A late evening spent participating in the famous quiz adding to a lot of late nights and early mornings meant the students were having a well deserved lie in. However, this all changed when a Melodious Warbler was caught in the Heligoland trap just after 9am. All the students were quickly awakened to see this scarce migrant being ringed.
Melodious Warbler © Ed Betteridge |
A seawatch from the South End and the West Coast in the strong Easterly wind produced a Balearic Shearwater, 32 Common Scoters, 26 Black-headed Gulls, a Common Gull, six Sandwich Terns, 23 Arctic Terns, four Black Terns and a Puffin.
A small arrival of Swifts saw a total of ten come mainly in off the sea along the West Coast. There were a few more waders around with two Sanderlings, six Dunlins and two Common Sandpipers. Passerines included the Lesser Whitethroat still at Cristin, a Redstart at Carrag Bach and a Spotted Flycatcher at Nant.
The moth trap may have fallen over in the wind but that didn't stop this stunning Convolvulus Hawkmoth sitting on the fallen over light! © Steve Stansfield |
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