Sunday, 13 November 2022

Antiques Roadshow!

I was in receipt of an e-mail yesterday. The message had an image attached which contained the most interesting record of a Stonechat I ever saw. 


The e-mail, record, and photograph is credited to Ian Mitchell, and is of a male Stonechat which he found at the rear of the house he had recently moved in to at Altham Road on the Westgate Estate, Morecambe 47 years ago in late September 1975.

The photograph was taken on an instamatic style camera when Westgate was in its infancy to becoming the huge housing estate it is today, hence the landscape where the picture was taken at the time, resembles a building site, and looks more akin to the habitat of a Black Redstart than that of a Stonechat.

From the first record in the LDBWS Annual Reports 1959, and for 38 years the Stonechat was recorded as 'no evidence of recent breeding' (1959) and 'no breeding records' (1997). Though the report does mention Morecambe twice, in 1963 'a male found dead in Morecambe during a cold winter spell' and in 1968 'breeds sporadically at one location in Morecambe'.

Historically the Stonechat in our area was scarce until 1999 when the species saw an upturn in status until the harsh winters of 2009/10/11, after which the records reverted near to pre 1999 numbers. For 12 years I comprehensively monitored the rise and fall of the Stonechat in Bowland. 

Ian Mitchell's record of this male at Westgate Morecambe in 1975, whilst out of the public domain, has been the best kept secret of a Stonechat in the LDBWS area for 47 years.         

4 comments:

  1. Pete - it was only after reading your blog of 9th October containing the Stonechat records that it jogged my memory that I had taken a picture of one in my back garden all those years ago in 1975. I certainly didn’t realise the significance of it.
    Glad you could make use of the picture and the record.

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  2. Certainly made use of the Morecambe Stonechat. Quite a record in every since of the word, and more than pleased it came to light in the end.

    Thanks again Ian, if the LDBWS haven't made note of this, they really should have.

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  3. This fascinating piece makes me wonder what other interesting records are out there and never come to light, Pete. Thank you for bringing this to our attention with your appended informationadding to the interest. Thanks due to Ian too!

    Best wishes - stay safe - - - Richard

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  4. Not just because this is a 47 years old record, in my book, because of the location, it is an amazing one Richard.

    Regards....Pete.

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