This morning, George headed out to the Narrows, most of the waders of late have moved on, with only three Whimbrels, one Curlew, two Redshanks and one Common Sandpiper today. However, a large number of Juvenile Wheatears have now started to appear, with 14 across the Narrows with a further four adults there too. A family party of Choughs was on Solfach too, feeding on the rich bounty of sand hoppers and other invertebrates on offer.
Whimbrel
a still territorial Oystercatcher, presumably with a chick below.
female Wheatear
a few Manxies were passing close in off the North End today
the West Coast Chough family party
Mark Carter, one of our volunteers, has now started the ground preparation for the installation of the solar panels. Hopefully, these will soon be in place, and will begin saving the Observatory a lot of money in diesel, and help us become more environmentally clean!
Later on, it was time for George to head around his Manx Shearwater Productivity Burrows, more chicks had hatched since last week, with one chick probably being less than a day old, as it only weighed a measly 32.1g... this pales in comparison to the largest chick, now weighing over 420g. The majority of the productivity burrows have large chicks now though, so presumably they have had an early breeding season.
420g...
32g!!
Other sightings today included: two Grey Herons, two Peregrines, one Cuckoo, 11 Swallows, three House Martins, two Robins, two Song Thrushes, two Sedge Warblers, one Whitethroat, two Blackcaps, four Willow Warblers, six Great Tits and 75 Starlings.
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