Saturday, 30 June 2018

It was a busy day that started with an early morning breeding bird survey and continued with a big changeover that saw us (or rather me, Billy - Ephraim's back tomorrow!) say goodbye to a fantastic set of returning guests, Jenny, Angie, Jackie and Daphne, and welcome a group of ten guests led by long-term friends of the Observatory, Geoff and Kate Gibbs. My thanks must go to Christine from down at the farm for helping me tidy everywhere before they arrived!

There wasn't too much time for birding, and many of today's seabird counts were made whilst cooling off in the sea this evening. A Greenshank was heard calling over Pen Cristin this evening and 12 Curlews toured the island, suggested that waders are beginning to return from their breeding grounds. Other birds logged today included 2000 Manx Shearwaters this evening, 57 Gannets, the Grey Heron, six Teals, two Lapwings, ten Redshanks two Common Sandpipers, six Kittiwakes, nine Swallows, five House Martins, four Wheatears, a Sedge Warbler, two Chiffchaffs, a Chaffinch and eight Linnets.

A portable moth trap set-up in Cristin Withy overnight produced a good haul that included a Southern Wainscot, three Pinion-streaked Snouts and Apotomis semifasciana. In the Observatory trap, Pandemis cinnamomeana represents what is a likely to be another new island record.

 Garden Tigers are a firm favourite amongst participants to our Moth Morning events. It's not hard to see why!

At the opposite end of the size scale, you'll do well to find the miniscule Micropterix aruncella flying around on the mountainside at the moment. These primitive micro-moths measure no more than a few millimetres across. 

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