Thursday, 7 August 2025

 A strong south-westerly dominated the first half of the day with light rain arriving in the early hours of the morning. A seawatch from the South End proved to be quieter than hoped with totals consisting of 215 Manx Shearwaters, 19 Gannets and 22 Kittiwakes. On the South End itself there was an impressive showing of Gulls with a mixed flock containing 368 Herring Gulls, 44 Lesser Black-backed Gulls and eight Great Black-backed Gulls. Over on Solfach, four Black-headed Gulls were using the area with two Redshanks.

Meadow Pipit (C) Greg Lee

Passerine numbers were unsurprisingly stifled by the wind with highlights including two Willow Warblers in the Withies and the Goldcrest from the previous day still in the Observatory garden. A check of the second-broods of the Swallows on the island revealed some healthy chicks clearly enjoying the better quantity of insects this season. 

The top sighting of the day was an addition to the Bardsey Odonata list when a Brown Hawker was found mid-morning hawking in the lee of the wind by Plas Withy. This large and striking species with its bronzy wings is fairly widespread across mainland and southern Britain but becomes less numerous in west Wales. This individual appears to be a male owing to the blue markings on the side of the abdomen. 

Brown Hawker (C) Greg Lee

Other invertebrate sightings included a Migrant Hawker in the Observatory garden, a Common Blue, Small Tortoiseshells and 15 Red Admirals.

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