The impeding passing of Storm Agnes brought with it an ever-freshening southerly but, for long periods at least, far less cloud than might have been expected and overhead passage was the day's main feature. Swallows were streaming through both at Ferrybridge and the Bill, with a sample count at the latter of 2750 in 90 minutes giving a good indication of the volume of movement at its peak; Meadow Pipits were also on the move in quantity but they looked to be taking a subtly different track that didn't lend itself to straightforward counting, whilst the morning's other prominent mover was Great Black-backed Gull, with 288 south at the Bill. After a largely clear, moonlit night grounded migrants weren't a feature, with no more than odds and ends of expected fare everywhere. The island's waters weren't graced with even a fraction of the seabirds logged further west: the tally at the Bill of 22 Balearic Shearwaters, 3 Arctic Skuas and a Grey Phalarope was, with the exception of the latter, barely worth a mention.
26th September
Both pre- and post-dawn rain failed to make any noticeable difference to our fortunes and it remained quiet on all fronts. A handful more grounded arrivals saw 35 Wheatears make up the loin's share, the first three-figure tally of Linnets and a lone Merlin were the pick of overhead passage and 28 Balearic Shearwaters and singles of Sooty Shearwater and Arctic Skua passed by on the sea.
25th September
A very underwhelming day, with passage on all fronts at a low ebb. The sea provided the day's two highlights with a Long-tailed Skua through at Chesil Cove and a Cory's Shearwater through off the Bill, but routine movement there was hardly up to scratch with just 229 Great Black-backed Gulls (with another 107 settled ashore), 30 Balearic Shearwaters and a Little Gull of additional note off the Bill. On a bright and breeze morning visible passage was unaccountably poor, with Meadow Pipits reduced to the low hundreds and the likes of Siskins to a few dozen. The land was well scrutinized but was also disappointing: Blackcaps and Chiffchaffs weren't at all numerous and there were no noteworthy finds amongst the ones and twos of other migrants uncovered.
Golden Twin-spot from the Obs moth-traps overnight; still a surprisingly rare migrant at Portland - think this is only the sixth island record pic.twitter.com/7lkWVRFRcQ
— Portland Bird Observatory (@PortlandBirdObs) September 25, 2023
24th September
Took this not so good Shearwater picture mid morning today at Portland Bill. Not sure if it is Sooty or Balearic? What do you think?@PortlandBirdObs
— Gary Watton (@GaryWatton1) September 24, 2023
@ pic.twitter.com/OxFLssSru4
23rd September
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15th September
Portland Bird Observatory @PortlandBirdObs is the venue for this Sunday, September 17 Optics day at the Bill @DorsetWildlife 01225 891352 @opticronuk @SwarovskiOptik @ZEISSBirding @VortexOpticsUK @hawkeoptics pic.twitter.com/CaEDWccIwA
— In Focus Cotswold (@infocus_Swest) September 13, 2023
This stonking 1w Barred Warbler was trapped at Portland Bird Observatory just before we departed at the end of our short visit yesterday morning. pic.twitter.com/7aKeoUTXQ0
— John Martin (@pilning) September 15, 2023
14th September
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10th September
With a drizzly start to the morning, expectations had been raised for a decent fall of migrants, although such hopes were soon dashed after the first couple of empty net rounds - the day's eventual grounded migrant tally was in fact considerably poorer in both number and quality than most during the last week! As it was, most of the day's bird activity occurred overhead with 39 Yellow Wagtails, 15 Tree Pipits, 10 Siskin, 4 Grey Wagtails and singles of Cattle Egret and Osprey passing through the Bill in the morning alongside a pulse of over 150 Swallows and 50 House Martins. At sea, 49 Balearic Shearwater and just 1 Arctic Skua were recorded.
Interesting bit of community engagement over recent days: we've been hosting for https://t.co/UWoQ4Cqjtd an installation by artist https://t.co/UkcVYmo97S visualising our work and findings - amazing amount of interest from the public! pic.twitter.com/igwbHNir3l
— Portland Bird Observatory (@PortlandBirdObs) September 10, 2023