There's no doubting the avian highlight from today. A
Song Thrush has been spotted in several gardens around the island over the past month but it wasn't until today, when a fledgling was caught in the observatory heligoland trap, that it became evident this was more than just a lonesome individual choosing to spend the summer on Bardsey. The bird was still exhibiting pin feathers and couldn't have flown much further than the other end of the observatory garden! The parents did well to raise a brood (are there more fledglings out there?) in almost complete secrecy right under our noses, and its a good thing we clocked them when we did as its the first confirmed breeding record for the island since 1961!
Other birds logged today included three
Fulmars, 200
Manx Shearwaters, 23
Gannets, a
Cormorant, two
Grey Herons, two
Kestrels, three
Ringed Plovers, ten
Sanderlings, 18
Dunlins, three
Whimbrels, nine
Curlews, a
Redshank, a
Common Sandpiper, 21
Turnstones, ten
Mediterranean Gulls, 20
Black-headed Gulls, 15
Kittiwakes, four
Sandwich Terns, 51
Swallows, 50
House Martins, a
Tree Pipit, a
White Wagtail, a
Robin, five
Stonechats, eight
Wheatears, three
Sedge Warblers, a
Chiffchaff, 52
Willow Warblers, six
Chaffinches and 47
Linnets.
Today's Song Thrush was still moulting its juvenile pin feathers and wasn't particularly capable in the air, eliminating any likelihood of a sea crossing.
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