Tuesday, 29 April 2025

The warmth and still weather was almost akin to the Mediterranean on the island today but the question hung over our heads, would the birds respond to the improvement in weather?

The answer was relatively quick with a lovely Nightingale found singing deep in the scrub in the Observatory garden, before being trapped and ringed early in the morning, an excellent life-tick for Ewan and an irregular migrant on the island. 

Nightingale (C) Steve Stansfield

Greg, who had been trying to rustle something up on the South End, decided to miss out on the Nightingale but managed to make his own luck when on his umpteenth scan of all the fences and bushes on the island, his binoculars fixed onto a superb Woodchat Shrike on a fence west of Ty Pellaf! The first record since 2021 of this colourful and much hoped for southern overshoot. Fortunately, the bird stuck around for an admiring crowd and showed very well along the fenceline, despite getting a bit of stick from the local Stonechats. However, it soon flew north into the central lowlands of the island and disappeared.

Woodchat Shrike with a Chiffchaff photobombing (C) Greg Lee
Woodchat Shrike (C) Steve Stansfield

The Mediterranean theme was not done for the day just yet, however, as whilst attempting to refind the Shrike, Ewan then discovered the fifth Hoopoe of the season in the North-west Fields which would then head south after giving everyone some flight views. Whilst walking along the West Coast to catch up with the Hoopoe, it was then Steve's turn to tap into the spring overshoot vein with a Red-rumped Swallow blasting northward over the island in the company of two Sand Martins!

Other notables on the island during the day included yet another Hooded Crow loitering on the Narrows with the Carrion Crows, two Ringed Plovers, a Kestrel around Pen Cristin, two Dunlins over the South End and an increase in Blackcaps and Sedge Warblers. Up to 49 Whimbrels were feeding around the South End, West Coast and Narrows in the morning. 

Whimbrel (C) Steve Stansfield 

It wasn't just the scarcities on the bird-front either, with a Water Carpet in the Observatory moth-trap just the seventh record for the island. 

Water Carpet (C) Greg Lee


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