Thursday, 26 March 2026

Finally a drop in the rough Westerly winds, although still Westerlies, the wind dropped down to F3. This break provided a nice lull, not only for us living on the island but for the bird life too. Visibility remained good, and there was only some light rain from 16:30 until dusk.

Preparations in the Observatory continued, Steve continued putting together the bedrooms in the North side, giving them a top-to-bottom deep clean and touching up the walls with a fresh coat of paint. Emma almost finished the library giving it a a good Spring clean and reorganised after she and Steve re-stablised more of the shelves. After which Ezra and Joel jumped at the opportunity for more painting and gave some of the walls another coat.


Almost finished Library 


Low numbers of seabirds were sighted with only two Manx Shearwaters seen off the West Coast and Eight Shags across the island.


A report of 21 Greylag Geese came in from Gareth as they flew over Henllwyn from the NE, doubled back over Solfach and disappeared NE again, heading towards Aberdaron. Six Shelducks were seen between the beaches today, three pairs, likely the whole island population. The pair of Gadwall chose Ty Pellaf pond as their pond of choice with five Mallards dotted around.


The female Merlin remained around the Lighthouse compound whilst two male Sparrowhawks were seen interacting several times on the mountain. The male Peregrine was seen above Nant.


Nine Moorhens were recorded, with five different individuals scattered through the Wetlands. 89 Oystercatchers were present around the coast, with much of these birds coming up to the fields at night to feed. Two each of Whimbrel and Curlew around the Narrows and South End. On Henllwyn a Redshank, Ringed Plover and three Purple Sandpipers were seen, with one of these Purple Sandpipers caught and ringed.


A slight increase in Pipits and Wagtails today, 68 Meadow Pipits, four Rock Pipits and fourteen Pied Wagtails. These were mainly recorded in small groups across the island in various places but a flock of seven Pied Wagtails on the Narrows was noteworthy.


Seven Dunnocks, a couple of Robins and two singing male Blackbirds were detected today. Nine Stonechats were spread across the island and nine Wheatears were seen on the South End.


Similarly low numbers of Warblers today. Only five Chiffchaffs and three Goldcrests, however two Firecrests were seen, confirming our suspicions that the bird to the North of the island and the one seen at Cristin were separate birds.


A Chaffinch at Nant was the first non-flyover Chaffinch to be seen in a while. Three Goldfinch and 13 Linnet were also seen.


A rather high count of Grey Seals compared to recent counts, totalling 192 between all the sites. Both Solfach and Henllwyn each contained 77 individuals with 38 seen elsewhere.

Grey Seals on Solfach © Steven Stansfield


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