The fish catching birds of the
beautiful north coast
IF you miss out the East coast for a week or two, you
are invariably drawn to the North coast, to sample the people, the air,
and the wildlife. And it has to be said, that one is never disappointed.
Cormorants were fishing, and they were also standing on
rocks with their wings outstretched, looking for all the world like some
prehistoric creature.
Healthy appetites these birds have, voracious comes to
mind, even greedy, for they can consume more than their own weight in
fish very day.
Try that, food-conscious reader, and see how you . end
up.
The cormorant is a strong under-water swimmer. It puts
its wings alongside its body, and drives forward with powerful movements
of its large webbed feet. Pity the fish that comes within its ken.
It quite happily catches flat-fish, its favourite, but
will eat wrasse, sand-eels, and will stoop to crabs. As the cormorant
visits, indeed lives on, fresh water, it also eats fresh water fish.
Cormorants are large fishing birds, generally dark in
colour, and with a quite distinctive shape. The birds on the north coast
mostly had their summer white face patch.
They could be expected to start breeding next month, so
the patch colour change seems to be a necessary prelude to breeding. As
for eating loads of fish, that is part of their nature.
Then there were wigeon off the North coast. They were
probably winter visitors from north-east Europe and Iceland, here for
the holidays.
A few will stay on in Ireland to breed, in Scotland
there would be a much more healthy breeding population.
The wigeon always build their nests on the ground, with
several ladies having their nests in close proximity. The gentlemen
stand guard over the ladies and nests during incubation.
The male of the species is quite eye-catching. He is
largely grey, with a red-brown head, with a buff forehead mark.
Although duller, the female is distinctive, with a rich
brown plumage and a rounded head shape. Keep an eye open for the wigeon,
it can be seen for another while off the coast and also on inland
waters. By May they will be mostly breeding much further north.
The oyster catchers were about in numbers, of course,
and besides, they_ are one of our more noticeable birds.
