This would entail a drive northwards to Sullom, a small settlement of houses that lies on one side of Sullom Voe with the huge Sullom Voe Oil Terminal. situated further up at the head of the voe (a sea inlet)
It was a bright but very windy morning as we set off and on arriving at Sullom we found only four other birders standing by the road looking for the shrike
It had been reported from here for a couple of days and photographed only yesterday from literally by the roadside where the edge of a plantation met the road.This plantation was quite extensive and like most similar plantations across Shetland was presumably acting as a windbreak, although standing on the road it did not appear very effective today due to the wind's direction.
We gathered together to admire it and took photographs as it hunted bees, wasps and other large insects visiting the rosa bushes. It had been reported as having met with some mishap which manifested itself in the form of a suspected broken left wing and indeed when it moved up from a post into a tree by a series of giant hops you could see the wing hanging down but from experience I knew the wing was not broken but badly sprained.
It certainly did not appear to inconvenience the shrike which despite the drooping wing was highly mobile, using both wings, damaged and otherwise, to assist it in progressing from ground level to the tops of the plantation trees with little apparent difficulty
We lost sight of the shrike and after a bit of searching discovered it had descended to the wire fence that ran along the leeward side of the plantation and rosa bushes and was a nice sunny spot well out of the wind.
The fence separated the plantation from a large grass field and I suggested to Mark we could get closer to the shrike and improve on any photographic efforts by climbing the fence which would put us in the field right opposite the shrike as it perched on the fence
In Scotland there is the right to roam enshrined in law and in Shetland provided you do not damage fences or leave gates open in areas such as this field it is not a problem to venture into such places.We duly crossed the low wire fence and stood in the wet field.The shrike for its part showed absolutely no alarm at our presence and we came to realise it was one of those individuals that would tolerate a close approach.
We went back a couple of days later to see the shrike and by now it was capable of flying relatively strongly so its prospects were hopefully positive.
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