Tuesday, 3 July 2018

Today saw further signs of migrants beginning to pass back through the island, with the first two Willow Warblers and Snipe of the autumn both logged. Willow Warblers usually pass through the island in high numbers from mid-July onwards, but these two have obviously opted for a bit of a head start. They were quite scruffy looking, suggesting that they've raised young (or at least attempted to raise young) somewhere on the mainland. The first Snipes begin to arrive back on the island around this point in the summer, with numbers building through the autumn and winter.

Otherwise it was another day packed full of breeding bird monitoring and guided walks. 300 Manx Shearwaters, 11 Gannets, a Grey Heron, 25 Common Scoters, two Peregrines, two Lapwings, three Whimbrels, 26 Curlews, four Redshanks, six Common Sandpipers, nine Black-headed Gulls, a Collared Dove, 12 Swifts, 23 Swallows (including five juveniles fledged from our tool shed), eight House Martins, a Stonechat, ten Wheatears, a Song Thrush, three Sedge Warblers, two Chiffchaffs, a Goldcrest, two Chaffinches, six Goldfinches and 19 Linnets made up the bulk of today's sightings.



Our guided wildlife walks at this time of year include great views of newly fledged Chough and Oystercatcher chicks, Grayling butterflies, returning migrant waders, Gannets fishing offshore and, of course, the 'classic' Golden Hair Lichen. 

It was a magical sunrise behind the mountain.

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