Monday, 26 March 2018

It was a morning of heavy lifting for the observatory team, with a flat pack kitchen arriving on the boat and a fresh batch of gas canisters needing to be moved into position ready for the season ahead. Weather wise, it was another beautiful sunny morning, and a fine selection of island scarcities and migrants were picked up during census by a strengthened team of island birders that for the next few weeks include ex-assistant warden Steve Hindes (over to repaint the LSA hut) and island resident Ben Porter (visiting from university before his final exams).

A male House Sparrow was in the obs garden before breakfast (presumably the same bird first seen at Carreg on 13th), and a Stock Dove flushed from the west coast was the first record of the year. There was a Firecrest in Nant plantation and the long-staying Great Spotted Woodpecker continued to tour the island, drumming intermittently. Numbers of common migrants remain low compared to previous years, but three Song Thrushes, eight Wheatears, nine Stonechats, two Willow Warblers and 28 Chiffchaffs hinted that things are starting to get moving. Other birds of note included a Water Rail, 14 Snipes and a Brambling in the observatory garden. At sea, 15 Common Scoters passed by and a summer-plumage Red-throated Diver lingered off the Lighthouse.

The east coast cliff tops are covered in Golden-hair Lichen (Teloschistes flavicans)

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