|
Return to Top
Return
to Top |
 |
| Osprey
over Oxenhope (2010) by David Barker |
Uncommon,
but regular passage visitor |
1990 |
A
bird flew up the Washburn Valley past Lindley Wood Reservoir
on 19th April. |
1991 |
A
bird flew in from the south-east at Chelker Reservoir on 14th
May only to leave northwards almost immediately, mobbed by Carrion
Crows. |
1993 |
Our best ever year with five records. April 4th
recorded two records over Stockbridge Reserve and flying low over
Swinsty Reservoir. The next record was in mid-summer; a bird flying
up the Wharfedale Valley on 17th July. This was followed by a single
over Ilkley Moor on 28th August. The final record, at Paul Clough
on 4th October, was of an immature which, after flying low over
the moors, landed on a transmitter mast for a short time before
continuing south. |
1994 |
An
excellent passage for the second year in succession with ten
records received involving five different birds. Presumably this
area is benefiting from the breeding success and spread of this
species in Scotland. The first, an immature/first-year, was seen
north-west at pylon height over Stockbridge Nature Reserve on
23rd April. The finder rushed to the telephone to alert the Group’s
Recorder, two miles away at Silsden, who was then able to add
one further species to his garden list. The second record involved
a bird flying north-west over Thornton Moor Reservoir on 1st
May. Next was a single west over Weecher Reservoir on 17th May
resulting in a further telephone call to Silsden. Amazingly 20
minutes later the bird was viewed from the afore-mentioned garden.
Autumn passage involved one south-west at Thornton Moor Reservoir
on 1st September and one, on 17th October, south over Elland
Gravel Pits. |
1995 |
A
memorable year, thanks in part to the drought and hence the low
water-levels which concentrated fish in relatively small areas
of water. The first was a bird flying south-east low over Kex
Gill on 14th September. On the following day one was perched
out at Timble. Between 16th and 18th September two, possibly
three, birds were observed at Swinsty, Fewston and Lindley Wood
Reservoirs. These gave Group members some of the most exciting
birdwatching the area has seen. The birds provided some very
close views as they fished with considerable success. Fish, some
so large that they were dropped, were usually carried off to
nearby Timble Plantation, where the birds ate their prey and
roosted for the night. The birds were thought to be juveniles
but conflicting literature made ageing difficult. |
1996 |
This year has seen an increase in the number of
recorded sightings of this species; records were received for 15
separate dates, which probably involved up to eleven different
birds.
The first record of the year was of a bird that flew in at Lindley
Wood Reservoir on the afternoon of 13th April; what was presumed
to be the same bird was seen hunting the following day, with one
observer being lucky enough to watch it plunge and successfully
catch a fish. The next record was of a bird seen flying north in
Wharfedale on 19th April; this was followed by a bird which stayed
in the Wharfedale area from 4th to 12th May, giving excellent views
to many observers, and even seen catching fish from the river.
A bird was seen leaving its overnight roost at Timble Ings on
the morning of 6th May, and a further sighting came from the same
location on the evening of 21st May. A bird was seen flying down
the Aire Valley from Crosshills on 20th June.
Autumn
records began with a bird which passed low over Thornton Moor
Reservoir as it headed south on 23rd August. Another bird gave
excellent views at Wharfedale on 1st September, followed by one
seen at Lindley Wood Reservoir on 4th September. Wharfedale again
featured on 8th September, with an individual described as ‘a
very dark bird’, finally, one was seen carrying fish at Timble
on 9th September. |
1997 |
This species has been reported more often since
1993, presumably because the Scottish population continues to increase.
This was another very good year (only last year has bettered it),
with a total of ten records involving at least six different birds.
