinised the new arrivals looking for a way to get an easy supper. It slipped from its perch, stooped low into a channel between the reeds and was lost to view. The assault must have signalled an end for one hapless individual, but the collective can sustain the loss of a singleton. Such is the nature of these birds existence. One moment alive and oblivious to imminent danger, the next a victim of death on wings.

Less capable, but nonetheless persistent assault came in the form of lumbering marsh harriers.  These large, slow raptors, more accustomed to surprising unwary ground based prey, seemed out of their depth when chasing swirls of fast moving objects. They lunged into the reed tops, talons extended, but stood little chance of making contact. Their subsequent laboured pursuits, flapping frantically on their broad long wings, bore no fruit. But surely, with such a throng at their disposal they would eventually strike gold? Not today. The trio chancing their luck soon gave up, finding their own roosting spot deeper into the reeds.


And still they swarmed. Parties of a dozen, of fifty, of two hundred hurtled without pause low over the waving reeds to plunge without ceremony into their depths. And once there they chattered, squeaked and chortled to one another in a fever. The sound of their discourse providing yet another layer of wonder; what were they saying to one another?


If any proof were needed as to why conserving such places as this is necessary, an hour spent at dusk watching the roosting birds would dispel any doubts. It is an oasis, a sanctuary, man managed but essentially left alone for wildlife to flourish. If 15,000 starlings couldn’t roost here then where would they go? If the sparrowhawks and harriers couldn’t fish for supper where would they go? Where too would the ducks and geese, the gulls, the otters, deer and voles go? And where would we go to find peace, to refresh our soul and be lifted by such sights and sounds?


On this day we eventually decided to leave the host in peace. A chill breeze had sprung up and it was time we battened down the hatches and left this place. Left it to the thousands of gossiping starlings, the circling harriers, the jet black crows. We had been fortunate to witness a visual and aural experience to savour, all played out in a Broadland haven a stone’s throw from a large city with its own murmuration of speeding tin cans and scurrying pedestrians each racing home to their own roosting spot for the night.

Saturday, 11 November 2017

Strumpshaw Autumn


We’ve been here before. The first thing to happen as I arrived at RSPB Strumpshaw Fen was an encounter with one of the regular photographers. After the customary hellos, the conversation quickly nosedived into the negative; the same old lament that there was ‘nothing about, totally lifeless, didn’t take a single shot’. I’ve heard it so many times, and whilst it’s true that I’ve sometimes wandered around without troubling the camera shutter too much, I’m here to tell you that on this day there was plenty about. Lots of lovely wildlife and landscape to see and enjoy. In fact I didn’t even have to leave my car, for there opposite my parking berth was a blackthorn flush with ripe sloes; sore temptation for any hungry bird. I watched for an hour whilst several blackbirds, a robin, blue tit, great tit and a lovely male blackcap plundered the feast. You see folks, in my world birds don’t have to be rare or seldom encountered to provide interest and entertainment.






Moving on through the wood and along the path to Fen Hide with my friend, we delighted in the antics of a jay that perched brazenly atop the fingerpost, its fine plumage dazzling as it raided oaks for any remaining acorns. A couple of minutes later a trio of bullfinches flew across the path and we slowly, carefully, very quietly, stalked them through hip and haw laden shrubs but, as ever, failed to get a proper prolonged look. A tantalising glimpse of deep red breast, a flash of a white rump, a soft muted piping and they were gone.    


Sitting on a bench overlooking the meadows where the seed heads of reeds danced wildly in the gathering breeze, we watched the rays of the autumnal sun spraying through gathering clouds of multi-hued grey. An ever changing skyscape that surely deserved attention. Between occlusions, the bright sunlight illuminated berries of guelder rose, emphasising their translucence, whilst highlighting a matrix of spider web spun between the stalks.  And all around the reeds sung their soft song of seasons end.

Image courtesy of R Burrough
Image courtesy of R Burrough


Marsh harriers, swirls of corvids, golden leaves of oak, beech and birch. Chattering blue tits, newly arrived fieldfares, a flotilla of monochrome coots, rounded off with cheerful chat and a steaming cup of coffee. All this was there for anyone to enjoy. We did.

