Saturday, 9 May 2026

Holderness: Weeton, Skeffling and Kilnsea

I had to change plans today, as the bus I was taking to a botanical meeting was cancelled and the following one meant an hour wait and being late. A couple of people were waiting for the Spurn Explorer a couple of bays down mine and I thought, why not? I'll catch the bus to Spurn and on the way, I'll plan a walk for the Holderness series. One of my already planned walks involved Weeton, Skeffling and Out Newton, but when I alighted at Weeton I realised I had accidentally left my bottle of water home. The closest watering hole was the Spurn Discovery centre, so, although I still need to do Out Newton, the walk was very pleasant, helped by the very light northerly wind, sunny sky and a high tide pushing waders to the bank. Weeton is a hamlet on the B1445, with Weeton Beck running by Humber Side Lane, the route I take. The  managed realignment of The Outstrays means that it is just a short walk to the estuary now. The Outstrays is is a brand new nature reserve creating habitat to compensate for losses due to industry on the south bank of the Humber. Overall 275 ha. of new habitat has been created, mostly saltmarsh and mudflats, but also freshwater pools and drains and the old bank sheltering the area, should also offer quiet spits for resting or breeding. It took several years to build a new floodbank back towards the village, and landscaping took place, using the soil to create the new bank. The old bank was then breached. The new coastal footpath uses the new bank or the base of it to reduce disturbance in the most sensitive areas. New interpretation boards and screens have been installed and wildlife has been quick to move in. I sat on one of the viewing screens and watched as Brent Geese, Shelduck and Curlew fed or slept. A group of gulls loafed on one of the mud banks. The views across the site and over to the Humber were fantastic from the hide.

The only Swift of the day was over Spring Bank on my way to the station.
Small Copper near Weeton.
Interpretation board with a map of the new nature reserve.
Shelduck.
A flush near the new bank.
One of two hares chasing on the new habitat.
Skylark.
Sleeping Shelduck.
Meadow Pipit.
Whimbrel. One of many on the day.
Sedge Warbler.

Sedge Warblers, Whitethroats, Skylarks and Reed Buntings provide the soundtrack to the walk, with the occasional piping of a Whimbrel. Where the new bank meets new I take Long Lane, as the coastal path detours around a new pumping station. I am pleasantly surprised to see a Yellow Wagtail calling from wires over a wheat field. I take a left at Church Road towards Skeffling. I eat a couple of oranges and cherry tomatoes on a rickety bench at the churchyard, St Helen's, that's all the watery food I have until the Spurn Discovery centre. After a walk around the village, where I add House Martins and Song Thrush to the day's bird list, I turn back, as I plan to walk along the Humber Bank.

St Helen Church Skeffling.

A Goldfinch collects spider web for nesting.
The only settled Orange Tips of the day were this mating pair, who fended off two males who passed by. 
Yellow Wagtail.
Painted Ladies are in full migration and given their numbers this may turn up to be a good year for them.

As I climb the bank by the old pumping station, I spot the remains of a Sperm Whale, one of five young males who stranded along the Yorkshire and Lincolnshire coasts and ended up beached on the Humber in March 2024. The skeleton is emerging under the rotted blubber and skin. It has no teeth. I walk around it. Depending on the breeze, it smells a bit. Scattered some bony vertebral growth plates indicating it was a young individual.

Sperm Whale remains. On the right the enormous mass atop the head, containing the spermaceti, on the left, the two bones of the mandible showing the teeth sockets, with holes where teeth were.

Buzzard near Sammy's Point.
Looking back.
Oystercatcher.
Rabbit at Sammy's Point.
Male Wheatear at Sammy's.

Brent Geese flyover.
One of a pair of Grey Partridges.

One of many Whimbrel today.

Ringed Plover.

I walk fast on the bank and make my way to the Discovery centre cafe, where I gulp two glasses of water with my coffee and lunch. After a walk along Beacon Lane and popping into Canal Scrape, I take the 16:25 bus back to Hull. What a surprising day, I'm glad they cancelled the bus!

Old advert for ice cream and a 'seagull' warning on a derelict Sandy Beaches building, probably the old cafe. No ice-creams or gulls to be seen now,
A Linnet at Sandy Beaches.

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Holderness: Ottringham, Sunk Island and Stone Creek

I take the bus to Ottringham, where I start of the walk. The walk is on very flat, exposed terrain so a bright day with little wind seemed ideal for it. Ottringham I didn't mind repeat visiting and the wide open never ending fields and straight roads paid off with some nice migrants. Swallows are back at Ottringham too. Soon after leaving the village a Buzzard was soaring, then a few minutes later it flew over carrying a vole. I visited Sunk Island and Stone Creek in 2018, during my walking the Humber series, where I wrote about the strange history of the island and its name. It is a massive area, reclaimed from the Humber and therefore very flat with the land virtually all devoted to intensive arable. In a field where wheat is starting to grow, three Lapwing are dispersed, one of them looking like it's making a scrape. Two Shelduck and a Little Egret flies over. The road is lined with trees, which add some shade and interest. I cross the North Channel and the Sunk Island drain and I am now on the island.

Herring Gulls at Ottringham Church.
Swallow at Ottringham
Buzzard with Field Vole prey.
Lapwing making a scrape?
Looking west along Marsh Drain from Ottringham Drain.
The North Channel.
We are now in Sunk Island.

Shortly after 'crossing' onto the island I spot a bird on a glowing rapeseed field, a Whinchat! On the same field there is a Reed Bunting. I plough along the straight road, not even trees or hedges along it. Sunk Island village is made up of a church and a school at a crossroads, with farms spread across the island. Although Stone Creek is just a boating compound on an inlet at one end of Sunk Island, I decide it adds to the interest of the walk, as I will have lunch by the Humber.  I popped into the Churchyard and record some plants and bees. The Rookery is noisy and Jackdaws fly overhead. I turn right at the crossroads and head towards Stone Creek. Yellowhammers call 'zit' from the hedges. A female and then a male Marsh Harriers quarted over the fields. As I get to Stone Creek, on the coastguard cottages I spot a Tree Sparrow. Sadly, Iit's been a while in the Holderness series that I've seen one. I sit down on one of the compound ramps to a boat and watch the Teal, Redshank and Curlew feeding on the creek. A Grey Plover arrives, landing quite close to me. A Marsh Harrier, then a Kestrel flies along the saltmarsh. Before I leave, I scan the distant saltmarsh and mudflats for seals and I see three, quite distant and hard to photograph with the heat haze, most likely Common Seals. The highlights of the way back is a Wheatear and a Corn Bunting, both on the same field of the Lapwings, just by the garden centre. I am quite happy with today's migrants. I do some recording around the bus stop at Ottringham and I head back home, after a total of about 22 km walked.

Whinchat.
Reed Bunting.
Large Rapeseed field.
At a crossroads.
Holy Trinity Church at Sunk Island.
Marsh Harrier.
Male Marsh Harrier.
Male Marsh Harrier.
Tree Sparrow.
I surprised this female pheasant and she just crouched there, not moving.

Teal.
Curlew.
Grey Plover.
Redshank.
A very fuzzy photos of three common seals. Not helped by the heat haze over the saltmarsh.
Reed Bunting.
Little Egret.
Linnets
Yellowhammer.
Wheatear.
A surprise Corn Bunting on the edge of the Wheatear and Lapwing field.