Friday, 6 August 2021

 Another blustery day this morning, Stuart and Megan started the day off with Census trying not to get blown off the South End! The waves were mesmerising to watch crash against the rocks and send plumes of white water metres into the air. Walking up towards the Narrows felt quite autumnal surrounded by heather and a rather dramatic sky and sea.

Heather and the lighthouse

View of the lighthouse and the South End hide

Choppy seas to the south

As Megan and Stuart arrived at the Observatory, Louis ever the hard worker had already got started on trimming back some of the overgrown front garden. Which now means that the guests can have an unobstructed view of the west coast and the sunset.

Louis hard at work

After a hearty breakfast of porridge (the assistant warden teams' favourite....) We set off with Louis and Emma to ring Manx Shearwater chicks and check them for weekly growth rate. As some chicks are reaching five weeks old they are starting to moult their downy feathers for sleek adult feathers ready to fly to South America in the next few weeks. We'll be sorry to see them go, walking around the island there is a notable absence of our other summer residents such as the Auks. However still plenty of Choughs are here along with juvenile Herring Gulls and Lesser Black-backed Gulls and our favourite Ringed Plover family.

Louis very much enjoying giving Stuart a hand with the Manx Shearwater chicks

Manx Shearwater chick requiring some further assistance to get into it's Burrow

Birds today: 15 Fulmars, 31 Gannets, one Grey Heron, two Dunlins, eight Whimbrels, 44 Curlews, five Redshanks, ten Turnstones, one Great Skua, two Sandwich Terns, five Collared Doves, three Willow Warblers

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