Saturday, 28 October 2017

Season's End



It seemed such a short time ago that I was tripping lightly along the boardwalk of the Norfolk Wildlife Trust’s unique reserve at Ranworth, heart full of the boundless possibilities of a vibrant spring as I arrived for my first volunteering session of the season. Then the recently cut reeds were only just beginning to regenerate, poking bright green shoots through the boggy ground festooned with yellow splashes of marsh marigold. Fresh buds of willow, sallow and oak were unperceptively but determinedly unfurling, Chiffchaffs sang in the alders, blackcaps warbled from hazel scrub whilst the azure sky of an April morn foretold of a likely busy day ahead.



Scroll forward six months and here I was walking the same trail, wearing the same boots, with the same shade of clear sky overhead. The season had been, as ever, entertaining, fulfilling and varied. Education and enlightenment was dispensed and received, picnics and laughter experienced and relished. But now things had changed. No birdsong accompanied my progress; no colourful spikes of marsh flowers punctured the damp ground, no sense of the impending explosion of growth; of bursting buds, of regeneration. Instead I walked through dampened, bedraggled ranks of  reed; under trees shedding leaves of burnished gold and red, through a world seemingly resigned to the end; the cessation of life. At least for this year. But then I caught the rays of the morning sun shining through reed heads caught dancing in a sudden waft of autumn breeze. The dapping light temporarily blinded me, yet the waltzing shadows lifted my mood. There was life here after all. A blue tit wheezed, goldfinches tinkled, gulls drifted as snowflakes. It was simply a different aspect of the same place; a morphing from one season to another; cause for celebration not melancholy. I walked on with a lighter step.


It was a good day, a steady flow of visitors, lots of children eager to draw the birds they had seen, complete the puzzles, push buttons and spent granddad’s money. Late holiday makers mixed with regular visitors; pilgrims from foreign counties rubbing shoulders with locals. As it should be.


In the late afternoon, as the sun swung in a descending arc westwards, the reflected light on the broad took on a special vibrancy.  A party of visitors dropped in from Scandinavia; Norwegian, Danish and an Englishman that had migrated north. They loved the mood and serenity of this place. We chatted about the birdlife now gathering in impressive numbers on and around the sparkling water, resting, washing, preening, squabbling, as birds do. It struck me that we were, in all probability, looking at foreign immigrants of an avian kind. Little, if anything, had originated in this beloved Norfolk of mine. I explained that the wigeon, teal, shoveler, cormorants and gulls we were watching could quite easily have come from Iceland, Russia, Central Europe or maybe even Norway or Denmark. Perhaps the gulls these people had seen wheeling around their local park or marina were now taking advantage of the peace and sanctuary afforded by a shallow Norfolk waterway. Maybe the ducks they had observed on their Scandinavian lakes were the very same ones now whistling and piping in front of us. Who can say? Similarly the impressive cormorant roost, already boosting at least 1000 birds perching still and sentinel on favoured trees, contained individuals from  France and Holland. A connection was made. We are not separate from these creatures; we share the same earth, move through the same space, rely on the same resources.



As we wound down the centre for our last shift of the year, gulls and yet more cormorants were streaming overhead, sailing into roost. Yes, the screeching terns and swooping swallows may have gone but they have been replaced with another shift, one that is equally interesting, spectacular and vital. The visitor centre may now be closed to the public, but it is simply dozing. Like the Queen wasps, peacock butterflies and bats sheltering within, it will reawaken with the first warm days of spring to commence the cycle of life.

Sunday, 24 September 2017

Secrets of the Night


We watched the sun slide smoothly towards the horizon, melting into the far end of the tranquil, unrippled surface of the broad; a golden orb slowly sinking into the mirror like surface of the water. In the stillness that followed its disappearance, peace settled over this water land, broken only by the occasional echoing quacking of mallards, floating silhouettes now, or the fluting melancholy of a robin’s autumnal song. Before long the lower sky became a band of flame, flowing by degrees into darkening shades of dusk, faintly chilly now summer’s grip was loosening. Presently we heard the faint honking of grey-lag geese that gathered momentum as they flew in to spend the night roosting far out of harm’s way; a strategy adopted also by gulls, ducks and heraldic cormorants. The gloaming giving way slowly to the velvet blue of a night filled with faint starlight. But we were not here to just admire the sunset, my colleague and I had some work to do. …..


Ranworth Broad, a Norfolk Wildlife Trust reserve in the heart of the Bure Valley.  I know the place well having been engaged as the official coordinator some years ago. That was a very interesting and fulfilling time, but I’m content now to turn up once a week during the opening season to spend a pleasant few hours watching the wildlife and chatting to holiday makers and other visitors about this special place. It is a vibrant location at times, full of people who are visibly amazed at the panoramic view of the large sheet of water they see as they enter; a legacy from the medieval need to dig for fuel. For children the adventure of visiting somewhere only accessible via a walk through a woodland swamp, reeds swaying above their heads is magical. For adults the delight their children show is reward enough. For all it is unique. 


