Saturday, 21 May 2022

Estuary

When weather conditions are right, we are favoured with stunning tangerine sunsets up on the Fylde coast, facing due west as we do across the expanse of Irish Sea, roughly in the direction of that other Blackpool (you didn't know that Dublin - or Dubhlinn in Gaelic - also means black pool?) 135 miles away as the sandpiper flies, which is just far enough as to be over the curve of the horizon, meaning that, at its going down, the sun appears to dip shimmering into the waters in between.

We also have an  estuary  just to the north of Blackpool, where the Wyre flows into the Irish sea, and where from its banks one can watch the river at sunset become a flaming ribbon under those same tangerine skies, as little sandpipers pitch their evening cries.

estuary at sunset
I've posted pieces about the Wyre Estuary on a few previous occasions and so I don't plan to cover that estuarine ground again. Here's a link to the earliest, from almost eight years ago, when I was relatively new to both the North West and the blogging game: Saltmarsh Blues Blog 
 
Instead I want to say a few words about those afore-mentioned sandpipers, and to leave you with a new poem. My big book of birds instructs me that there are twenty different varieties of sandpiper inhabiting the shorelines of estuaries, lakes and seas worldwide. What they all have in common is long legs for wading at the water's edge and long bills for probing into mud or sand for food, both sets of features allowing them to keep their compact bodies from getting wet. They are part of a larger group of shoreline birds known as 'waders' for obvious reasons (which comprises oystercatchers, plovers, snipe, curlews, godwits, knots, redshanks, dotterels, dunlins, phalaropes, ruffs, turnstones and whimbrels). 

Of the twenty varieties of sandpiper, whose adjectival qualifications include buff-breasted, green, marsh, pectoral, purple, semi-palmated, sharp-tailed, solitary, spotted, white-rumped and wood, it is the unpretentiously named common sandpiper that inhabits our north-western shorelines, and fittingly so.

solitary sandpiper?
Designated actitis hypoleucos, from the ancient Greek aktites (meaning coast-dweller) plus hupo (beneath) and leukos (white), it should come as no surprise that what distinguishes the common sandpiper is the pure white breast  beneath its brownish-grey upper body. It's a relatively small bird, only about eight inches long, and it spends its days in gregarious flocks combing the tideline for insects, molluscs, crustacea or worms. As it walks, its hind parts and tail bob up and down much like a wagtail's do. When it takes to the air (often in a flock) it flies low over the water on stiff, bowed and rapidly beating wings, almost skidding across the surface. In summer, flocks of common sandpipers often put on flying displays. When it calls, it pipes with a shrill, twee series of four or five notes. All in all, a rather lovely little bird.

I'll leave you with the poem, the title of which makes them sound like a notable local family, don't you think? Fylde gentry. Hambleton is on the shore of the Wyre estuary. The emission of raw sewage into Britain's rivers has increased by 87.6% in the last year and a half. Water companies have "transgressed with impunity" on no fewer than 375,000 occasions over that period. How long can this go on without causing irreparable harm to wildlife?

The Sandpipers of Hambleton
One with the mottling dusk they pipe in the creeping tide
that cools their feet while washing out those hieroglyphs 

which told the story of their foraging. Almost unseen now
the ceremonious bobbing in time with that kittywiper call.

Do they have souls? They seem to rejoice in the returning
of the waves which bring tomorrow's feed. Or might it be

relief that salt tang and seawater will dilute the offence of
raw sewage leaked into their estuary? If they suffer from

emotional wounds, don't let the trauma dull their whistled
shrill incantations to a higher avian power (for God surely

is made in bird's image). As dark brings silence once more
to Hambleton's shore, I reflect it is a thin line we all tread. 

Thanks for reading, S ;-)

36 comments:

  1. Dublin means Blackpool - that I did not know. A lovely blog, Steve, and a poignant eco-poem.

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  2. That's beautiful.๐Ÿงก

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  3. Enjoyed your blog and the poem particularly the image of the footmarks as hieroglyphs (brill) washed away.

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  4. What a joy to read. Just the list of names of those wading birds was a delight in itself. I loved the poem with its mix of estuarine imagery, philosophical rumination and ecological message.

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  5. Not "orange skies" then, with nightingales! (Love - Da Capo).

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  6. You're right. You can't beat the Fylde coast for tangerine skies. ๐Ÿ‘

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  7. Looks like we're nor getting tangerine skies tonight - weather conditions not quite right. I've been told that slurry washing off from farmers' fields contributes to the pollution as well. Still, a lovely poem.

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  8. There is something quite powerful about seeing the sun 'sink into the sea'. I've enjoyed it on holidays. You're so lucky to have it on your doorstep every day. I enjoyed the blog and poem very much - and of course you know it's 135 miles from Blackpool to Dublin as the sandpiper flies!

