Tuesday 19 November 2019

geese are getting fat


We have changed dealers. We now get our Gullane coffee and scone from Goose on the Green. I just hope we aren't spotted by the Village Coffee House family along the road who would feel we were cheating on them. I have terrible guilt pangs. GotG is nearer where we park at the toilets and the scones are quite a bit bigger. Yes the serving teenagers aren't really paying attention and seem to regard the customers as an inconvenience. But those scones...


Anyway it was November the 5th, remember remember, and the geese were getting fat. Me too. Possibly the pendulum of work/running was swinging towards work. My body senses the cold weather and goes into hibernation mode and I eat like bear. And if I drop running to once or twice only a week I'm in trouble. Oh well. Best to make a little money for a December holiday we have booked. Second flight abroad this year, poor Greta T will be sending me hate mail. How dare I?




Mary, berries




I didn't see this sign till I got home with these photos.














The light, from Archerfields onwards, just got better and better.



The only other puffin I've seen along East Lothian coast line was here as well 
and also dead.












I think that was the last of the sun. We had been hoping for a spectacular sunset but it disappeared behind a thick bank of low cloud and things returned to more normal lighting.


a late fox moth caterpillar


Aberlady beach

Although we didn't get much of a sunset we were treated to the impressive spectacle of thousands of geese coming along the coast and landing just the other side of the estuary at Kilspindie golf course. At first it was just a hundred or 2 in their v formations. And then we would hear more honking, look up and the sky would be full of geese flying in skeins, all heading West as if to a predetermined time and place just beyond the bay. Some were flying erratically and almost looked to be tumbling out the sky, perhaps tired after a long migration, perhaps buffeted by turbulence. We watched one straggler being coaxed in by another 2, who flew either side and seemed to be helping it make the last few hundred yards. We could see them all descend to land in what must have been a huge festival of gooseness on the other side of the golf course. And all the honking as they flew overhead was delightful.





descending to Kilspindie


this amount of geese flew past for 5 minutes


by the time we crossed the bridge at Aberlady it was lighting up time


I was surprised that we extended the run beyond the usual circuit. The plan had been to head East from Gullane, through Dirleton to Yellowcraigs. Then back along the coast to Gullane, and if we had the energy to do the usual route in reverse. I was surprised when Mary opted to run past Gullane beach and do the extra 5 or 6 miles taking the total over 13miles. It was a decent afternoon, there were very few other folk around, and what with the sun and the geese and it not being too cold yet, it was all very pleasant. If a bit dark towards the finish. Lovely day out!


13.3 miles

2 comments:

  1. If you want an accurate number of geese, count the legs and divide by two. This advice was given to me by a seasoned birder and works a dream 😉

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  2. That's really helpful Brian, I shall bear it mind! 😂

    ReplyDelete