Monday 29 June 2020

Another windy day on Bardsey, with gust in excess of 40mph from the west. These conditions are usually ideal for seawatching as passing birds a pushed closer to the island. This meant George was up and clicking Manxies as they flew by for an hour this morning, and ended with a total of 7272, also in the mix were: 80 Gannets, 23 Puffins, 14 Kittiwakes, nine Fulmars and best of all a Storm Petrel pattering along the waves! Later in the day, he did another half hour which produced 2748 Manxies, 42 Gannets, four Kittiwakes, 20 Puffins and eight Fulmars.

Because of the wind and rain, Sam spent the morning collating his burrow census data. As expected, the increase in Apparently Occupied Burrows (AOBs) has increased since 2016, but the increase is really dramatic. In the North-west Corner/West Side Mountain section, the increase of AOBs has landed at 59.6%. For context, there were 4,937 in 2016, where now there are 7,880.

This will probably surprise regular visitors to Bardsey, for sure, because when you see a burrow-filled wall in the North-west Fields, it looks as though all the burrows have been there for as long as the wall has. Not so, as roughly a third of them are just four years old or less!

At the end of May, we started to think that the end count of AOBs would be around 8,000, but even so, it's nice to have the actual result reflect this assumption.

The maps that Sam has been scribbling on for the last month and a half, noting which areas/walls had been covered.

In the afternoon, George carried on with his work in the Common Room, it's fit for guests now, but the wall still needs pointing. While he was busy with that, Sam went down to the Withies to clear the net-rides and the paths, as they had become quite overgrown!




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