Processing the last few birds at sunrise, after closing the nets, with the plough constellation in the background.
1 of 61 Storm Petrels handled last night
This morning was a calm, sunny morning, but fog rolled in late morning and then struggled to clear for the rest of the day, before being joined by heavy drizzle in the evening.
First thing, Mark and Sam headed to the East Side to finish some Kittiwake counts. As they were walking to Pen Cristin, it became clear that there had been an arrival of Willow Warblers overnight, as there were a few feeding in the bracken and along the fence lines on their way. While round the East Side, this Kittiwake was noted on the cliffs, it is a non-breeder, but it will be interesting to see where it was ringed, nonetheless.
Once they arrived back, Sam opened the nets in the garden and Mark headed down to the Withies to open the nets there, too. Totals for the two sessions can be found at the bottom of the page.
juvenile Willow Warbler at the Obs.
George got up a little later after last night's escapades and headed out soon after to start his Manxie Growth Monitoring Burrows, again, Willow Warblers were evident, with 40 up at Nant and more above on the Mountainside, and on the way too.
A small Manxie Chick from above the Observatory
Other sightings of note were: 2328 Manx Shearwaters, one Common Scoter, two Golden Plovers, one Dunlin, five Whimbrels, 27 Curlews, nine Redshanks, seven Common Sandpipers, one Turnstone, two Black-headed Gulls, two Song Thrushes, two Grasshopper Warblers, 16 Sedge Warblers, three Whitethroats, one Blackcap, 203 Willow Warblers, six Great Tits and three Redpolls.
Ringing totals today: 50 Storm Petrels, 16 Manx Shearwaters, 2 Blackbirds, 1 Blackcap, 1 Chiffchaff, 1 Grasshopper Warbler, 1 Great Tit, 8 Sedge Warblers, 1 Whitethroat, 46 Willow Warblers, 5 Wrens. Total 132 birds of 11 species.
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