Day out: burton mere wetlands, cheshire/flintshire wings of the wirral

1 min read

Neil Coates journeys to the England-Wales border where one of the RSPB’s most active autumn reserves hums with honking geese, whistling starlings and ke-ke-ke-ing hen harriers

Photo: RSPB Images

Out with the old, in with the new. Autumn is a season of considerable flux at the superb coastal RSPB reserve of Burton Mere.

Tucked into the south-west corner of The Wirral peninsula, this liminal landscape beside – and in – the huge Dee Estuary thrums with seasonal activity. It’s among a string of reserves and locations in one of the UK’s best birdwatching areas, where summer’s departing visitors are replaced by fresh new feathers seeking climatic sanctuary.

DEE DELIGHTS

Between the woods and the water, lagoons, scrapes, reedbeds, marshes, pastures and copses all offer the potential for plentiful sightings during a restful visit. Accessible paths and boardwalks lead from the visitor centre straight to the action; several diversely located hides may reward with black-tailed godwits, snipe, lapwings, redshanks, elusive ruffs and many other wading birds.

October also sees the arrival of pink-footed geese. Over 20,000 fly in from far North Atlantic islands; their filigree skeins etch twilight skies as they return from foraging the Dee’s waterside larders. Elegant whooper swans migrate here from Iceland to escape the brutal winters there; their honking call is a defining sound of autumn’s arrival.

Little egrets, lining up like nodding donkeys to probe the shallows for elusive prey, appear ungainly in their tree-branch roosts, secure from predators. They’ve become well-established here over the past 20 years. More recently, great white and cat

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles