| Winter
wildlife watching offers possibly the most spectacular moments
with wild creatures. Days are shorter and the secret is to
get up that bit earlier. Beautiful white sand beaches still
look as they do in summer but now they are scattered with
wading birds on passage or wintering here. The sea is just
as blue and it’s great to be in some remote place and
catch sight of a school of bottlenose dolphins all to yourself.
Forests are often backed by snow capped peaks and if you are
lucky enough to get a fall of snow you might pick up the track
of a pine marten or a wildcat.
The air is very clear and winter sun can be very pleasant
indeed. This means that whilst it’s very cold on the
top of our highest mountains, it can be surprisingly warm
down below and in the sunshine. Days are quieter and less
windy and you can pick up the noisy calls of the bright red
parrot-like crossbill as they alight on pine trees often in
large groups. The huge capercaillie is a noisy bird and their
strange grunting noise can be heard from a great distance,
particularly as there are no leaves on the trees to absorb
the sound. Black grouse and red grouse are also easier to
hear and see than in summer.
Our seas are kept fairly mild because of
the effects of the Gulf Stream and this is a cue for Atlantic
seals to produce their appealing white and fluffy seal pups.
Otters also have their young in the autumn and early winter.
There can be no more enchanting sight in nature than seeing
mum out with her cubs who are small balls of brown fur floating
with their heads down on the surface as they watch their mother
diving to get their food.
Winter also brings literally thousands of
geese to the Isle of Islay and other Hebridean Islands. Barnacle,
greenland white fronted and other `species arrive with a cacophony
of noise from their summer breeding grounds in the far north,
as do millions of wading birds. Our lochs are probably busier
now than at any other time of year and you will see divers,
grebes and sea ducks in their winter plumage. Freshwater lochs
have whooper swans, and arctic ducks also enjoy our mild winter
climate.
It’s impossible to overstate the spectacular
beauty of a winter wildlife watching holiday here. Winter
is full of wildlife surprises – this is the time to
see species that you would not expect to see at any other
time, such as gyrfalcon and rough legged buzzards. Roads are
quiet and wildlife is undisturbed and bolder. Days can often
be spent sunning yourself in a forest glade, whilst waiting
for that elusive pine marten to appear!
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