26th May

26th May: despite some epic fieldwork by @dorsetbirdtours.bsky.social the expectation of Bee-eaters galore came to nothing, with the day's migrant tally at the Bill consisting of grounded singles of Turtle Dove, Bcap & CC and 27 Com Scoter, 13 commic terns, 2 GNDivers & a Balearic thru on the sea

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 26, 2026 at 11:07 PM

This spring's very unexpected flurry of Turtle Doves is extremely welcome although it should be borne in mind that these numbers still fall far short of those logged even a decade or two ago that were described at the time as woefully low. Today's sightings seem to refer to one individual that was first sighted beside the Obs, later turned up at Sweethill where this photograph was taken and then returned to the Obs garden during the evening © Nick Stantiford:


25th May

25th May: stiff easterly breeze prompted some tern passage with 108 commics, 5 Blacks and a Little thru off the Bill; singles of Arctic and Great Skuas also thru offshore; passerine arrivals at the Bill limited to yet another 3 CCs + 2 Spot Flys; Ferrybridge waders: 27 RP, 18 Sanderling & 10 Dunlin

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 25, 2026 at 10:10 PM

Chief prize from overnight mothing was a Little Thorn - the first at the Obs and only the second for Portland after we were gripped by @birdbeard.bsky.social finding one last year on East Weare when he wasn't even seriously mothing! 471 Diamond-backs & 114 Small Mottled Willows amongst the Obs catch

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 25, 2026 at 11:31 AM

More migrant moth news: the second Many-lined in as many nights - this one from last night from John Lucas' garden at Southwell

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 25, 2026 at 8:56 PM

Overnight trapping @portlandbirdobs.bsky.social gave this lovely Ni Moth (out of the fridge, courtesy of MC), with best of the self-trapped at Freshwater Bay including Puss Moth (2, inc. egg laying female), migrants inc. a single Small Marbled and 25 Small Mottled Willows:

[image or embed]

— alanlewiswildlife.bsky.social (@alanlewiswildlife.bsky.social) May 25, 2026 at 9:01 PM

Last fews day have started to really improve in the moth trap with my second ever beautiful marbled and new for garden 2x euchromius ocellea 11 small mottled willow and 122× diamond back

[image or embed]

— dunccrip.bsky.social (@dunccrip.bsky.social) May 25, 2026 at 11:53 PM

most butterflies wings shut today in the breeze like this adonis blue. a fair few lulworth skipper out on the E side where they always seem to show up first, probably been on the wing a while i would imagine. first yellow belle and mother of shipton for me on the moff front.

[image or embed]

— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) May 25, 2026 at 9:14 PM

male and female black tailed skimmer, broad bodied chaser, emperor, also saw a demoiselle that was flying away from me at the back, probably beautiful i guess. blanked on red veined darter after oli's single yesterday and martin's two the day before.

[image or embed]

— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) May 25, 2026 at 9:24 PM

Some Ferrybridge Sanderling action © John Dadds:

 


24th May

24th May: uneventful on the bird front with a handful of Chiffchaffs and Spot Flys along with singles of Wheatear and Yellow Wagtail making up the passerine migrant tally; waders at Ferrybridge included 30 Dunlin, 22 Ringed Plovers and 14 Sanderling; 600 Manx and a single Balearic off the Bill

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 24, 2026 at 11:33 PM

Also on the migrant front, the Obs nocmig recorder picked up a passing Quail overhead in the early hours:



Rich reward again on the migrant moth front with the chief prizes at the Obs being a Many-lined - Portland's 10th record of this decent scarcity - and 7 Silver-spotted Veneer E ocellea. Among the commoner things a big arrival of 376 Diamond-backs was of note, with Small Mottled Willow also up to 204

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 24, 2026 at 10:43 AM

Another decent migrant moth: the island's first Ni Moth this year from our garden trap at the Grove last night - a very smart specimen too

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 24, 2026 at 1:30 PM

Just a single Red-veined Darter seen above Yeolands Quarry, Portland this afternoon. Several Hairy Dragonflies and Norfolk Hawkers on the wing at Radipole.

