I was nonchalantly having a late breakfast around 8.20, after checking the moth trap, and contemplating the day ahead when my phone pinged! Fred had put the message out that Pete Brash had found a Woodchat Shrike along the canal towpath off Delph Lane, Daresbury! A quick look at Google maps confirmed it was only 20 minutes away and, for once, there were no delays on the M56. Next I phoned Fred to confirm where to park & told him I was on my way. I’d only been bemoaning to Steve that Cheshire was due another Woodchat Shrike as the last one was in 1998 - a juvenile caught & ringed on Hilbre. With birds recently in North Wales, Staffs and Bardsey the influx seemed to have past us by.
Arriving at the designated parking spot I met Pete just heading off and he informed me that Fred was still watching it a few hundred metres along the canal towpath. Result! Slightly breathless I arrived to find Fred & Malc waiting for me to arrive. Firing off a few record shots and using Fred’s ‘scope I relaxed and we chatted for a few minute before the bird got flushed by a Carrion Crow and disappeared. Luckily for the birder that had just arrived I wandered down the towpath and relocated it a few hundred metres further on.
It was great to catch up with Fred & Malc again and enjoy a Cheshire rarity & a Cheshire lifer with only the three of us watching and less than 18 miles from home! I was back home by 10.00 tidying my breakfast things away.
It was also nice to see an array of Southern Marsh Orchids along the canal towpath. The dry spring has meant many orchids have suffered but these were doing well.
Looking through the records this constitutes possibly the 6th record for Cheshire. T Hadley Bell, in his birds of Cheshire, says that there were a pair seen in Congleton on 2nd May 1908. These birds were mentioned by Coward in his Fauna of Cheshire and it appears he was happy with the description. Unusually for that period they weren’t ‘collected’.
Following that the next record was 22nd June until early July of a bird in Birkenhead in 1954 followed by a bird on Hilbre in 1958 that constitutes the 1st ratified record for Cheshire by the rarities committee.
Cheshire birders had to wait then until 1996 when a juvenile graced Frodsham between 4th-7th September followed relatively quickly by a juvenile trapped and ringed on Hilbre between 9th -11th September 1998. With the last twitchable Cheshire bird being nearly 27 years ago this bird was always going to be popular and a steady stream of grateful observers visited during the day.