Thursday 11 October 2018

The weather couldn't quite make up its mind as to how it wanted to treat us today. What started off as a stunningly calm and sunny morning quickly deteriorated with the arrival of an impressive storm that drifted up from Cardigan Bay. It was one of those huge expanses of darkened sky that we can brace ourselves for as we watch it slowly creep towards us from miles off out to sea, and this one drenched the island for much of the afternoon. Once it eventually dissipated, it left us with an eerily still and humid evening plus a couple of interesting birds too. The first Yellow-browed Warbler of the year was associating with a small flock of Coal tits in Cristin Withy, and a Treecreeper was mixed in too. A Firecrest was at Ty Capel and a lonely Spotted Flycatcher was found in the Plantation.

Other birds logged today included a Fulmar, two Common Scoters, a Sparrowhawk, a Buzzard, two Kestrels, a Merlin, two Peregrines, two Water Rails, three Purple Sandpipers, six Snipes, three Whimbrels, six Curlews, three Redshanks, five Turnstones, four Mediterranean Gulls, 100 Black-headed Gulls, five Common Gulls, a Little Owl, eight Skylarks, 11 Swallows, two Grey Wagtails, 29 Robins, three Stonechats, four Song Thrushes, eight Redwings, five Blackcaps, a Yellow-browed Warbler, 12 Chiffchaffs, two Willow Warblers, 19 Goldcrests, a Firecrest, a Spotted Flycatcher, ten Coal tits, two Blue tits, five Great tits, a Treecreeper, 45 Starlings, eight Chaffinches and 15 Goldfinches.


The first Yellow-browed Warbler in, big swells off the West Coast, bracken looking withered and crispy and the sun hanging low in the sky. It definitely feels like autumn. 

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