The
first record was of a bird seen flying up the Wharfe Valley on
30th March – the earliest date for an Osprey sighting
so far. A Common Buzzard rose to intercept the Osprey but the latter
paid little attention. On 3rd April, a bird passing up the Aire
Valley overflew an observer’s garden at Silsden. This was
followed on 11th April by a bird which flew north-west up Airedale
over Farnhill and Low Bradley moors, its progress hampered by mobbing
Mallard, Eurasian Curlew and Carrion Crow. A fourth bird was reported
over Masrtons Nature Reserve, Airedale on 10th May, while the last
record of the spring was of a bird which flew east-south-east near
Graincliffe on 27th May.
The
first returning bird was reported from Barden Scale, where one
flew east on the evening of 25th August. The next sighting was
also from Barden Scale, on 30th August when a bird flew over
during the late morning. On 4th September a bird carrying a fish
was seen flying near Kex Gill Quarry, and one flew east over
Timble Ings Plantation (again carrying a fish) just two days
later. Finally, a bird was seen flying up the valley at Swinsty
Reservoir on 10th September. The latter three locations are all
close togther in the Washburn Valley, and this would almost certainly
indicate that the same bird was involved in each case; it is
also a distant possibility that all the autumn records related
to just one wandering individual. Moreover, although spring migrants
mostly pass straight through the Group’s recording area,
autumn movement is a more leisurely affair with birds tending
to linger, particularly if the fishing is good. |
1998 |
A creditable 1998 total of seven birds engendered
far more individual records (24 in all) than have ever been received
before, courtesy of two lingering autumn individuals.
The first record was of a bird reported flying up Wharfedale past
the Barden Scale watch-point on 27th March, the earliest date yet
for the species. The next record was of a bird being mobbed by
two Lesser Black-backed Gulls as it flew north over Skipton Moor
on 31st March. Another bird was seen flying up the Shibden Valley
on 12th April, and the last record of the spring was of a bird
flying up Airedale on 27th May, viewed from a house at Silsden.
An
adult bird in active wing-moult which was found at Timble Ings
Plantation on 2nd September continued to frequent the area, roosting
in the plantation, until at least 13th September. During its
stay, the bird fished the nearby Fewston and Swinsty Reservoirs,
usually bringing its catch to the plantation to eat; it was also
seen at the ponds at Kex Gill/Blubberhouses Quarry on three occasions.
Overlapping with this bird was a juvenile that was present at
Swinsty Reservoir from at least 8th September until 14th September,
it was not aged until 10th September, but it must have been one
of the two birds which had been reported from the Swinsty/Fewston
Reservoir area on 8th September. Single birds seen at Swinsty
Reservoir on 6th and 8th September could have been either of
those birds, but were likely to have been the juvenile, verbal
reports suggest that the latter probably arrived about the same
time as the adult or just afterwards. A single bird was seen
standing in the silt-pond at Kex Gill Quarry on 14th September.
The year’s final record
concerns a bird seen near Dob Park Bridge on 3rd October, as it
flew up the Washburn Valley carrying a fish. |
1999 |
This
was an excellent year, with nine singles recorded. Osprey passage
has become one of the highlights of the passage periods of late,
and sighting of the species is almost guaranteed if enough hours
are put in at the right time of the year in the right place.
With Scotland’s population now bulging at the
seams, it is surely only a matter of time before breeding takes
place in England.
The
year’s
first bird was seen from the Barden Scale watchpoint in Wharfedale
on 6th April while another was reported from Fewston Reservoir
in the Washburn valley on 28th April. The remaining spring record
concerned a bird flying northwards high over Lower Barden Reservoir
and Barden Moor on 8th May.
Autumn
passage was more fruitful still, beginning with a bird seen fishing
Chelker Reservoir on 20th August. The next bird was seen flying
westwards at Barden Scale on 30th August, and the same site produced
another on 29th September, the latter bird being mobbed by a
Peregrine. Nearby Lower Barden Reserrvoir also scored with a
bird on 5th October, and one flew east over the observer’s
house on Bradford Road, Shipley, on 14th October. Finally, a bird
was reported flying south-west at Thornton Moor Reservoir on 16th
October. The three October records equalled the previous totals
for that month since the Group’s records began in 1987. |
2000 |
Previous
years’ Group reports have highlighted
the dramatic increase in sightings in the last 13 years. A level
of records such as that for 2000 (22 records, submitted by 14 observers),
is therefore almost to be expected. As some birds apparently lingered
in the area, an exact assessment of the number is difficult. It
is considered, however, that a minimum of ten birds was involved.
