Today, a thick sea mist blanketed the island. The sea was almost completely obscured and from Cristin, the lighthouse disappeared completely from view. The sea state (when visible) was a 3 and we had F4 south westerly winds.
Today, the most common butterfly recorded were Meadow Browns, with 39 seen. We also had ten Graylings, eight Green-Veined Whites, five Red Admirals and four Painted Ladies. For day-flying moths, the most common moth by far was the Straw-Barred Pearl with 150 seen on the East side! Eight Six-spot Burnets, two Hummingbird Hawk-Moths and a Silver-Y moth were also seen. We also had a Rush Veneer at Pen Cristin; a migrant from North Africa.
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| Green-veined White © Joel Tragen |
Joel, Saffron and Cameron headed to the East Side in the afternoon for some seabird monitoring. 275 Kittiwakes, 100 Guillemots, 400 Razorbills, 40 Shags, three Fulmar and three Gannets were all recorded. The highlight of the day was the recapture of a Razorbill first ringed on the island as an adult in 1999- making it at least 30 years old!
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| Elin fitting the 30+yr old Razorbill with a new ring whilst Saffron fits it's chick with a ring © Joel Tragen |
We also spotted ten Swallows and a House Martin in the Wetlands. There were also three Stonechats, two Wheatears, three Chiffchaffs, four Linnets and a Sedge Warbler found in the Withies.


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