I carried on towards Thornwick Pools, a site I hadn't visited before. It took a while to find, but it is a lovely, open and shallow wetland with a narrow belt of reeds and protected by an earth bund. There are two hides, the lower one had the best light. A pair of Little Ringed plovers were very excited in one of the low islands, doing parallel little races, hunched up, yaffling and making all sort of odd noises. In the hide I meet Andy Hood, from Flamborough Bird Observatory. After a good chat, it's lunch time and I descent onto Thornwick Bay, realising I've never beed there. There is a beach of rough pale and chalk boulders. The chalk makes a shallow platform, giving the water a beautiful turquoise colour. A perfect place for a picnic.
Raft of Guillemots, Razorbills, a Puffin and some Kittiwakes.
North Landing.
Razorbills.
The cleptoparasitic bee Melecta albifrons.
View from the cliff east of North Landing, with Bempton in the distance.
Holmes Gut.
Thornwick Pool.
Shelduck.
Singing Linnet.
Puffin.
Thornwick Bay.
Wall Brown Butterfly.
Singing Sedge Warbler.
Possibly Nomada fabriciana on daisy. A cleptoparasite of several mining bees.
Another view of Holmes Gut.
North Landing.
Thornwick's Bay.
2 comments:
Beautiful spot, one of my favourite places. We were there two weeks ago and I've just posted my blog if you are at all interested http://jill.tenfoottwo.co.uk/flamborough/. I just stumbled across yours and will certainly be keeping an eye on it, I'm from and still live in Hull so always happy for new ideas of places to visit. Thank you for sharing your adventures.
Thank you for your comment Jill, I've put a comment on your blog, I will be checking it too in future!
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