 …..But there are no holidaymakers here tonight, we have a different purpose;  we are here to trap moths, those members of the night shift seldom encountered in any numbers….. unless you have a moth trap, and luckily we do. Nobody seems quite sure why moths are attracted to light, but attracted they certainly are. Here, away from prying eyes and in no danger of upsetting neighbours, we position the trap on the decking; essentially an open topped wooden box with sloping Perspex inserts that moths can harmlessly slide down once mesmerised by the emissions from the bright mercury vapour lamp. We stay watching the trap until tawny owls send their love songs to one another through the wood, one so close and loud it startles us with its eerie screech. Another answers; a faintly audible trembling hoot from way down the channel towards the river. Insects: mosquitos, flies of all kinds, small beetles, midges by the hundred, swarm around the trap but no moths yet appear. So we turn our attention to the bats that are now flitting all around taking advantage of the myriad flying insects attracted to the light. Our bat detector picks up a wealth of chittering, chattering and buzzing as the bats echo locate their prey. We think they must be Daubenton’s or natterers since they are emitting at between 50-60kHz frequency. We have a more sophisticated device which we will leave overnight and will later show we had an astounding total of nine species of these flying mammals making use of the site.  Our two suspected species, all three pipistrelles, brown long-eared, noctule, serotine and Leisler’s. An indication of the tremendous diversity this jewel of a site supports.

There is method to our madness, we want to record the bats as part of a Norfolk bat Survey operated by the British Trust for Ornithology, and we want to trap the moths to have something mysterious and live to show the visitors the following day. And all of a sudden there is a moth, a large yellow underwing, thrashing around in the bottom of the trap before finding refuge amongst the empty egg cartons placed there. Satisfied that the moths are beginning to emerge we make our way home through the now silent reed swamp, our head torches showing every flower head of hemp agrimony, purple loosestrife and marsh thistle to have feeding insects; it’s not just daytime residents that have a pollination role to play. We even find a few green and black striped swallowtail caterpillars munching their way through milk parsley. We’re confident the trap will produce the goods and this is confirmed when we return the following morning. We have struck gold; brilliantly marked garden tigers, poplar hawkmoths, a drinker, large emerald, pebble hook-tip, carpets, pugs and waves. Enough to keep us busy recording and potting for an hour. Later we enthrall some children with the larger species and amaze most with the diversity of form, colour and camouflage. A successful outcome and one that encourages us to undertake this late vigil for several subsequent weeks until it gets too cold and wet to continue. We will try again next season.


Monday, 22 May 2017

A Million Miles From Home

I read once of a couple who, having decided to shun the trappings of modern city life, fled to a remote Scottish Isle, finding themselves by degrees falling into complete harmony with the seasonal ebb and flow. In winter they would retire shortly after darkness fell in late afternoon, sleeping long and waking late; in summer they would make do with a mere three hours rest and not feel any the worse for it. So it is here in the Pacific coast rain forest of Costa Rice. We have no modern devices to distract us, no TV, no wi-fi, no bars, restaurants or street lights. All we have is nature, and this we are surrounded by. In fact after three days we find our cycle is already being dictated by the environment. It becomes dark at around 5.30pm and after an early dinner we can sit out for a short while watching lighting flash thunderlessly over the ocean before slumber beckons at 9pm. Our wake up call around 5am is provided by the Howler Monkeys beginning their blood-curdling Baskerville Hound growling and by the squeaky-wheel cries of Black-billed Toucans. No man-made device can be nearly so effective. 

Our bungalow here at El Remanso Lodge in the south west of the country is placed at the head of a forest cloaked valley, providing an uninterrupted view of the sea a kilometre distant. The raging surf pounding on the grey sand beach is an ever present background noise; at night surprisingly loud, thunderous even. The breeze from the sea wafts up the valley to provide most welcome cooling and is used by vultures, hawks, kites and the like as a means of soaring effortlessly in search of a meal. Flowers of all colours, shapes and sizes provide nectar for hummingbirds and butterflies whilst fruiting trees offer their bounty for many species of colourful bird. Trails through the dense forest provide access to another world of tall sentinel trees, twisted vines, tangled roots and buttress where millions of leaf cutter ants form flotillas of tiny green sails marching in purposeful ranks. Smaller ants excavate their nests under the soft red soil pellet by pellet, individual insects struggling with a weight that in equivalent terms would crush us. The spoil from the mining piles up like so many miniature volcanoes over the forest floor. Major industry on a macro scale.

