A day of sunshine to welcome our first guests of the season onto the island. Aside from the stellar weather, it proved to be a sublime day of birding on the island with a few firsts for the year. This comprised of a pair of Barnacle Geese on the East Side, a Jackdaw at Ty Pellaf and singles of Tree Pipit and House Martin flying north. Other common migrants included a stream of 24 Sand Martins and 20 Swallows, two Black Redstarts, 49 Wheatears, 25 Blackcaps, 31 Chiffchaffs and 22 Willow Warblers. Our second Hooded Crow for the year bombed northward during the mid-afternoon.
The main talking point of the day though was the arrival of three Hoopoes on the island. The first of the day was discovered by Greg at Henllwyn, where it flicked up from the cliffside causing him to drop his laundry bag onto the floor as he quickly photographed it flying east to Ty Pellaf. After heading down and successfully twitching his first ever Hoopoe, Ewan would then flush another along the track on the mountainside towards the Schoolhouse to make it two for the day and one each for the Observatory staff this season! The third would be discovered courtesy of Ewan's parents visiting on a day-trip as they would flush another whilst looking at the Ty Pellaf bird, at least one of these birds would be seen twice at the Observatory during the day. This is a record day-count for Bardsey and comes on the back of an exceptional influx to Britain of this colourful spring overshoot over the past couple of weeks, with sites across the sea in Ireland recording as many as eight individual birds.
Like many Hoopoes that appear on the island, they were remarkably timid, despite these birds having a tendency to show very well at other migration hotspots.
A rather typical view of a Bardsey Hoopoe (C) Greg Lee |
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