Subalpine Warbler and Stone Curlew - Portland Bill, April 30th 2004 © Martin Cade |
April
30th |
The long wait for a quality spring
rarity came to an end this morning when a male Subalpine Warbler - on plumage
and measurements seemingly a bird of the eastern form albistriata
- was trapped and ringed in the Obs garden (biometry
and more in-hand photos); it was released into the Obs
Quarry but in increasingly miserable weather conditions wasn't seen
again. There was further quality in the form of a Stone Curlew
at the Bill, a Nightjar at Suckthumb Quarry and a flock of 40
Black-tailed Godwits off the Bill. Common migrants were again
quite plentiful, with the Bill area producing most of the species
logged yesterday, although numbers of all were somewhat lower;
noteworthy counts there included 60 Whitethroats, 60 Blackcaps,
30 Whinchats, 15 Garden Warblers, 10 Reed Warblers,
5 Pied Flycatchers, 4 Grasshopper Warblers, a Cuckoo
and a Wood Warbler. Notable sightings elsewhere included a Knot
at Ferrybridge and a Firecrest at Easton. A few Manx
Shearwaters remained off the Bill, where 2 Little Terns,
a Great Northern Diver and a Black Tern also passed
through. |
Pied Flycatcher and Spotted Flycatcher - Portland Bill and
Southwell, April 29th 2004 © Martin Cade (left) and Debby Saunders
(right) |
April
29th |
With the weather forecasters reporting grim
conditions on the other side of the Channel there was no expectation
of much in the way of new arrivals; fortunately the birds
confounded the local pundit's predictions and the Bill area at least
was awash with birds. Numbers were tricky to estimate as everything
was moving through very quickly and, in strong winds and constant
light rain, many of the Obs garden mist-nets were out of action.
Much of the island was hardly visited, but the Bill area produced
minimum counts of 300 Wheatears, 300 Willow Warblers,
250 Swifts, 150 Whinchats, 90 Whitethroats, 60 Blackcaps,
30 Yellow Wagtails (and a single Blue-headed
Wagtail), 30 Sedge Warblers, 25 Tree Pipits,
20 Garden Warblers, 20 Chiffchaffs, 16 Pied
Flycatchers, 15 Whimbrel, 15 Redstarts, 15 Spotted
Flycatchers, 10 Lesser Whitethroats, 8 Common
Sandpipers, 6 Reed Warblers, 4 Black Redstarts, 3 Cuckoos,
3 Song Thrushes, 2 Hobbies, 2 Turtle Doves, 2 Fieldfares,
2 Grasshopper Warblers and a Firecrest. The strong
offshore winds saw to it that the sea produced nothing more than a
few lingering Manx Shearwaters and an Arctic Skua. |
Sanderling - Ferrybridge, April 28th 2004 © Debby Saunders |
April
28th |
Much quieter today in chilly, dull
north-easterlies. Swifts trickled in off the sea all day, but
the only conspicuous grounded migrants were Wheatears (mainly
Greenland Wheatears) that numbered over 60 at the Bill. The
handful of other migrants there included 10 Whimbrel, 10 Blackcaps,
3 Whinchats, 2 Yellow Wagtails, a Common Sandpiper,
a Redstart, a Garden Warbler and a Firecrest,
whilst there were 200 Dunlin, 6 Bar-tailed Godwits and
2 Sanderling at Ferrybridge. The offshore wind did
seawatchers no favours, with 50 Manx Shearwaters and 2 Arctic
Skuas the only noteworthy sightings off the Bill. |
Whinchat - Southwell, April 27th 2004 © Debby Saunders |
April
27th |
The
return of a good cloud cover worked wonders on the land, where there
was a good arrival of most of the expected late April migrants. The
Bill area was distinctly busier than most of the rest of the island
