Rothiemurchus sateyd in the Borders until 16th, after roosting overnight at Bowhill. At midday on 16th he was tracking the Peebles road towards Penicuik and an hour later was flying over the Forth just east of the Rail Bridge at 80km/hr and at 839 metres altitude. At 2pm he was near Uchtermuckty and an hour later south of Dunkeld. The next signal (miserable overcast weather is preventing full charges of the battery) was at 9am on 17th May when he was near Braemar in Aberdeenshire. At 1pm he was near an old established osprey nest further north near the River Don and then at 3pm he was by the junction of the Braemar road east of Corgarff. The next signal on 18th May showed him back in the Borders near Yarrow at 4pm and by the River Ettrick at 5pm. Very interesting movements.
To The Borders ospreys
After a few days south of Carlisle, he roosted last night to the east of the town and today flew north to the Scottish Borders osprey nesting areas. He was at Innerleithen at 10am, at Stobo an hour later and aound 4pm near Selkirk. So he clearly having a good look around at the nests.
Sponsorship for new transmitters urgently needed
I am hoping to sat tag four new ospreys in the Highlands this year – at least one of the tags is already funded but I am appealing for help with funding. The GPS satellite tags are now costing just over £3000 each and the annual download costs are about £700. Full sponsorship of either amount would be acknowledged on the individual bird’s webpage. If you can help please send cheques, made out to Highland Foundation for Wildlife, to me at Middle Lodge, Dunphail, Forres, Moray IV36 2QQ or email me to discuss a donation and for details of our bank transfer details. Many thanks. Roy
Lake District
Rothiemurchus was perched beside Derwentwater north of the Low Brandelhow ferry pier in the Lake District at 7am and 8am, almost certainly after fishing. He then flew north and between 9am and 10am flew over the Bassenthwaite Osprey Site before heading north to his last year’s haunts south of Carlisle. I wonder if he will settle in Cumbria or whether the pull of the Highlands will take him north? Three days until the next downloads.
This is a fascinating bird to track home – he is old enough to breed at three years of age but he left it rather late to leave Africa. The very poor weather for migration from Spain to the UK also delayed him. There’s just time to breed if he quickly found an unattached female with a nest! His summer of wandering last year will have taught him the locations of many of the possible nests.
North to The Lakes
Rothiemurchus set off early and at 7am was flying N at Wellington; he was over No Man’s Heath an hour later and then at 1pm was just NW of Bolton. Passing Blackburn, he flew over Wolfhole Crag heading NW for the Lakes. At 7pm he was at Skelwith Bridge and then flew over the high hills at Ullscarf before roosting over night at south end of Derwentwater. 239 km today.
Through Wales to Birmingham area
He crossed the Bristol Channel to Nash Point in early Morning and at 8am was near Bridgend. He then flew NNE over the Welsh Valleys and at 10am was near Aberdare. At 3pm he was perched by the river near Hay-on-Wye and then flew slowly east and then north up past the Clee Hills in generally poor weather. At 8pm he was fishing near a small lake and then roosted in nearby woods just SW of Broseley, NW of Birmingham. Day flight of 190 km.
All new incubation behaviour
Red 8T hunting for his mate and fishing in waters within a range of 16 square km, including Rothiemurchus fishery at Aviemore
Arrived England
Rothiemurchus reached Devon at 10am this morning.
On 6th/7th May he roosted east of Rochefort and then next day flew over 300 kms to the north coast of France. He roosted overnight east of the St Malo estuary, but on 8th May poor weather prevented a Channel crossing and he flew 100 kms west to the north Brittany peninsula and roosetd over night near Begard. This morning he was near the Brittany coast at 0607GMT and the next contact at 10.26am our time was just NW of Salcombe in South Devon; he had completed the crossing of 100 miles in 3 hours with a tail wind of 20mph, but but weather with rain showers. Full GPS details not yet in. He should fly north rapidly and where will he go.
He was in mid Channel at 0800GMT and came ashore at Prawle Point in Devon at 10am. He continued north and then NE to be south of Toverton at 4pm and came to roost in a wooded hill, Periton Hill just south of Minehead. A day’s flight of 295 km.
Finally reached France
Rothiemurchus was still on the north Galician coast on 3rd May in the same big estuary. The transmitter switched to once every three days and today 6th May the first transmissions are coming in and last night he was roosting close to Arcachon Bay on the French Atlantic coast south of Bordeaux. When the full data comes in it will probably show he flew along the north coast of Spain rather than cut over the Bay of Biscay – but we will see.
Waiting in NW Spain
On 28th, he was near As Ponte de Garcia Rodriguez where he has been in previous years, and on 29th and 30th was in the estuary at Ortigueira. Waiting to head north over the Bay of Biscay, but the weather in Spain and France continues to be poor for migration, with cloudy wet conditions