Having indulged myself with some very special birds this last month, culminating in the excitement of going twice to see the American Robin at Eastbourne( see here )today it was back to a more sedate kind of birding at Farmoor Reservoir, renewing acquaintance with the long staying Great Northern Diver, now only granted the most casual of glances as the novelty of its presence has long since worn off. It first arrived on the reservoir on 12th December 2021 and has been here for 67 days, one of the longest stays of this species that I can remember since I began visiting the reservoir years ago.
Today provided a window of opportunity between two violent storms. The first, Storm Dudley did its worst yesterday, the ferocious wind churning up the waters of the reservoir into white horses and making walking out along the causeway hazardous. That storm passed overnight, leaving today still windy but pleasantly sunny. However this is only a temporary respite as now we are bracing ourselves for the arrival of Storm Eunice which is predicted to be much more violent and has prompted Thames Water to close the reservoir tomorrow, Friday, due to an amber weather warning.
I walked around the larger basin to the far western side where I was sheltered from the worst of the chilling westerly wind. A welcome respite indeed. I sat on the retaining wall and scanned the waters of the reservoir in front of me which were calm here, in the lee of the wind, and as a consequence numbers of Coot,Tufted Ducks and Great crested Grebes had congregated to avoid the exposed rougher water further out.
I was looking for the Great Northern Diver and it did not take long to find as it surfaced almost in front of me for a minute before diving again, but above or below water it remained always relatively close to the reservoir bank. With nothing else to divert my attention, I was in no hurry and decided to spend a peaceful hour or more here, out of the strong wind, entirely alone, observing the diver going about its life. For the main part it was fishing but would intersperse this with bouts of preening and even a brief sleep.
This is a Great Northern Diver in full breeding plumage taken on The Isle of Arran in May |
It was obviously feeling the itch of renewing feathers coming through or maybe old feathers that needed discarding and spent some time nibbling at and removing downy under feathers. It raised a huge paddle of a webbed foot as it tilted to one side, its head held low to the water and then as it slowly rotated in the water, with infinite delicacy it scratched an irritation on its cheek many times, an action one would have thought impossible with such a blunt instrument as the giant foot.
After each session of preening it would invariably stand on its feet in the water and extending head and neck raise its body up and flap its wings before sinking back into the water.
So a much more eventful hour than I could have imagined came to a minor climax. I have never seen a Great Northern tackle such a large fish before and learnt something new this morning as yet again I reflected on how, taking time to sit quietly, watching birds or any wildlife can bring the benefit of inner peace to one's being.
Nature is wonderful,it is all around and free for everyone to enjoy and treasure.
No comments:
Post a Comment