A breezy start with fine weather, perhaps too fine and clear to drop many migrants in with a quiet ringing session at the Observatory yielding singles of Spotted Flycatcher and Blackcap. A Cuckoo discovered mid-morning on the side of the mountain was relatively accommodating to admirers, later being seen in the Observatory garden with a big Lackey caterpillar as its prize. A small uptick in waders was also noted with six Ringed Plovers feeding on the grass on the Narrows, two Bar-tailed Godwits, nine Turnstones and 12 Dunlins.
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Cuckoo (C) Greg Lee |
The main event of the day for the Observatory staff was a boat trip around the east side of the island to count the Shag and Fulmar nests with 64 of the former a good count, it is still a little early for the Fulmars to hit their peak. Aside from the target species, the ledges were holding a healthy number of Guillemots, Kittiwakes, Razorbills and Puffins, the auks in particular were rafting on the water in their hundreds. A Purple Sandpiper right on the water's edge was an added bonus. A rather impressive Barrel Jellyfish was floating in the turquoise waters in the Sound and a few smaller jellies were noted in Henllwyn.
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Some lovely views to be had of the scores of rafting auks on the sea. (C) Greg Lee |
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There was positive signs on the Puffin front too with more new sites potentially holding nesting birds. (C) Greg Lee |
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