Still Husavik

Millybrown
Mark Hillmann
Tue 1 Jul 2008 00:00
 
 I had meant to go out on this schooner
 but was a bit late and I could not summon the energy to rush.
 Why not?  Well, difficult to see, but there are probably 60 people on board
 and they motored out of the harbour and then motored
 straight into the wind until I lost sight of them. 
 
 In the morning a couple, who had got very wet, only saw one fin. 
 They seemed happy, but we saw more round Scotland. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I walked out along the breakwater and got this shot of the town.
 
 
I then set off up the hill and got to the shoulder below the radio masts, about 1,000ft up.
Can you see the blue lupins covering most of the hillside?  Very wet they were as well. 
The rest of the grass, flowers and bushes were no problem but the lupins soaked me to above the knees.
 
 
 There were three different bird species conspicuously present,
 with the golden plovers (in northern plumage) doing serious patrolling.
 
 There were two more out of shot busy cheeping in their musical way.
 Higher every time I moved, lower again if I kept still. 
 Why it needed four of them to round me up I do not know.
 
 
 
 
 
 There were also black tailed godwits flying round and round chattering,
 could not even keep their beaks shut to be photographed. 
 I may have been disturbing them in the breeding season
 but they kept this going from right up on the shoulder back down into the town.
 
 
 
 
The other birds that did not come close to be photographed (with an ordinary little camera, not a big Nikon) were snipe. 
Now usually snipe fly past and I mutter "probably snipe" as they are too quickly gone to be identified as anything else.
 
In this case they were clearly enjoying themselves, doing short dives that produced a vibration,
I looked for a machine on the hillside the first couple of times, but then it clearly came from birds high above.
The book calls it drumming and says it usually happens at dusk. 
Drumming is a poor description, ululating seems closer, and there is no dusk up here.
They are right to call it a display flight because it certainly is.