[image or embed]

— Oli Mockridge (@yeovilbirder.bsky.social) May 24, 2026 at 6:56 PM

23rd May

23rd May: a few new grounded migrants incl 5 Spot Flys and singles of Reed W, LWT & Firecrest at the Bill, Spot Fly at Broadcroft and 27 Sanderling & a Wheatear at Ferrybridge; 350 Manx, 33 BhGulls, 20 Med Gulls, 10 commic terns, 4 Eider, 3 GNDivers, a RtDiver & a Pom Skua through off the Bill.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 23, 2026 at 10:41 PM

A Firecrest an unseasonable early catch at the Obs this morning

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 23, 2026 at 7:14 AM

Yesterday's daytime arrival of Painted Ladies and Hummingbird Hawks proved to be the precursor to a decent overnight migrant moth catch at the Obs that included a Striped Hawkmoth & 139 Small Mottled Willows; 5 Green Oak Tortrix & Delicate of note amongst the back ups.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 23, 2026 at 10:00 AM

Our garden moth-trap at the Grove contained more of the same migrant-wise with the addition of the island's first Vestal of the year. Also an additional Striped Hawk for the tally from John Lucas' garden trap at Southwell.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 23, 2026 at 1:07 PM

Wakeham 64 moths of 29 species, with my first ever Striped Hawk-moth (Hyles livornica). A lot of interesting firsts as well, plus I'm getting confused with Common Quaker (Orthosia cerasi) and Vine's Rustic (Hoplodrina ambigua), if anyone can help. homandway.blogspot.com/2026/05/my-f...

[image or embed]

— Port and Wey (@portandwey.bsky.social) May 23, 2026 at 9:16 PM

Striped Hawkmoth nectaring on Red Valerian this evening at the Obs

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 23, 2026 at 9:39 PM

At least 2 Red-veined Darters on the Yeolands Quarry pool this afternoon - both fully coloured-up and no tenerals found so uncertain whether they're more likely fresh immigrants or the result of last year's breeding. Black-tailed Skimmers also the wing there - the first we've seen this year.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 23, 2026 at 4:44 PM

22nd May

 

22nd May: after yesterday's excitements today was far quieter with 2 each of Reed Warbler & CC, and singles of Wheatear & Willow Warbler the only grounded arrivals at the Bill; Sanderlings were down to 21 at Ferrybridge. 42 Common Scoter, 21 commic terns, 2 Balearic Shearwaters & a GNDiver at sea

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 22, 2026 at 10:30 PM

Very disappointing overnight mothing at the Obs: trap contents getting prettier as the month goes on but almost no evidence of new migration/dispersal

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 22, 2026 at 10:29 AM

a few painted lady moving through and this hummingbird hawkmoth in the obs garden

[image or embed]

— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) May 22, 2026 at 4:57 PM

21st May

21st May: In increasingly summery conditions Woodchat Shrike at New Ground, Sooty Shearwater off the Bill, 4-5 Turtle Doves at the Bill and Curlew Sandpiper at Ferrybridge were the day's goodies. Big increase in Sanderlings - 94 at Ferrybridge and 10 at the Bill, with 2 Grey Plovers also at Fb...

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 21, 2026 at 10:44 PM

...common migrants incl a few new Wheatears & Spot Flys, 2 CCs & singles of Hobby, Whinchat, Reed Warbler & WW. 42 Common Scoter & singles of RtDiver, Balearic Shearwater, Pom Skua & Arctic Skua the best from the sea. Baby season getting going with first juv Stonechat and Linnet ringed today

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 21, 2026 at 10:52 PM

And a couple more random photos from the afternoon - a bit more context on the Woodchat...


...and a glimpse of the white rump on the Curlew Sandpiper © Martin Cade:


We also had an interesting few minutes at Ferrybridge when we were momentarily flummoxed by a Curlew Sandpiper vs Dunlin confusion. We'd straight away noticed the Curlew Sand at long range but were intent on getting a full count of all the waders present before we paid it proper attention; once the counting was done we went back to looking for the Curlew Sand to try for some photos and immediately latched onto this rather long-billed Dunlin that had virtually no black belly patch - although obviously a Dunlin it had such a Curlew Sand-ish feel to it that we were beginning to doubt whether we really had earlier seen a Curlew Sand - did we just string up this bird? Further scrutiny of the flock eventually revealed the real Curlew Sand but this presumably first-summer, longer-billed than average, schinzii Dunlin lacking almost any black belly patch certainly invited confusion © Martin Cade:





Pleased to see that the Scarce Blue-tailed Damselflies on the Crown Estate Field pond have persisted for another year - several on the wing there in the warm sunshine at the moment; also just now the first Emperor Dragonflies of the year emerging from one of the Obs garden ponds

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 21, 2026 at 1:28 PM

20th May

20th May: Apart from the day's sea happenings it was quiet on the migration front; hirundines continued to trickle thru with a single Hobby also arriving in off; 2 Spot Flys the only new grounded arrivals at the Bill; waders up a little at Ferrybridge including 40 Dunlin, 30 Sanderling & 8 Turnstone

