Saturday, 1 September 2018

Today turned into quite an eventful day despite the unfavourable winds. Fortunately, calm weather and partly overcast conditions saw a small trickle of notable migrants move through the island.

Amongst the usual waders today were three Ringed Plovers, one Golden Plover, one Whimbrel, 10 Curlews, nine Redshanks and 35 Turnstones. Sea passage was perhaps the highlight of the day today, an impressive stream of birds passed the West Coast with Carreg yr Honwy playing host to a large mixed group of Terns today. In total three Teals, one Pomarine Skua, 78 Sandwich Terns and 357 Arctic Terns were noted, the latter constituting a new island record beating the previous record total on 1st June 2016 by 133 birds!

The land was far from uneventful either, a Great Spotted Woodpecker was noted again, whilst overhead passage consisted of 106 Swallows, 10 Tree Pipits, three Yellow Wagtails, a ‘Flava’ Wagtail and a large proportion of today’s 36 White Wagtails. Some bashing of the bushes also produced three Whinchats, two Song Thrushes, three Garden Warblers, seven Chiffchaffs, nine Willow Warblers, one Spotted Flycatcher and a Pied Flycatcher!

It wasn’t until the evening however, that today’s true highlight occurred. The tern passage provided the perfect opportunity to attempt to tape lure Arctic Terns into a net to ring. In Bardsey’s history only one Tern has ever been caught a Little Tern in 1956, so this was a very unique opportunity. Half an hour in we were fortunate enough to have lured in two terns which were calling to one another, only one went into the net. An amazing coincidence saw that this second ever Tern to be caught on Bardsey was in fact not only a control but was also a Juvenile Roseate Tern! A chick which had been ringed on 11th July 2018 on Rockabill Island, Ireland!

A classic autumnal Whinchat seen in the Wetlands, one of three seen today

Immature Roseate Tern

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