In the morning, George started preparing the Gift Shop for Emma to re-stock, by removing all of the food from in there that we brought for the year. Day-trippers will be allowed on from the 13th, so there will be people back in here again before long!
Later on, in the early afternoon, Josie headed out to help George with his Manxie Productivity Burrow checks. Most of the burrows now contain lone chicks, some have adults still with very young chicks, some have adults with an egg, and some have lone adults, which have lost their egg in one way or another.
an adult from a burrow with no other contents
George fitting it with a specially-shaped metal ring
the egg was hatching!! what are the chances of finding one at this stage... such a privilege
This evening, the Pied Wagtails in the courtyard at the Obs were having a little trouble - one of their chicks had fallen from the nest, George quickly grabbed a ladder and popped it back in, the parents were soon back in feeding them...success!
nestling Pied Wagtail
George popping it back into its nest
Later on, Josie went and helped George add a net to the existing one on the North End for catching Storm Petrels, it looks a little too breezy to try for them tonight, but a calm night tomorrow looks very promising indeed.
the two nets furled on the North End.
Other sightings today included: one Common Scoter, one Buzzard, three Peregrines including two juveniles, four Curlews, two Black-headed Gulls, one Cuckoo, 24 Swallows, 12 House Martins, one Robin, three Song Thrushes, three Sedge Warblers, three Whitethroats, one Blackcap, five Willow Warblers, one Spotted Flycatcher, seven Great Tits, ten Starlings and one Lesser Redpoll.
Depressaria radiella larvae
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