Last night a storm raged out to sea, flashes of sheet lightning flooding the troubled sky, painting the night forest in stark monochrome relief. The caressing breeze became a more violent wind enticing the Pacific surf to pummel the thin stretch of beach in angry cascade. The monkeys don't like such events, howling in protest at the interruptions to their slumber. Yet somehow you accept the disruption, recognise it as a natural response to an elemental phenomenon, roll over and fall asleep.....if you're lucky.

From our elevated vantage point we can see, far below, Brown Pelicans and Great Frigatebirds gliding along the coast. This morning I watched a group of 15 pelicans glide across our eye line for a count of 53 seconds without a wingbeat between them. Quite masterful. During the course of the day the vultures begin to cruise the slopes, mainly Black and Turkey, but today a magnificent King Vulture joined them. Other raptors, Swallow-tailed Kites and a White Hawk have joined the list over the course of the past 24 hours. As I have been writing this post we have become surrounded by a foraging flock of mixed small birds, tanagers, honeycreepers, vireos and many I haven't yet been able to identify. Toucans surreptitiously glide into a nearby tree where they deftly pick small berries from a cluster, holding the prize in the end of their multi-coloured mandibles before, with a quick flick, sending it down their gullet. Scarlet McCaws Screech from hidden tangles whilst butterflies, some as large as a saucer glide across the dappled glade or sip the nectar proffered by almond blossom. As dusk falls, a Common Pauraque (a nightjar), sits on the lawn from where it will make forays into the dusk for moths and other flying insects, bats flit around after the same fodder whilst frogs, cicadas and crickets chirrup and squeak to each other from the undergrowth. 

It is a wildlife paradise that can be measured scientifically as being so many thousand miles from home, but in emotional and spiritual terms it is light years from our everyday existence. 














Thursday, 18 May 2017

Matters of the Heart


I watched a heart beating today, not my own or that of any fellow human being, but that of a tiny bird. A hummingbird, a White-throated Mountain Gem to be precise; such an apt name. This minuscule treasure was perched under the shelter of a rose arch, defending its patch of nectar rich flower border from would be usurpers. Between sorties to see off intruders with an indignant 'tick' and sip sugar rich liquid from the bountiful blooms, it would hold vigil from its favoured twig, twisting its head from side to side to allow its sparkling eye to search for potential rivals. So I carefully moved closer, wondering just how close I would be allowed to get before the little beauty gained alarm at something five thousand times it's bulk and thirty thousand times its weight. To my delight the answer proved to be about a foot, a mere twelve inches separating me from a true miracle of nature. From that short distance I could take in everything; the way the feathers overlapped like minuscule scales, each containing the ability of refract sunlight into glittering shards of multi-coloured iridescence; the way tiny grains of pollen adhered to the crown, ready to complete the mutually beneficial transaction when the next flower was probed by the long pointed bill, and I noticed the way the little mite's whole frame was moving in some kind of sycophantic motion with the beating of its heart. Of course the bird wasn't sitting there with its chest jumping around at a rate of 1,200 beats per minute, but some abridged, collective cardiac rhythm was clearly perceptible. A living, breathing, pulsing creature, so delicate, so vulnerable and so full of energy. And for a few moments, no more than perhaps thirty beats of my own sometimes troubled heart, I was privileged enough to be able to gaze upon it, and into its dark liquid eye, on a sunny morning high in a perfume scented garden surrounded by cloud kissed mountainous forest.

Some pictures of the delightful hummingbirds that abound in the grounds of our lodge.












Wednesday, 17 May 2017

Resplendently Humming

'Quetzal!' I exclaimed. No response, again: 'Quetzal!' 
Not a flicker from Marino my guide who was intently peering through his scope at some small bird tazzing around in the tree tops. I tried again.
'Quetzal!'
'It's Queetzaal' he said, reluctantly peeling his eye from the scope.
'No, there's a Quetzal. There in that tree!' I pointed to a clump of green foliage that simply lost relevance against the curtain of mixed greens facing us. 
'Oh, I thought you were practicing the pronounciation' he said in heavily accented English. Irony? Who would know?

