Tuesday, 7 July 2026

Yesterday’s fog stuck around this morning, but finally lifted by midday. It was a warm, calm day, with temperatures of 19°C, a sea state of 1 and winds blowing in from the south. 

We had two Risso’s Dolphin sightings this afternoon. The first was a group of six adults socialising off the West Coast. They stayed for half an hour, performing short dives and slowly moving further westward. The second sighting was much briefer, with 4 individuals leaping closer to our coastline.

A lot of butterfly activity today! 15 Red Admirals, 11 Painted Ladies, 19 Green-veined whites and no fewer than 124 Meadow Browns. For day-flying moths, the most common species was the beautiful Six-spot Burnet with 11 across the island. We also had two Hummingbird Hawk-Moths and two Silver Y moths.

Joel opened the nets at Cristin during the morning and had a productive session catching the resident female Sparrowhawk, a young Magpie and a Sedge Warbler along with a handful of young Wrens.

Female Sparrowhawk © Saffron Forrester

Juvenile Magpie, still with an obvious gape © Joel Tragen

Joel, Saffron and Cameron once again headed to the East Side for some seabird monitoring. Counts of 350 Kittiwakes and 150 Guillemots were quickly overshadowed by the 600 Razorbills still in the colony. 60 Shags, 10 Cormorants and 22 Gannets were also counted between the East side and West Coast. 

We also spotted three Sedge Warblers, nine Chiffchaffs and a Whitethroat at Cristin. Across the island, 15 Swallows, two House Martins, five Meadow Pipits and four Rock Pipits were also recorded. At Cristin we also had one Goldfinch and two Linnets up on Pen Cristin.

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