With the exception of two birds seen together on 12th June, all
the records were of single birds. Fishing was seen to take place
on four occasions, and birds often provided close views.
As
with the other large raptors, nearly all the records come from
the north of the Group’s
recording area, with Barden again to the forefront. Birds were
recorded in every month from March to October with the exception
of May, with, most unusually, the majority of records coming
from June and August, this perhaps indicating the presence of
summering birds. The first and last sightings were on fairly
typical dates: 26th March at Burley and 22nd October at Thornton
Moor Reservoir. |
2001 |
Whilst the number of records submitted was down
on the previous year, the number of individual birds, probably
13 in all, represented the best year on record.
Passage commenced in some style on the 28th March when, in the
course of an hour, three different birds moved up the Washburn
Valley at Blubberhouses. One of these birds appeared to be fitted
with a radio transmitter. These were shortly followed by individuals
in April at Stockbridge Nature Reserve on 1st, and Barden Scale
on 3rd and 27th, and two birds were seen over Beamsley Moor on
7th.
In summer birds carrying fish were seen at Kex Gill on 16th July,
and 11th August at Barden Scale, though there was no suggestion
of summering in the area.
Autumn records comprised a bird at Barden Scale on 3rd September,
and singles in October, on 4th at Queensbury and on 7th at Burley,
proving that birds can be seen away from the well-watched locations
in Upper Wharfedale and the Washburn Valley. |
2002 |
Whilst a far cry from the meagre returns of 10
years ago, 15 records and about 12 different birds can now be decribed
as average.
The first returning bird was seen at Barden on 31st March, followed
in April by one over Timble Ings on 7th, and another over Thornton
Moor Reservoir on 14th. Other spring records consisted of individuals
seen in May over Luddenden Dean on 2nd, at Barden on 3rd and 5th,
another at Addingham on the latter date, and one over Silsden Reservoir
on 15th.
Autumn
passage commenced with one fishing at Chelker Reservoir on 4th
July, followed by singles at Barden on 19th and 24th August.
September birds were at Thruscross Reservoir on 7th, over Leeshaw
on 14th, with the year’s final record, a bird at Hoodstorth
on 30th. |
2003 |
A slightly disappointing year with 10 records received,
all of single birds. On 18th April birds were noted at both Lindley
Wood Reservoir and Barden with further records from Barden on 9th
May and 1st June. Elsewhere one flew over Lippersley Pike, Timble
Ings on 7th May and one flew over Oxenhope on 13th May.
Autumn
records came from Lindley Wood Reservoir 23rd August, Otley Gravel
Pits on 26th August and Barden on 6th and 20th September. |
2004 |
The
Barden watchpoint provided records of single birds on 6th and
12th April, 5th May and 9th June. The only record
away from this area concerned a single bird near Timble Ings
on 5th September. Given the increase in the Scottish population,
the fact that this species is now breeding in northern England
and the trends in recent years, this selection of records is
very disappointing. |
2005 |
After a poor year in 2004, this bird came back
to form, with a good series of records, although many of them came
from the watch-point at Barden Scale, and might have involved a
limited number of birds in all.
The
first returning bird was at Barden on 6th April, from where there
were three more April records of up to three different birds.
In the south of the area a bird over Oxenhope on 13th April might
have accounted for the further reports at Leeshaw Reservoir on
15th and 21st.
The
Barden area had all the May records. There were nine reports,
beginning with at least two birds on 9th, and between 15th and
20th there were further sightings of up to two birds, including
several on consecutive days. From the pattern of observations,
seven birds could have been involved.