And so, standing on a trail somewhere in the Costa Rican cloud forest, overlooking a sunlit valley, did our quest for this famous bird reach its comical end. We had been looking in and around an avocado tree for an hour or so, Marino occasionally giving a two toned call mimicking a singing male bird, but so far had drawn a blank. Not that the area was bird less, far from it; several colourful species had entertained us as they hunted fruit and insects in the high canopy of this pristine primary forest. But no Quetzal, until some pigeon or suchlike tumbled into a dense tangle of leaf, frightening a shock of iridescence to bolt out and perch in the tree to which I was now guiding my guide. 

Once found, this splendid bird, a truly Resplendent Quetzal, gave us wonderful views for the next twenty minutes as it occasionally tripped between tree tops, huge tail plumes waving in the warming air of a mountain morning. What a stunner:  peacock body feathers glowing metallic green and blue, deep crimson chest band, neat yellow bill and punk like head feathering. And of course those magnificent tail plumes that give the bird its name, it's fame and elevate it from just a trogon to something exotic and surreal. When it flew it gyrated through the air as a gymnast's ribbon with the tail plumes lagging behind the body to create a semblance of discord. When perched it became amazingly almost invisible. With the satisfaction of a vigil justified, we simply watched and photographed it, until with a twist and a turn it flipped behind a tree and became lost to view once again........






Our week in Costa Rica hadn't begun in such high fashion. The first couple of days were spent in Tortuguero National Park where the only way to reach the lodges lining the riverbanks of this area bordering the Caribbean coast is by water. Shallow draft boats zip up and down the waterways weaving between the trunks and roots of fallen trees taking people to work, to socialise and sightsee. There are no roads through the rain forest and few trails allow access to the deep, dark ranks of sentinel trees. To motor at speed along the wider rivers with a cool breeze blowing on your face is quite pleasurable, more so because being static on land is nothing short of hellish. The heat and humidity make everything an effort and even three showers a day do little to freshen you up. The rooms of our lodge had air conditioning on permanent deep chill mode so you are alternating between being in an oven and a fridge; not good for our fragile English constitution which sadly broke down, resulting in mild sunstroke with its associated sweats, nausea, headaches and such like. 

The wildlife in and around the rain forest was interesting enough, but there were no pathways to roam; no walkways to lead you around corners where surprises may, well, surprise. In short no real excitement. So with flagging appetites and sagging shoulders we were boated once more to the docking area to endure a subsequent eight hour motor journey south; greeted for our efforts on arrival by a violent thunder storm. Nothing for it but to go to bed by 8pm, hoping to catch up on lost sleep, but instead laying awake and wide-eyed, listening to the rain hammering down on the tin roof of our bungalow all night. The thought of getting up for a birding walk at 5am lost its appeal with every clap of thunder.





......but the Quezal has made it all worthwhile. And the gorgeous zipping, cantankerous, shining, beady eyed hummingbirds, and the tanagers, coloured with hues of sunset, and the multi-coloured confiding toucanets, redstarts, flycatchers, woodcreepers, woodpeckers...........












Thursday, 11 May 2017

Doing Time

Alcatraz, La Isla de los Alcatraces, Island of the Pelicans, stands about 1.25 miles off the coast of San Francisco. It seems so easily accessible but in actuality is as remote as any offshore island can be. The freezing waters of the San Franciscan Bay together with its strong currents made it an ideal place to house America's most hardened and determined criminals. As the Con's quotation goes - 'If you break the rules you go to prison, if you break prison rules you go to Alcatraz'.

When early Spanish colonisers discovered the Bay Area sometime in the 16th century, the island was indeed home to large numbers of pelicans, so large were their numbers that when a cannon was shot across their bows the noise of the frightened birds taking wing was likened to a hurricane. One can only imagine the numbers of birds involved, even allowing for some fancy in the written accounts. Sadly no pelicans nest on the island today.

It must have been a bleak place to serve time; so close to civilisation, but no closer in reality than the moon. Only three people actually escaped from the prison, immortalised in Clint Eastwood's movie Escape From Alcatraz, although their fate was uncertain. Did they drown in the unforgiving waters of the bay, or did they manage to make landfall and wend their way to South America? Nobody knows. What seems clear is that the famous movies with the prison as a subject matter, Birdman of Alcatraz, The Rock and the aforementioned Mr Eastwood's epic, depict inmates in an heroical light. The reality is quite different; inmates were hardened criminals, psychopaths, murderers, violent individuals that fully deserved their incarceration. Spencer Tracy, Nicholas Cage, Clint Eastwood they were not: malevolent, murderous, bitter and twisted they were.

