Things then slipped back into the midsummer doldrums for a couple of days, until a call at around a quarter to nine on Thursday morning from twitching's foul-mouthed bad boy Dan Pointon alerted me to a River Warbler singing the previous evening in the unusual yet magnificent location of Applecross, Highland. Realising that this was only 11.5 hours from home, and seeing as I had 24 to play with before I was due on shift for BirdGuides the following morning, I figured that if the bird played ball then it would be doable. So, off I set, picking up DP at 11:45. We made good progress, passing Glasgow by 15:00. Anyone who knows the road from Glasgow up to Kyle of Lochalsh will agree that the scenery is stunning, and I left Pointon to do the photography whilst I tried to concentrate on the road:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiTS4oTFJogCedpQGlp-ydDsvC5nmzT75mdzvkWZCVtHm5PfQQkx04LfOjJNlYcM7CdDIar5v0f27sLJ4-kw_zP73KvPjbOvxe4jVoagA9hs0YZhOCY2nsMxcaNGYE8vxKPPgpIOzlQUE2u/s280/scotland1.jpg)
We finally reached the bird by around 19:30. The River Warbler was giving short bursts of song from thick gorse until it was provoked by a wandering Whitethroat; it reacted in such a way that it sat right up on top of the bush and proceeded to sing constantly for the next fifteen minutes. I was fortunate to get a couple of decent shots before it moved to its favoured perch in a nearby sycamore:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjsei-np2juKqKeJJlZx1t2ybXFiEDq_HUXLXpxJJHhfeD9o5fsG4yf60LSOPDFaKqsvR7MO1GR6NAalDqhiOeFCCk5arD5dihafVv1gIPosut48Mn5Oy_OJzRXZs9ca6AvSZ_VESB9Imkf/s280/RiverWarb_2_7_09_1.jpg)
River Warbler, Applecross, 2nd July
Somehow, I managed to drive back to Glasgow, and Pointon took over for 150 miles or so. Remarkably, I was back home in Langtoft for 06:30, a full 90 minutes before my BirdGuides shift began - nicely timed...
And so the third chapter of the week involves a Caspian Tern, which graced Welney WWT's Buxton Scrape on the morning of Saturday 2nd. Waking up late, I was greeted with messages concerning the bird's presence, and so I stumbled out of bed and in to my car, and was down at Welney by 13:00. Sure enough, the bird was still present (and asleep), ending a run of dips I've had with the species. Judging by the incomplete hood and 'mucky' cheekys, as well as immature-type primaries and coverts, it seems this bird is presumably a 2nd-summer. After it got it's conk out for me, I left. And that was about it:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUxGQsUMN6zEx7ig-g4tV7jIz_sKN2VaiX0T2_kC4fe-mtN6OMeRBzla24hbG454QIc5W4nvcBEHGuRgKUuj0ov0FYibU3mXQ46KNsli650Dj-z1xLsDOkp9SsaiVaBW2xPh-h2bwP7ncR/s280/Caspian_4_7_09_1.jpg)
not-so-Royal Tern, Welney, 4th July
A busy week then - but when's the Royal going to be back to shaft all us dippers again?
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