25th February-1st March
16th-24th February
After a long barren spell the gradual introduction of milder and more more settled conditions has perked up interest no end, with 24th seeing the arrival of 2 Fieldfares and singles of Chiffchaff, Firecrest and Greenfinch at the Bill, 11 Stonechats and a Black Redstart at Reap Lane, a wandering Marsh Harrier overhead and 17 Common Scoter through offshore (...together with a handful of Redwings, Song Thrushes and Robins, and singles of Oystercatcher and Curlew logged overnight by the nocmig recorder at the Obs). Aside from routine winter fare, highlights during the preceding days concerned a released White-tailed Eagle overhead at Weston and Chiswell on 20th and a extremely unexpected island rarity in the form of a Nuthatch near Nicodemus Knob on 22nd.
After a few days when Lesser Black-back Gulls constituted the only signs of inbound passage at the Bill...
8th-15th February
31st January-7th February
29th-30th January
A steady couple of days, with a Red-necked Grebe in Portland Harbour, 5 Teal through off the Bill and a Redwing at the Obs (all on 29th) the best of the not-so-regulars. The Grey Heron and 10 Purple Sandpipers continued at the Bill, as did the Black Redstart at Reap Lane and the Black-throated Diver and a customary selection of other divers and grebes in Portland Harbour.
Routine fare included Red-throated Divers and Purple Sandpipers at the Bill, and the Portland Harbour Black-throated Diver...
...whilst five Teal through off the Bill were not so expected © Pete Saunders:
28th January
Nice sunny, quiet conditions were very welcome and allowed for plenty of coverage today. Little Gulls continued to provide interest, with 1 off the Bill and 2 in Portland Harbour. A Little Grebe was also a good record from the Harbour - formerly a familiar sight both there and at Ferrybridge, this species has lately become very infrequent at both. The day's other new arrivals were a Grey Heron at the Bill, where a second Reed Bunting joined the long-term winterer. Another 14 Red-throated Divers passed by off the Bill, where 9 passing Common Scoter was a higher total than of late.
It's always good to see a nice, close Black-throated Diver like this long-stayer in Portland Harbour © Phil Cheeseman:
birds had dispersed back in the harbour today, just a couple of GND off portland castle and maybe 3 off hamm beach and a BNG too, all distantly. main novelty was the first dabchick i have seen for a while at osprey quay
— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) January 28, 2026 at 4:01 PM
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26th-27th January
25th January
24th January
13th-23rd January
12th January
Besides a few of the regulars there was a nice little event during the afternoon when the year's first 3 Little Gulls joined the feeding Kittiwakes off the Bill.
Some of this afternoon's Little Gull action © Martin Cade:
Red-breasted Mergansers Portland Harbour
— Debra Saunders (@debbyseamist.bsky.social) January 12, 2026 at 3:39 PM
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10th-11th January
7th-9th January
3rd-6th January
1st-2nd January 2026
28th-31st December
A quiet end to the year with cold-weather movement limited to just a lone Lapwing at the Bill on 29th, whilst a Brambling that dropped in briefly from height at the Bill on 31st had all the look of a late migrant; the only other minor oddities were single Little Egrets overhead at the Bill on 29th and passing through on the sea there on 31st. The long-staying Goosander continued to visit Ferrybridge daily and winterers included the Purple Sandpipers at the Bill and selections of customary divers and grebes in Portland Harbour.
a couple of GND off the tourist information centre and another distantly off hamm beach as was a BNGrebe, disappointing considering how far you could see in calm bright conditions.
— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) December 31, 2025 at 4:27 PM
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at the third time of asking got a record shot of one of the kingfishers opposite the sailors return after missing off the tourist centre and also the sailing academy car park. unfortunately just after martin adlam left.
— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) December 31, 2025 at 4:18 PM
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whilst seeing martin and dawn out and about today was the best thing, fluking a bottlenose dolphin entirely way out of the water was next best, opposite the sailors return,
— andylportland.bsky.social (@andylportland.bsky.social) December 31, 2025 at 4:24 PM
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