Sunday, 10 August 2025

A thankfully calmer breeze today with the sun shining nicely for the entire duration.

It didn't take long for the students to get some good birding in when a juvenile Sabine's Gull was picked up early morning flying south off the West Coast before settling on the sea and eventually drifting north. Continued efforts offshore also delivered some good seabird counts with 1405 Manx Shearwaters, 19 Fulmars, 64 Gannets, 288 Kittiwakes, 44 Sandwich Terns, 39 Black-headed Gulls, 14 Mediterranean Gulls, six Razorbills and a juvenile Puffin off the North End. 

Some large gull flocks also gathered around the island anting on the bountiful crop of flying insects with 393 Herring Gulls feeding around the Narrows, Pen Cristin and the South End.

On land, it was slightly quieter for migrants with nine Willow Warblers, five Goldcrests, five Sand Martins, 24 Swallows, 23 Wheatears and a Chiffchaff at Nant. Wader passage was represented by two Ringed Plovers, five Common Sandpipers, a Dunlin, three Turnstones, eight Whimbrels, 45 Curlews and two Redshanks

Turnstones (C) Greg Lee

Resident species counts included two Song Thrushes, 73 Linnets, two Blackbirds, seven Dunnocks and five Robins.

As if that wasn't enough, there was also some good dolphin activity with two pods of 20+ Common Dolphins passing off the West Coast during the day as well as two Risso's Dolphins.

Invertebrate sightings consisted of a Wall Brown on the Narrows (a rare butterfly for Bardsey), a Grayling on the North End,  two Hummingbird Hawk-moths, two Small Coppers, 14 Red Admirals and seven Painted Ladies.

In the evening, the still night allowed for a chance to catch some Storm Petrels, ultimately delivering three birds plus an additional Manx Shearwater

The gathering of the team (C) Steve Stansfield

Ewan assisting a student with a Storm Petrel (C) Steve Stansfield



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