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 20, 2026 at 10:26 PM

Still a bit of sea passage this mrng even if a lot of the views/photos were on the shoddy side in increasingly dreary/mizzly conditions; Bill totals: 9 Arctic Skuas, 2 GNDivers, singles of RtDiver, Balearic Shearwater & Pom Skua, Manx reduced to just a few dozens

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 20, 2026 at 12:35 PM

We've been really pleased just lately to receive several interesting updates on breeding birds in the Chesil/Portland Harbour area. Guy Hayden and his team who ring gull chicks on the harbour breakwaters have made several preliminary visits in recent weeks to keep an eye on happenings at this site that for obvious reasons gets pretty well no coverage from the wider birding public. Guy reports that on 20th April there were five active Canada Goose nests with eggs on the breakwaters but by 10th May only two of these were still occupied - one with three goslings and an egg, and the other with three eggs. Visits on 10th and 15th May also saw the discovery of two Shelduck nests (with 11 and 15 eggs respectively) and three active Oystercatcher nests.

Canada Goose nest containing three goslings and an egg...


...and the two Shelduck nests © Guy Hayden:


Meanwhile the Chesil Little Terns seem to be settling in well, with several three figure counts in the wider vicinity. Among the colour-ring sightings have been an individual - dark green 178 - that was ringed as an adult on 29th March this year at La Langue de Barbarie National Park, Senegal; we'd guess that by that date it would have been on the return leg of its journey back to Chesil from a wintering site further south in West Africa. Among the returnees at the colony this year are yellow PV0 that was first ringed as a nestling at Gronant, North Wales, in 2022, and dark green AP9 and AB9 that were both first ringed as nestlings at Kilcoole, Ireland, in 2021 - all three of these birds have been seen previously at Chesil in breeding seasons between 2023 and 2025. Many thanks to John Dadds for passing on the details of these sightings and for the photographs below of two of these individuals. As a further example of colony switching, Chantal Macleod-Nolan has passed us details of yellow Z02 that was ringed as a nesting at Chesil in 2017 and was seen again as an adult in the colony during the 2019 breeding season; however, in three subsequent seasons (2021, 2023 and again during April this year) it's been observed in a colony at Westkapelle, The Netherlands.


And finally some Little Tern video from @johnluk

19th May

19th May: mostly about seawatchihg today, apart from the Fea's type Petrel, c1000 Manx, 33 Com Scoter, 10 Sanderling, 3 GNDiver, 2 RtDiver, 2 Arctic Skua, 2 Pom Skua, singles GCGrebe, YLGull & Bonxie; 8 Spot Fly & 2 CC new on the land - very weirdly CC still running at twice the nos of WW this month

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 10:27 PM

A Fea's type Petrel east off the Bill at c09:00 - seen briefly but well going past mid-distance with a Manx but lost while then trying to photograph it. Being looked for constantly from the Bill and the Obs since then but still no further sign so presumed to have moved through rather than lingered.

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 9:48 AM

Four and half hours more at the Bill tip and no further sign of the Fea's Petrel - the way it suddenly/inexplicably vanished suggested it might have landed but if it did it seems not to have lingered. Constant trickle of sev hundred Manx throughout the watch mainly heading away west into Lyme Bay

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 2:09 PM

A flavour of this morning's seawatch...

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 2:30 PM

...and some of the skuas - unfortunately we missed the 2 Poms that were just before we arrived

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 2:32 PM

Evening seawatch - just in case: another c300 Manx Shearwaters with about equal movement in both directions but few actually lingering; passing Great Crested Grebe a bit of a Bill oddity.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 19, 2026 at 10:13 PM

18th May

18th May: waders slightly up incl 72 Dunlin, 42 Ringed Plovers, 42 Sanderling & 3 Barwits at Ferrybridge; passerine passage very subdued in indifferent damp and breezy conditions with 3 Spot Flys the best of it at the Bill; 2 GNDivers through off the Bill + c300 Manx milling around

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 18, 2026 at 9:56 PM

17th May

17th May: light scatter of Spotted Flycatchers made up the bulk of passerine arrivals; sea quiet until the evening when 300 Manx, 80 Kittiwakes and a Pomarine Skua passed the Bill; 25 Sanderlings at Ferrybridge.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 17, 2026 at 10:44 PM

Some riots of colour at Portland this weekend (staying at the bird obs as always) with Black Mustard (Brassica nigra) in Crown Estate Field and Thrift (Armeria maritima) on the slopes today. Bit late for #wildflowerhour camera issues!

