In the morning, an onshore breeze from the West prompted a seawatch, George headed to the seawatching hide at the North End, and Steve watched from the Obs. It wasn't particularly busy, but a Sooty Shearwater which passed the North End at 0900 made it worthwhile, and there was a reasonable passage of terns too, totalling 158 Sandwich Terns, 44 Arctic Terns and another two Roseate Terns, an adult and a juvenile. One Arctic Skua also headed South along with 800 Manxies, one Ruff, 1529 Kittiwakes and 167 Gannets; Over the land, 14 Siskins, three Grey Wagtails and two flava wagtails also moved South.
Down on the Narrows, passage was evident, 44 Ringed Plovers were across the two beaches, along with three Sanderlings, two Purple Sandpipers, one Dunlin, one Whimbrel, 38 Curlews, nine Redshanks and 64 Turnstones.
The afternoon was then spent cleaning the Observatory in preparation for our guests arriving tomorrow, so that tomorrow morning we are free to seawatch - with North-Westerly winds forecasted, it could be a very productive morning...
sunset over the Narrows
Other sightings included: two Grey Herons, three Common Scoters, two Sparrowhawks, one Merlin, one Peregrine, seven Willow Warblers, one Goldcrest, nine Great Tits and 22 Siskins.
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