Wednesday, 19 September 2018

The wind picked up overnight and by this morning it was gusting 80mph in the right places. In this kind of weather it's hard to stand up, let alone wield a pair of binoculars and find birds, so much of the day was dedicated to the less weather-dependent jobs such as report writing. A few hardy souls did brave the storm, either to head out to one of the seawatching hides or grab a dose of fresh air - there was plenty of it about!

Two Balearic Shearwaters passed by offshore and a Short-eared Owl was flushed on the North End, but today was a little more about quantity than quality. 582 Gannets and 624 Kittiwakes were tallied, and the 765 Arctic Terns that went south over the course of the morning represents a new record day count for the island!

Other birds logged today included Five Fulmars, 145 Manx Shearwaters, 13 Common Scoters, a Buzzard, four Kestrels, two Peregrines, a Ringed Plover, three Whimbrels, 29 Curlews, seven Redshanks, 20 Turnstones, five Arctic Skuas, 39 Sandwich Terns, 26 Common Terns, 104 'Commic' Terns, 41 Razorbills, a Short-eared Owl, 11 Swallows, a Robin, four Stonechats, two Wheatears, three Chiffchaffs, eight Goldcrests, three Chaffinches and a Linnet.


 The coves and inlets quickly became frothy bubble baths, although perhaps not quite as exciting.

The waves off the West Coast were reaching quite a height, although they've still got some way to go before they reach the scale of those experienced during Hurricane Ophelia, when the sea swept straight across the Narrows.

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