Friday, 25 May 2018

I’m not sure how to start today’s blogpost. It was one of those “classic” days in late May were you just don’t know where to run, because there could be anything around any corner. The day began with a report of a strange sounding Acrocephalus Warbler singing intermittently in the South End gorse. People slowly converged on the area, but the bird unfortunately had no interest in revealing itself, staying very low, giving only occasional flight views. The bird was later identified as a BLYTH’S REED WARBLER, and was heard again in the observatory garden later in the afternoon. This is only the fourth record for the island and fifth for Wales!

This could easily have been enough excitement for one day, but barely had we finished breakfast before another enthusiastic radio call went out of a male BLUETHROAT, again on the South End. Once again we all piled into the buggy to rush back down, stopping briefly to pick up Steve from the Narrows who had just flushed a Quail! After we ran the last few hundred yards into the South End gorse we were all treated to sporadic views of a male White-spotted Bluethroat, a mega rare bird for the island with the last record in May of 2001. This will coincidently also become the fourth record for the island. The fact it was of the subspecies L.s.cyanecula was also a big surprise since this is the first confirmed record of this subspecies in North Wales and should have moved through by early April at latest with May usually only producing Red-spotted variants from Scandinavia or Northern Europe.

Today held two outstanding rarities for the island and for Britain, but the supporting cast was nothing to turn your nose up to. Waders were once again present today, with presumably a large turnover throughout the day, however today three Ringed Plovers, four Sanderlings, 13 Dunlins, three Whimbrels, one Curlew and one Turnstone were logged. Out to sea the highlights amongst the usual Auks and Shearwaters were seven Common Scoters, one Sandwich Tern and two Arctic Terns. A Cuckoo was seen at Cristin late in the afternoon, whilst overhead passage consisted of three Sand Martins, 29 Swallows and nine House Martins. A Whinchat was quite a local scarcity with only a handful of records this year surprisingly. Warblers comprised of nine Sedge Warblers, one Reed Warbler, five Whitethroats, two Blackcaps, 11 Chiffchaffs and four Willow Warblers. Finally, some 17 Spotted Flycatchers were recorded another respectable day total.

Blyth's Reed Warbler




A veritable barrage of photographs to satisfy even the most Bluethroat centric of our followers

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