and produced counts including 200 Willow Warblers, 90 Wheatears,
60 Whitethroats, 40 Blackcaps, 30 Whinchats, 12
Pied Flycatchers, 10 Tree Pipits, 10 Yellow
Wagtails, 8 Redstarts, 8 Sedge Warblers, 8 Garden
Warblers, 7 Grasshopper Warblers, 3 Hobbies, 3 Lesser
Whitethroats, a Firecrest and a Spotted Flycatcher;
elsewhere there were 3 Grasshopper Warblers, 2 Hobbies
and 2 Pied Flycatchers in the Barleycrates Lane/Suckthumb
Quarry area and 290 Dunlin and a Ruff at Ferrybridge. Swifts and hirundines passed overhead in
quantity all day. Seawatching at the Bill produced 50 Manx
Shearwaters, 18 Dunlin, 16 Eider, 9 Pomarine,
5 Arctic and a Great Skua, and 3 Red-throated
Divers. |
April
26th |
Still not much of consequence to
report. Odds and sods on the land included a 4 Whimbrel, 2 Whinchats,
a Woodcock, a Turtle Dove and a Fieldfare at
the Bill, and a Merlin and a Greenshank passing
overhead there. The sea was quieter than over the weekend, with
totals at the Bill of 100 Manx Shearwaters, 79 Common
and 2 Velvet Scoter, 78 Bar-tailed Godwits, 21 commic,
5 Sandwich and a Black Tern, 2 Arctic, 1 Pomarine
and 1 Great
Skua, and 1 Great Northern Diver, whilst off Chesil Beach
there were 350 Bar-tailed Godwits and 2 Pomarine Skuas.
Up to 25 Little
Terns are now settled in at Ferrybridge, where there were also
40 Dunlin, 14 Bar-tailed Godwits, 2 Sanderling
and a Whimbrel. |
Turtle Dove - Southwell, April 25th 2004 © Debby Saunders |
April
25th |
With
high pressure still dominating it was another fine but birdless day
on the land. A Serin flew north at the Bill but there was
otherwise nothing in numbers and nothing else of note except for a Turtle
Dove at Southwell and a steady passage of hirundines and a few Swifts
overhead. Fortunately there was some movement at sea, with plenty
more Bar-tailed Godwits and a variety of other typical spring
fare passing the Bill and Chesil Beach. At the Bill there were 729 Bar-tailed
Godwits, 100 Manx Shearwaters, 100 Common Scoter,
36 Black-headed Gulls, 26 commic and 6 Sandwich
Terns, 5 Arctic and 2 Great Skuas, 3 Shelduck,
3 Golden Plover, 2 Red-throated and a Black-throated
Diver, 2 Mediterranean Gulls, a Great Crested Grebe
and a Red-breasted Merganser, whilst Chesil Beach produced
280 Bar-tailed Godwits, 50 Whimbrel, 41 Black-headed
Gulls, 22 Common Scoter, 15 Common and 10 Sandwich
Terns, 4 Shelduck, 4 Grey Plover, 4 Dunlin,
2 Gadwall, 2 Red-breasted Merganser, 2 Little Gulls,
a Red-throated Diver, a Great Crested Grebe, a Great
Skua and an overflying Hobby. |
Bar-tailed Godwits - Portland Bill, April 24th 2004 © Martin Cade |
April
24th |
A fine, warm and sunny day with
hardly a breath of wind - pretty hopeless conditions for producing
any migrants! The lightest sprinkle of grounded new arrivals
included 4 Redstarts, 4 Whinchats and 4 Grasshopper
Warblers dotted around the island; the only oddity was the
long-staying Pheasant that was still in Top Fields at the
Bill. Swallows were again on the move in quantity, but the
only other fly-overs of note were 6 Yellow Wagtails over the
Bill. Offshore, 200 Manx Shearwaters were still off the Bill,
where 175 Bar-tailed Godwits, 15 Whimbrel, 3 Arctic
and a Great Skua, 2 Red-throated Divers and 2 Sanderling
also passed through; another Arctic Skua was seen flying high
over Barleycrates Lane. |
April
23rd |
Despite the clear, cloudless
