Wednesday, 3 September 2025

Attention turned to the sea again this morning with a lashing of heavy rain first thing reducing visiblity dramatically. Once it had cleared, staff were set-up in position to take a look at the sea. 

Lighthouse with a cloudy backdrop (C) Greg Lee

The first Pomarine Skua of the year was the highlight, with a juvenile passing south but a pair of Knots flying past the West Coast were also a very nice sighting of this infrequent wader to Bardsey. There was some very light tern passage with 17 Sandwich Terns, 13 Arctic Terns, nine Common Terns and 30 Commic Terns seen off the North End. In addition, nine Arctic Skuas, 85 Common Scoters, 46 Gannets, 55 Manx Shearwaters, four Fulmars and 174 Kittiwakes were also logged.

The land was quiet in the strong breeze with a single White Wagtail, six Wheatears, six Willow Warblers, five Goldcrests, two Chiffchaffs and a Spotted Flycatcher across the island. A small and brief altercation between a Sparrowhawk and a Kestrel in the Observatory garden was an unusual sighting in the early evening. Whether the Sparrowhawk had thought it had lucked out with a large snack, only to realise they got more than they bargained for is unclear. 

One of many fresh young Meadow Pipits (C) Greg Lee

A Painted Lady on the South End was one of the few butterflies braving the winds, whilst the Grey Seal pups now numbered nine with another 188 adults distributed around the island. 

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