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Fowl watching is a good January outdoor activity
January is a good time to
take a look at local ponds or reservoirs to see the wild fowl, which
congregate there over the winter months.
We recently visited the flooded gravel pits
at Knotford Nook, near Otley. You can scan the waters here from
the roadside and there's always something interesting to see. It
was a bright, frosty morning, the willows along the far banks glowed
orange in the sunlight and the lagoon presented an elegant composition
in black and white.
The waters provide a resting place for large
numbers of black-headed gulls, now quite ghostly without their striking
summer chocolate-brown head plumage, and a family of swans cruised
in a dignified fashion among the smaller fry. Coots seem to have
had a successful breeding season, and their sooty forms provide
the contrast as they bustled round, bobbing and diving and quarrelling
noisily. Here and there among the throng, we spotted the neat black
forms of male tufted ducks.
These jaunty characters have brilliant white
patches on their flanks and long dropping crests that flow out from
their glossy heads as they potter about in the breezy sunshine.
However, closer scrutiny revealed that not
all was black and white. There were a fair number of widgeon in
small sub-groups scattered across the pool. Ducks can be tricky
to identify, especially as you are often straining to see them in
the distance with the wind in your eyes.
We always look out for the males, which have
the more striking plumage than the females generally to be found
accompanying them.
The widgeon drake is a fine fellow with grey
black, rich chestnut coloured head and a creamy patch down the middle
of his face.
Then, quite close to us, we spotted a dumpy
shape, quite tiny in comparison to the coots and tufties, and a
beautiful rich brown with lighter brown neck and sides. That characteristic
head shape with the forward thrusting bill identified it straight
away - the little grebe - smallest and shyest member of the grebe
family. It's the master of the disappearing trick and, once aware
of you, will dive and swim underwater to the nearest cover, not
emerging till the watcher has gone.
There was another treat in store for us.
In the second lagoon on the other side of the road, were a small
number of goldeneye.
The drakes are truly spectacular; glossy
black above and with dazzling white flanks and chests, they also
have a round white patch on each check and vivid yellow eyes. The
sunshine and the presence of the females had clearly excited them
and they were engaged in their courtship display which involves
snapping back their heads right onto their backs, bills pointing
skywards and white chest puffed up, then jerking forward again.
One drake would start and soon all had joined
in while the drabber females continued swimming and diving, apparently
unimpressed.
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