Starting at Hoylake where the reasonably high tide was covering most of the sand and mud in the Dee Estuary and the waders congregating closer to the shore-line. Here a small part of the flock moves toward higher ground. Almost all these are Dunlin and Knot.
Closer views of Dunlins flying by. Note the sides of their tails are white, the bellies are mainly white with the head shaded.
No ATC needed for this mixed flock.
Compare and contrast. A Knot on the left. This shows the longer, thinner and very slightly decurved bill of the Dunlin. Just to confuse things here are several different races of Dunlin that vary slightly in average size and length of bill.
A few other things seen. A Curlew flies by.
Also in the area were a few Shelduck. This is a female: the male has a large swelling at the base of his bill and a wider chestnut breast band.
An Oystercatcher tries to find space among its fellows. The foreground is likely to be mainly Dunlin.
The sandpipers cannot feed in their favoured rock-pools which are inundated at high tide. Time to catch up on sleep as they will feed happily in the dark when the tide recedes. A lone Purple Sandpiper is here with three sleeping Turnstones.
Lots of sleeping Turnstones....
...too distant for a great shot.
Not something I expected to find even on a sunny day in January – a Honey Bee Apis mellifera!
It was indeed a sunny day. Next stop West Kirby seen here across the Marine Lake.
It is amazing what turns up on the lake and seems relatively unfazed by the walkers (and, I was told, wind-surfers). Sadly the birds all decided to appear while I was looking in to the sun. Here are a pair of Goosander, the drake at the back.
A splendid drake.
Separation of the ducks is best done by looking at the neck. The fresh-water loving Goosander has, as here, a sharp divide between the upper and lower neck: on the merganser the brown fades away and she also has a more wispy hair-do. (The breast is all-red in the drake merganser as the name implies).