Not too much time for birding these last few days, what with all this lovely
sunshine and the need to make hay. But I did manage a short session in
Rockit Land on Wednesday morning. Again I really struggled to find
some. Two or three at most, and so-so photos of just one. I can't find a good
match among the birds photographed so far, and reckon it's probably a new
one...
I wonder why I'm struggling to find them in any numbers all of a sudden? Have they got a new favourite hang-out? Somewhere I'm not looking? Or, have some of them moved on? Towards...er...Scandinavia maybe? Anyway, I'm not done with them yet, so will keep at it.
After work yesterday I called in at a local spot with some water, hoping for a Sand Martin or two. It was a peaceful evening, and I watched the setting sun turn a beautiful red as it bowed out of the day. No Sand Martins, but there were several Pied Wagtails to pick through instead.
I always enjoy hunting for White Wagtails among the Pied in spring, but it looked like I had drawn a blank this time. It was 18:15, and the light dimming fast, and then one bird finally did catch my eye. Not in the usual way, i.e. because of an obviously pale mantle, but rather because its white bits were so clean and bright. Its mantle, in fact, seemed to be a surprisingly dark shade of grey...
I never saw the rump, but the somewhat limited (and pale) grey wash on
the flanks is a good sign |
The solid black nape suggests a male but, as I learned in the paper 'White Wagtail and Pied Wagtail: a new look' by Adriaens, Bosman & Elst (Dutch Birding 2010), only a fool is dogmatic about alba Wags. Here is yesterday's bird compared with a West Bex peach from 2nd April last year...
Yesterday's bird (top row and middle right) and West Bex
White Wagtail (bottom two and middle left) |
Let me share a gem from that Dutch Birding paper.
Mantle shade (on Kodak Grey Scale): yarrellii (10-18), alba (7-12)
And scapular shade: yarrellii (10-18), alba (7-11)
The paper defines 11 as 'dark grey' and 12 as 'very dark grey', and certainly
a quick glance at a Kodak Grey Scale supports those definitions. The point is,
of course, that there is overlap between the two races. So, purely on
the basis of mantle/scaps colour, my bird yesterday might be a pale
Pied or a dark White. I'm going for White. And I might
even be correct.
Really though, the bird's actual identity is immaterial. Yet again, a common
species has given me a lot of fun. And that'll do nicely.
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