Saturday, 3 October 2009

Strong south-westerly winds, veering north-westerly during the day made seawatching the most likely activity to produce some quality birds. In the event, the sea passage of common species never really achieved a particularly fast pace, but fortunately there were a few scarcities to spice things up a bit. The best bird of the day was also just about the first: a juvenile Long-tailed Skua flying slowly past the hide early in the morning. A good total of eight Sooty Shearwaters was recorded during the day, and a single Leach’s Petrel was seen in the afternoon. Counts of the more usual seabirds included four Great Skuas, two Arctic Skuas, 400 Gannets, one Red-throated Diver, two Fulmars, 100 Manx Shearwaters, seven Common Scoters, one Mediterranean Gull, 120 Black-headed Gulls, 750 Kittiwakes, 320 Herring Gulls, 25 Lesser Black-backed Gulls, 42 Great Black-backed Gulls, four Common Terns, 400 Razorbills and 30 Guillemots.


Merlin
(c) Steve Stansfield

Common Scoters
(c) Steve Stansfield

Gannets
(c) Steve Stansfield

Bar-tailed Godwit
(c) Steve Stansfield

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