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  9. I knew next to nothing about sandpipers before reding your blog. After a bit more research, it seems their numbers have declined by half in England since the millennium alone and they are now on the amber list of endangered species.
    If pollution continues unchecked there may not be many left soon :(

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  10. Loved the blog and poem Steve. Question: could a common sandpiper actually fly the 135 miles from Blackpool environs to Dublin? If so, they might just choose to up and migrate as I'm sure the Liffey estuary (under EU regs) will be a lot less polluted than any post-Brexit British estuary.

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  11. I loved this. ๐Ÿงก

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  12. Penny Lockhart27 May 2022 at 08:43

    Lucky you. We live on the other side of the country and once or twice have been at the coast early enough to see the sun rise out of the sea, but that's never as spectacular as a sunset. I loved the poem and the idea that sandpipers would think of God as a bird.

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  13. Bad water companies, great poetry.

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  14. Water companies flaunting the rules - one more legacy of the sh!t that is Brexit. I enjoyed your latest Steve, that's a killer opening line.๐Ÿ‘

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  15. Grant Trescothick30 May 2022 at 10:49

    Very good Steve.

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  16. A lovely read (Dublin is Blackpool - fascinating) with a sting in its tail. Polluters only get away with it because they can and they don't care. Lack of accountability coupled with lack of responsibility is a literal shitstorm. Your poem is a beautiful creation - well done.

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  17. I loved the blog, the pictures, the beautiful and pointed Sandpipers poem. ๐Ÿงก
    And I envy you your tangerine sunsets. As someone else commented, we east coast dwellers miss out!

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  18. A super blog and poem Steve.

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  19. You're so lucky to be living by the sea. Great pictures and a lovely poem.

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  20. Charlotte Mullins1 June 2022 at 09:11

    What a lovely and caring blog and a terrific sandpiper poem. Where does 'kittywiper' come from, out of interest?

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  21. Bella Jane Barclay3 June 2022 at 09:37

    Lovely estuarine lines in your sandpiper poem. And Dublin means Blackpool, amazing.

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  22. I loved this. Stunning images, beautiful writing, such a touching poem. ๐Ÿ‘

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  23. If the current trend continues the sandpipers may choose to move elsewhere. Since privatisation of water utilities by the Tories, over 70& of Britain's water industry is now foreign-owned and with the move to more deregulation since Brexit, controls over what they can get away with are slacker than they have ever been.

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  24. Fiona Mackenzie6 June 2022 at 20:10

    Love the tangerineness. You are so lucky to live by the sea. Love the sandpiper poem too.

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  25. By coincidence, there's a mass sewage alert all along the Fylde coast today from Fleetwood down to St Annes after untreated water from local water treatment plants was discharged into rivers and the sea to avoid the risk of it flooding across land after unusually heavy rainfall over the jubilee week-end. More crap for the sandpipers (and other wildlife) to cope with, not to mention bathers on our beaches. I wonder how often this happens.

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  26. Bridget Durkin8 June 2022 at 09:33

    Beautifully written. Wading birds get overlooked in my opinion. I loved the poem. ๐Ÿ‘

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  27. Katrina Ellison10 June 2022 at 08:26

    We used to enjoy summer holidays in Blackpool. I've not visited in a while. Thanks for the beautifully written blog and stunning pictures. Also the lovely poem.

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  28. Fascinating facts and photos, and a terrific poem. Excellent Steve.

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  29. Valerie Marchant11 June 2022 at 09:43

    I love your sandpipers poem. ๐Ÿงก

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  30. Martin Brewster11 June 2022 at 11:13

    Sewage apart (and that is scandalous behaviour by the water companies), your blog made me yearn to visit the seaside again. We've not done so since Covid. I think your poem is fabulous and I love the picture of the sandpiper too. ๐Ÿ‘

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  31. Lesley Harrison12 June 2022 at 10:22

    A lovely blog and what a beautiful and poignant poem. (I loved the idea that sandpipers would think of God as a bird.)

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  32. I finally tracked down your blog! I heard you read the sandpiper poem at a poetry event last week and thought it was wonderful. Equally so, your blog. Great writing, lovely illustrations.

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  33. A lovely blog and a fitting testament to a wonderful part of the country. I was shocked to hear about the level of pollution that's happening these days. Good luck to your sandpipers.

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  34. Barb Winehouse5 July 2022 at 09:42

    Godwits, turnstones, whimbrels - what lovely names wading birds have. I really enjoyed the blog and your beautiful and poignant sandpipers poem.

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  35. Do the water companies donate to the Tory party?

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  36. Martin, according to historical research, nearly a dozen companies in the UK's much-criticised privatised water industry have links with businesses contributing to Tory party coffers. Now there's a surprise!!! ๐Ÿ˜Ž

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