North of the Tyne
We were invited to give a talk on The Biggest Twitch to the North Tyne & Wear Bird Club last week to kick off their autumn season of indoor meetings. A good crowd turned up and seemed to enjoy the talk, and were kind enough to buy plenty of books afterwards.

Alan Tilmouth birding hard!
The next day Alan Tilmouth who’d arranged our visit to the north east took us out birding to some of his favourite birding locations. The majority of the day was spent on Holy Island or Lindisfarne as it is known. This is a magical place, only accessible at low tide, so time of arrival and departure is crucial. Get it wrong and you can lose your vehicle!
We took the still-wet causeway across to the island and then explored on foot around the Tower area and down quiet tracks behind the village. Alan knew all the sites where migrants may be lurking and we enjoyed a wonderful day pottering about the knooks and crannies of this beautiful, wild spot.

Snook Tower
With the backdrop of Lindisfarne Castle, huge skies and sunshine, it proved to be a brilliant day.

Lindisfarne Castle
Migrants were in evidence wherever there was cover and we discovered good numbers of Wheatears and Whinchats, a sprinkle of Spotted and Pied Flycatchers, good numbers of Redstarts including some beautiful males, a Lapland Bunting lurked in a weedy field, but it was a resident bird that perhaps proved the highlight of the day as a gorgeous Barn Owl floated silently past us at close range and away over the fields towards the castle. Magical.

Wheatear
With the tide rising rapidly, we made our way back to the car and just had time to scan the fast-disappearing mudflats, where we enjoyed many waders: 4 newly-arrived Brent Geese and a fine adult Mediterranean Gull. All too soon it was time to leave this enchanting place before we were trapped by the incoming tide – though we could think of worse places to be stuck!

Poles mark the short-cut to the mainland on foot, but you need to get your timing right!
A huge thank you to Alan and all the other north east birders that we met and who made us so welcome.