Tuesday, 21 August 2018

Today was a day full of might-have-beens. A distant dainty, pale-looking tern tagging along with a group of Arctic Terns off the west coast looked very much like a Roseate Tern, and a stocky bunting-type bird that flushed silently from the side of the mountain late in the morning got the observer's mind racing but unfortunately wasn't relocated.

Even though the 'big one' didn't materialise, today's actual birds more than kept us entertained. Willow Warbler numbers picked up to 95, and 14 Tree Pipits that moved through during the day was the highest count of the autumn so far. A Pied Flycatcher remained around Nant for its second day, whilst the 19 Wheatears seen today undoubtedly included some new arrivals from further afield. Out at sea, the 10th Sooty Shearwater of the year passed by with a fine-looking Pomarine Skua and seven Great Skuas.

Other tallies included 12 Fulmars, 43 Gannets, four Grey Herons, a Sparrowhawk, a Buzzard, two Kestrels, five Ringed Plovers, nine Dunlins, a Snipe, a Whimbrel, 39 Turnstones, three Mediterranean Gulls, 30 Black-headed Gulls, 80 Kittiwakes, 53 Sandwich Terns, 56 Arctic Terns, a Collared Dove, a Little Owl, a Sand Martin, 80 Swallows, seven House Martins, four Robins, a Whinchat, nine Stonechats, a Grasshopper Warbler, four Whitethroat, a Blackcap, two Chiffchaffs, 18 Spotted Flycatchers, two Chaffinches and 78 Linnets.

Spotted Flycatcher up close.

The pumpkins in the front border are ripening, seen here through a dewy spider's web in the front gate.

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