Wednesday 18 July 2018

It was one of those busy summer days where tasks just kept flowing one after the other and before you know it the sun is dipping below the horizon. There were Manx Shearwater productivity burrows to check (many of which now contain a fluffy chick), bicycles to fix (the observatory's sole mode of transport this year is a hardy vintage mountain bike but it recently lost a pedal!), an old boardwalk to pull out in Cristin Withy and a new boardwalk to offload, a bespoke bumblebee identification walk and a particularly memorable Noson Lawen to end the day with.

There wasn't a whole lot of time to dedicate to census today, but sightings did include 245 Manx Shearwaters rafting off the west coast this evening, a Grey Heron, 27 Common Scoters, a Kestrel, a Lapwing, two Curlews, a Redshank, 13 Swallows, five House Martins, a Wheatear, a Whitethroat, six Willow Warblers, a Chaffinch and 13 Linnets. There were two Harbour Porpoises off the West Coast early in the morning and a pod of Risso's Dolphins put in an appearance as the sun dipped below the horizon.




Mark kindly stepped in to cover Ephraim's Manx Shearwater burrow checks this week whilst he's away. It provided a good opportunity to show Eve how we monitor the island's most famous avian resident during the breeding season.

 It's amazing to think that in a month or so this clumsy ball of fluff will transform into a powerful ocean-crossing traveller, capable of flying to its grounds in South America without any guidance from a parent.


We're lucky enough to have an entomologist and bumblebee expert staying as a guest in one of the Trust's houses this week. This afternoon he gave us a crash course in the identification of some of the island's commoner bumblebees. 

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