But the prison is no more, it closed in 1963. High maintenance costs associate with the wear and tear inflicted upon it by decades of extreme weather hastened its demise. The Rock was abandoned and once again left to nature. Now it is run as a National Park with thousands of visitors catered for every day, eager to get a taste of what incarceration on the Rock was really like. The answer is bloody awful! Extremely cramped cells, no privacy, stripped of dignity and out of sight and mind of the rest of humanity. Perhaps they deserved it, but it is hard not to feel a pang of regret that such things had to be. The thing that struck me though was that even amongst the most antisocial and hate filled minds, the need for some connection with nature was strong. One prisoner took it upon himself to make a garden on the bare rock, transporting and spreading by his own hand tonnes of soil. He built a greenhouse out of old window frames begged from the prison guards and grew flowers from seed. Today, In full spring bloom it was a delight; it became a haven for inmates as well who would linger there on their way to complete other chores. The human spirit needs to have some link with the natural world or it will wither and die.

Part of the Alcatraz experience nowadays is to have a look at the returning birds and other animals. Various National Park employees were dotted around counting pairs of nesting gulls and cormorants, letting interested people have a look through their scopes and generally informing them of the work going on. The fortunes of the birds seems on the up after a couple of bad El Niño years. Brandt's Cormorants covered flat slabs of rock and the concrete jetties; Western Gulls were everywhere else. A small colony of mixed Snowy Egrets and Black-crowned Night Herons occupy a cluster of shrubs and small trees whilst a pair of Great Blue Herons were tending their nest high in a eucalyptus. Ravens, Song Sparrows, Pigeon Guillemots and Blackbirds completed the avian cast and an information board told us that small mice on the island have evolved a colourway to match the grey of the concrete covering most of the site.

Alcatraz is a monument to inhumanity, suffering and pain, but as will always be the case, nature is healing the wounds and soothing the scars.





Wednesday, 10 May 2017

Walking On Water



A depression hit the mid Californian coast a couple of days ago resulting in strong westerly winds and raging seas. The surf pounding the rocks was quite spectacular; the consequent chill not so welcome and not something we expected. Isn't it always warm here? Obviously not. However, as we all know, it is an ill wind indeed that blows no good; as with onshore gales at home, so it is here - there can sometimes be surprises in store. 

Blue skies the following day found us taking a quick peek at Monterey's Old Fisherman's Wharf, the plan to have a brief look around the tat shops and maybe grab a cuppa. Instead our fate led, most agreeably, in another direction when it became clear the calm waters of the inner bay were playing sanctuary to some very unusual and quite beautiful storm driven birds. Aptly named storm petrels, Fork-tailed Storm Petrels to be precise, had been displaced from their usual haunts far out in the Pacific to grace the harbour area and mix it with sea lions, otters, whale watching boats and totally oblivious tourists. A local birder was there and remarked how unusual this sight is 'They should be 30 miles off shore' he said without removing his eye from the viewfinder of his camera. Another chap came along to say 'Wonderful and so rare'. He was a local boat operator and knew his business. That aside I don't think another person from the thousands milling around gave these wonders of nature a second glance. How sad I thought. 

But at least four folk appreciated the sight of such dainty creatures, floating, swooping, bobbing around on a mill pond, multi-hued surface, reflecting and distorting in kaleidoscope fashion the garish colours of the buildings lining the pier. It crossed my mind that these birds had probably never seen a human being before, may never see one again and will never again come as close to land. They will live out their lives dancing on the surface of the sea, walking on water, out of sight of the billions of humans inhabiting the earth. Such tiny waifs, so fragile, yet capable of surviving the worst weather the marine world can throw at them. If that doesn't demand respect I really don't know what does.

The petrels were a privilege, but not the only stray to bedeck the harbour. Numbers of phalaropes were busy picking tiny morsels from the water's surface, Red-necked and Grey. At times the species swam side by side providing a once in a lifetime photo opportunity to capture these northbound waders in their spring finery. About twenty or so birds were spinning around next to where we stood, more than I've seen in a lifetimes birding back in the UK. There must have been scores more dotted over the bay. Breathtaking. 

With both Red-throated and Great Northern Divers, Pigeon Guillemots, Brandt's Cormorants, grebes and gulls as a supporting cast it was quite a spectacle. But the abiding memory will be of those little petrels, tripping across the water, so buoyant they made hardly a ripple.