[image or embed]

— John Martin (@pilning.bsky.social) May 17, 2026 at 9:12 PM

Some Portland specialities too (well I see more of them here than I do anywhere) - Pale Flax (Linum bienne) and Yellow Vetchling (Lathyrus aphaca) - both of which seem to be having a good year at the Bill. #wildflowerhour

[image or embed]

— John Martin (@pilning.bsky.social) May 17, 2026 at 9:22 PM

Decent amounts of sunshine at Portland despite the often chilly breeze so some nice butterflies seen including Adonis Blue, Wall, Dingy Skipper. Painted Lady, Small Heath and others. #mybutterflyyear #ukbutterflies #ukwildlife

[image or embed]

— John Martin (@pilning.bsky.social) May 17, 2026 at 9:31 PM

16th May


16th May: a fair bit of migration on all fronts; hirundines arriving all day along with singles of Marsh Harrier & Hobby also in off; grounded arrivals at the Bill included 6 Spot Flys & 5 Reed Ws, with 14 Sanderlings at Ferrybridge; 2 Arctic Skuas and singles GNDiver, BtDiver & Bonxie thru on sea.

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 16, 2026 at 11:22 PM

Haven't seen any mention of them in flower elsewhere on Portland yet this year but this evening a Bee Orchid on one of the roped-off grassland restoration plots in front of the Bill lighthouse

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 16, 2026 at 11:33 PM

After a complete moth migrant blank yesterday, last night a little better at the Obs with the year's first Delicate and the fourth White-speck in five nights of note amongst a handful of more routine things

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 16, 2026 at 8:42 AM

15th May

 

15th May: In the context of the spring as a whole, today's migrant arrival was pretty impressive and included Bill totals of 40 Reed Ws, 20 Spot Flys and 15 Sedge Ws on the ground and 300 Swallows and 50 House Martins through overhead; 3 GNDivers and a RtDiver through on the sea.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 15, 2026 at 10:27 PM

After a long migration hiatus, decent rewards on the ringing front today with 73 mainly migrants ringed at the Bill; plenty of variety incl 25 Reed Ws (+ 2 controls, both first ringed last yr in Devon), 9 Wthroats, 8 Sedge W, 7 Spot Flys, 4 CCs, 4 Bcaps, 3 WWs, 2 Garden Ws and a Lesser Wthroat

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 15, 2026 at 9:59 PM

Reed Warbler in full flow at the Obs just now - they're well into double figures this morning

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 15, 2026 at 7:24 AM


blacknor gully, adonis blue, common blue, holly blue, small blue, small copper, large white, small white, clouded yellow, painted lady, wall brown, small heath, dingy skipper, no lulworths yet, like large skipper always late in the gully.

[image or embed]

— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) May 15, 2026 at 9:57 PM

the raven's continuing their predation of guillemot eggs by the looks

[image or embed]

— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) May 15, 2026 at 10:04 PM

14th May

 

14th May: always chilly and by the afternoon quite showery to boot; migration-wise, arctic waders made up all the nos incl 79 Dunlin, 44 RPs & 24 Sanderling at Ferrybridge with sev of each also passing the Bill along with a GNDiver & a Mallard; grounded and vismig passerines pretty well absent.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 14, 2026 at 10:05 PM

13th May

 

13th May: brutal NW'ly made birding really hard work today; 3 Spot Flys the only grounded arrivals of note at the Bill, with Sanderlings increased to 50 at Ferrybridge; single Arctic Skua and c500 Manx through off the Bill.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 13, 2026 at 11:15 PM

And thanks to Alan Mayell for popping us through a couple of recent trail-cam photos from his garden at Southwell; Badgers are quite regular there so not a huge surprise but much better value was a Turtle Dove that dropped in last Sunday 10th (a day when human observers didn't see a Turtle Dove anywhere else but quite briefly in the Obs garden) - how long before we dip out on a really gripping rarity that get detected in these circumstances!:


12th May

12th May: apart from the Subalpine Warbler, quiet for grounded passerine arrivals today although waders increased at Ferrybridge incl 46 Sanderling; steady passage of arriving Swallows all day; 24 Sanderling and 1 RtDiver through on the sea; 14 migrants ringed with CCs still outnumbering WWs

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 12, 2026 at 10:52 PM

First-summer female Subalpine Warbler trapped at the Obs and just released in the Obs Quarry - if we had to put money on it it's a Western but tail mostly v worn juvenile so no help!

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 12, 2026 at 12:33 PM


A bit more detail on the Subalpine Warbler © Martin Cade




Not surprisingly considering the dip in temperature, overnight mothing at the Obs rather uneventful but the summers's first Pine Knot-horn a nice stray/migrant. Nice random find by day of the not often noticed but probably quite common day-flyer Fruitlet-mining Tortrix.

[image or embed]

— Portland Bird Observatory (@portlandbirdobs.bsky.social) May 12, 2026 at 10:42 PM