Tuesday, 17 April 2018

It was a blustery, rainy and overcast day with gusts reaching 65mph at times. The main highlight came for the sea, with the first Great Skua of the year making a close fly past of the north hide late in the morning, hounding a juvenile Herring Gull as it went. However, despite the less than perfect weather conditions, there were still signs of life from the land with a smart male Ring Ouzel found on the mountain late in the afternoon. The first Reed Warbler of the year turned up in the observatory garden with a female Pied Flycatcher, the latter being the third separate individual of the spring.

Otherwise, it was a day for indoor jobs. Billy started redecorating the washroom whilst Ephraim continued drawing up exciting plans for completely redesigning his accommodation at the observatory (currently just a room with a bed!). 

Other birds logged today included three Fulmars, 24 Gannets, a female Merlin, a Knot, 56 Purple Sandpipers, two Snipe, four Whimbrel, the first Common Sandpiper of the year, 17 Turnstones, a Little Owl, the long-staying Great Spotted Woodpecker, three Swallows, 48 Meadow Pipits, 24 Rock Pipits including two littoralis birds, three White Wagtails, two Stonechat, 15 Wheatears, 11 Blackcaps, one Chiffchaff, 12 Willow Warblers, four Goldcrests, three Chaffinches, one Siskin and two Lesser Redpolls.

The inclement weather didn't stop the Willow Warblers from frantically foraging on the lawn in front of our kitchen 


We're currently enjoying one of the best spring passages of Purple Sandpiper in recent years

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