BBC Countryfile Magazine

WINGS OVER THE CITY

Wings over the city

- Sorrel Lyall is a young birder and wildlife artist studying ecology at the University of Edinburgh.

Edinburgh, Midlothian

Glancing up between city buildings, a scraggly flock of pink-footed geese flies north, marking the end of an Edinburgh winter. As spring unfolds, the last winter visitors linger on: waxwings feast on tree-top berries, whooper swans patrol the lochs and white-winged gulls scour the beaches.

Then the spring migrants begin to trickle in. It’s a time of much excitement, when a day of birding can conjure the unexpected and the city’s nature reserves really shine.

BLACKFORD HILL

A spot I always return to is Blackford Hill, a beautiful mixed woodland in the south of the city. Great spotted woodpecker­s, nuthatches and bullfinche­s flit among the trees, while dippers and grey wagtails bob along the stream. As the days lengthen, the ground flora blooms with clusters of wood anemones, wild garlic and bluebells, and flocks of tits and chiffchaff­s chime above.

HOLYROOD PARK

Rising from the Edinburgh cityscape is Holyrood Park, where the green slopes of Arthur’s Seat attract migrant ring ouzels and wheatears. Grasshoppe­r warblers, whitethroa­ts and sedge warblers establish territorie­s in the scrub around Duddingsto­n Loch, also home to whinnying little grebes and an impressive heronry. A walk up the glaciated Salisbury Crags reveals ravens, peregrine falcons and even fulmars whirling against a backdrop of spectacula­r city views.

LITTLE FRANCE

Another urban oasis is Little France, near Craigmilla­r Castle in the south of the city. This small reedbed is a stronghold for spring warblers, including good numbers of reeling grasshoppe­r warblers. Reed buntings, linnets and a variety of finches frequent this inner-city site, which sits beside a handy cycle path.

MUSSELBURG­H

Musselburg­h’s harbour and lagoons, to the east of the city, are both premier birding sites. From the seawall look out for long-tailed ducks, divers and Slavonian grebes; you may also see the spectacle of velvet scoters and perhaps even a very rare surf scoter or two. At the lagoons, the hides provide wonderful views of bar-tailed godwits, knots and oystercatc­hers, with migrants such as garganeys and wood sandpipers dropping in en route to northern Europe.

ABERLADY BAY

Further afield, East Lothian presents exciting coastal birding. As the terns, gannets and other seabirds return, spring gems turn up in the coastal scrub, including redstarts, whinchats and the occasional bluethroat. Snow buntings and water pipits linger on the beaches and Aberlady Bay is blanketed with waders at high tide.

PENTLAND HILLS

Travelling inland to the

Pentland Hills, cuckoos can be heard among the cacophony of blackcaps and other warblers. Woodland stands are home to spotted flycatcher­s zipping back and forth, and a hike up Scald Law can even turn up dotterel grounded on passage.

An Edinburgh spring brings many delights, not least the arrival of swifts screaming as they race through the streets. With so many wildlife hotspots in reach of the city, a whole host of spring birds can be enjoyed.

 ??  ?? Bluethroat­s are very rare passage migrants sometimes seen along the east coast of the British Isles in spring
Bluethroat­s are very rare passage migrants sometimes seen along the east coast of the British Isles in spring
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