We headed further south towards virtually the end of the main island, Mainland and to a very well known birding location, a garden that you can overlook from the road at a place called Grutness which is near to Sumburgh Head, the southernmost tip of Shetland.
This morning, via the various Shetland Birding News WhatsApp groups one joins on arriving on Shetland we learnt that a Red breasted Flycatcher had been seen in the sycamores but was noted as being very elusive. There was also a Yellow browed Warbler, a Lesser Whitethroat, a Willow Warbler and a couple each of Common Chiffchaff and Goldcrest keeping it company.
These tiny, sprite like, will o' the wisp flycatchers are a scarce but regular vagrant to Shetland and there is never a year when they are not found.They are very small, move incredibly fast and rarely are they still for more than a second or two, as they flick and whizz through the boughs and twigs to catch the tiny insects they feed on.
When you see one up close and in a rare moment of inactivity it is impossible not to be charmed by their endearing persona. Robin like but without the truculence is how I would describe them. Most are young birds in a dull plumage of pale buff underparts and brown upperparts with a black tail that shows white flashes when they fly.
I caught a flash of white today as it dived into the shelter of a sycamore. then there it was again no more than a blur of buff as it shot into another tree.Would it ever settle?
A birder stood next to me said
There it is on that branch, right in the open
I could not find it and it was gone
A familiar situation but then there it was again
It's back he said. Same branch
I looked and found it
Hurrah!
I carried on watching and discovered it had favoured perches that it invariably returned to.Sheltered branches that were low to the ground where the wind was less forceful due to the wall. For long periods it disappeared, so small was it amongst the wind flickering leaves it became at times impossible to make it out. Its plumage, the shade of the dead leaves, also aided in keeping its presence secret, only for it to reveal itself when it flew out after an insect.
I embarked on a rollercoaster of frustration and triumph as I tested myself against this most difficult and elusive of subjects to watch and photograph
We decided to come back on another day to try and see it better but when we did found it had been joined by a Spotted Flycatcher, the larger bird not unnaturally in the ascendancy and causing the smaller bird to absent itself. However when the flycatchers were at opposite ends of the line of trees it worked well enough.
In a flight of whimsy looking at them, my mind recalled our recent overnight journey to Lerwick and looking out of our cabin window in the middle of a sleepless night at the passing white crests of the stormy sea, and I wondered at these scraps of life soon having to make a perilous journey across the vastness of sea in the dark, as they must.
to be continued
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