Saturday, 23 March 2019

There was a sense of movement around the island today. The weather has improved since yesterday, with the wind changing from southerlies to northerlies, and visibility out to sea was very good.

Up at the Plantation, the trees appeared to be moving with a fall of Chiffchaffs having arrived overnight, with an estimated 60 in the limited tree space on the island. The years first Black Redstart at Nant in the late afternoon and a Greylag Goose that flew east over the Narrows, with two Canada Geese on Pwll Cain and another two on the East Side  Today's clear weather showed other signs of migration, including: 15 Wheatears, nine Shelducks, 11 Chaffinches, 147 Meadow Pipits (some seen coming in off sea), four Sand Martins (the year's first), two Whimbrels, eight Stonechats, one Grey Heron, 11 Goldcrests, one Blackcap, three Goldfinches, five Starlings, one Song Thrush and a Hooded Crow amongst Carrion Crows at South End.

Bardsey experienced an influx of Chiffchaffs today, this one is exhibiting a 'pollen horn' which develops
as pollen sticks to the base of the bill as the bird extracts food from inside flowers

Further counts included: one Red-throated Diver, two Fulmars, one Gannet, two Cormorants, five Shags, seven Teals, four Mallards, one Sparrowhawk, one Buzzard, one Merlin, two Peregrines, two Moorhens, 148 Oystercatchers, one Snipe, three Curlews, 23 Redshanks, 27 Turnstones, 28 Lesser Black-backed Gulls, 216 Herring Gulls, two Great Black-backed Gulls, two Kittiwakes, nine Guillemots, seven Woodpigeons, two Little Owls, 19 Rock Pipits, 15 Pied Wagtails, 32 Wrens, five Dunnocks, three Robins, seven Blackbirds, five Magpies, 11 Choughs, 13 Carrion Crows, four Ravens, six Linnets, one Redpoll and a Reed Bunting.

A view of Bardsey showing the South End in the far distance
Nets have been put up at Cristin (the Observatory building), and a quick ringing session in the late afternoon produced small catches Goldcrests and Chiffchaffs in the single digits. Ringing will start in earnest in the coming days

Setting up a mist-net, these are used to delicately catch birds in order to
 ring them to monitor movements and survival
All in all, a promising day today with a few unusual birds, and hopefully a good sign of whats to come this Spring.

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