This season there aren't many Starling Mururations close to home in the East Riding, but there is a spectacular one in the Lower Derwent Valley. It has been present since before Christmas, and has been building in size during the intervening period. My thanks to a Thursday morning stalwart who first drew this murmuration to my attention. The setting may be the most picturesque of all East Yorkshire murmurations in the past decade. The best vantage point is to view from either the hide or car park at the North Duffield reserve and face north. You may view the performing Starlings against the huge skies above the rather flat Lower Derwent Valley. One local birder with apparently a lot of time on his hands has meticulous counted the Starlings on his photos, and has estimated that there are approximately 300,000 individual Starlings involved in these breathtaking displays. If you want to see it, then the best time to visit is on a still evening with hopefully a fine sunset. The following photos were taken on two evenings within the past week. The drama was beginning at around 5.15 last week, but the spectacle will occur progressively later. Please note Starlings will be returning to their breeding grounds before too long, so if you want to see it at its peak, don't hang around.
All photos (c) 2020 Jane Robinson
"Finger Over Trees"
Head with a large bulbous nose?
"Mushroom"
"Bee Swarm"
A Skein of Geese Flies Through
Peeling Off
A Speckled Band
Filling the Sky
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