With
one exception, Barden again monopolised the June records. There
were ten reports, beginning on 4th June, but, particularly towards
the end of the month, it was thought it was the same bird, or
perhaps two. Away from here, a bird was seen from Thornton
Moor Reservoir as it flew north-west over Leeming on 20th June.
July had only one record, again at Barden, on the last day of
the month.
In the following month, the first two days had records of the
bird seen on 31st July, and a different one on 21st (AGG et al).
The last two sightings of the year were in the south. On 30th August,
a bird stopped off and bathed at Thornton Moor Reservoir, before
leaving southwards (BV), and finally, a departing bird passed over
Oxenhope on 20th September, just over five months after an early
arrival had been noted there by the same observer. |
2006 |
Such are the expectations of seeing Ospreys in
the area these days that the 2006 tally of at least 13 birds might
be viewed as disappointing. Allowing for some duplicated reports,
there were 18 records, about half of which came from the Barden
Scale watchpoint.
The
year’s first sighting came from the south of the region,
however, when a bird passed Warley Moor Reservoir on 25th March.
Barden’s first record was on 7th April, and there were
then reports of single birds on a further five days during the
month, until the 26th. The pattern of sightings
indicates a minimum of two birds were involved, but, given the
tendency in recent years for birds to linger in the vicinity, there
might not have been more than this. Further records from here,
on 16th May, 25th August and 1st and 15th September, will have
been different birds.
The
southern sector had all but two of the remaining records, the
exceptions being a single at Timble Ings on 28th May, and another
which was seen to catch a fish at Lindley Wood Reservoir on 5th
September. This second date was clearly one of some movement,
as two birds were seen at Ogden Reservoir, and what was presumably
one of them was also noted from Soil Hill and Thornton Moor Reservoir,
which location had also produced a bird several weeks earlier,
on 14th July. The year’s final record was of a bird
perched in a pine tree at nearby Lower Laithe Reservoir on 17th
September. |
2007 |
With
eleven records, this was one of the quietest years for Osprey
since the species started to be reported with some regularity
in the late 1990’s.
A
bird moving west over Oxenhope on 25th March was the first
of four to be seen here, the others comprising one north over the
nearby moor on 6th April, and two, again over the
village, on 3rd August. One
flew north over Lindley Wood Reservoir on 16th April.
Other
April reports concerned a bird flying up the Aire Valley at Riddlesden
on the 10th, and on the same day one was near Barden Bridge.
Barden’s remaining records, all from
the watchpoint, were singles on 19th May, 17th August,
and possibly the same bird four days later .
The
year’s
final bird, at Chelker Reservoir on 3rd October, might have been
the one seen two days previously at nearby Draughton Heights. |
2008 |
A
good year, particularly at Barden Scale, where there were four
birds in late March and early April, and 10 records in August and
September, probably involving at least seven different birds (AGG,BV
et al). In the south of the area, individuals were seen in April
at Harden and Thornton Moor Reservoir, one overflew
Leeshaw in June, and there was another at Dean Head in September. |
| 2009 |
Barden Scale had most sightings, with two birds
in March and April, three reports of a single bird in July, and
one in August.
Other singles, were seen at St. Ives in March, Chelker in
April and Oxenhope in May, and in August at Embsay,
Snaygill, Fewston and Timble, whilst two birds passed Thornton
Moor in September. |
2010 |
A
good year, with 20 sightings, but an indeterminate number of
birds. The first returning bird was seen at Barden Scale on 17th
March, comfortably the Group’s earliest ever. This watchpoint
then dominated the remaining records, with further observations
in April on the 2nd and 7th and 17th. There
were more records of single birds here on six dates between 13th
and 27th May, 14th and 15th June, and 18th and 19th August .
Away
from here, an early bird was seen from Addingham Moorside on
23rd March, one was over Oxenhope on 30th May and Otley Wetland
on 30th July, and consecutive days in September produced
singles at Chellow Dean on 13th, Thornton Moor on the 14th,
and over Keighley the day after. |
Return
to Top
|
|