conditions there was a surprisingly good early arrival of migrants
on the land although few birds lingered for more than a couple of
hours after dawn. The Bill area produced totals of 100 Willow
Warblers, 30 Chiffchaffs, 20 Wheatears, 20 Redstarts,
15 Blackcaps, 8 Whinchats, 4 Sedge Warblers,
3 Grasshopper Warblers and a Reed Warbler; another 100
Wheatears, as well as 5 Yellow Wagtails, 4 Chaffinches,
a Hobby and a Grey Wagtail passed straight through
without lingering, and hirundines got moving again in some
numbers as the day went on. Another 3 Grasshopper Warblers, a
Pied Flycatcher and a Garden Warbler were the pick of
the grounded migrants around the centre of the island. Off the Bill,
up to 200 Manx Shearwaters continued to linger but passage
itself was at a virtual standstill, with just 3 Red-throated
Divers, 3 Whimbrel, an Arctic Skua and a Sandwich
Tern passing through all morning. |
Grasshopper Warbler and Manx Shearwater - Portland Bill, April
22nd 2004 © Martin Cade |
April
22nd |
Another small arrival of new common
migrants included totals of 10 Redstarts, 10 Grasshopper
Warblers, 8 Sedge Warblers, 3 Whinchats, a Merlin,
a Black Redstart and a Garden Warbler scattered around
the south of the island; as the day went on hirundines also
started to pass through in quantity, with 250 Swallows
counted in an hour on the West Cliffs. The Hoopoe showed up
again briefly on the edge of Southwell and a Serin flew over
at Barleycrates Lane. Sea passage died a death at the Bill, where
just 5 Arctic and 4 Great Skuas, 2 Velvet Scoter
and a Great Northern Diver passed through and 100 Manx
Shearwaters were lingering offshore. |
Great, Arctic and Pomarine Skuas - Portland Bill, April 21st 2004 © Martin Cade |
April
21st |
Wetter
and windier than for a few days although a few common migrants still
managed to struggle in, with 3 Pied Flycatchers, 2 Redstarts,
a Whinchat and a Grasshopper Warbler among a small flurry of new Blackcaps,
Chiffchaffs and Willow Warblers at the Bill.
Seawatching there produced 700 Manx Shearwaters, 79 Common
Scoter, 76 commic terns, 24 Sandwich Terns, 21 Great,
10 Arctic and 5 Pomarine Skuas, 2 Red-throated Divers and 2 Whimbrel,
whilst at Chesil Cove there were 2 Arctic and a Pomarine
Skua. |
April
20th |
Only the most minor of pulses of
passage again today, with a few new Chiffchaffs and Willow
Warblers but nothing else in any numbers; a Serin -
seemingly not one of the birds seen on the last two days - was at
Southwell briefly at midday, but otherwise a Grasshopper
Warbler at the Bill was the only scarcer migrant reported
although the long-staying Pheasant was also still there. The
sea provided more interest, with 100 Manx Shearwaters, 21 Common
Scoter, 11 Arctic, 7 Great and 1 Pomarine Skua,
2 Red-throated, 2 Black-throated and a Great
Northern Diver, 3 commic terns and a Whimbrel
passing the Bill. |
April
19th |
The Hoopoe
remained at Southwell but there was no sign of the 2 Serins
there. New common migrants were again pretty sparsely spread (just 2
new birds were trapped and ringed at the Obs all day), although the
first Swift of the spring passed overhead at the Bill and
there were 10 Redstarts, 3 Grasshopper Warblers, 2 Whimbrel,
a White Wagtail, a Garden Warbler and a Firecrest scattered
around the south of the island and 4 Ring Ouzels and a Redstart
at Verne Common. Seawatching at the Bill produced just a few
lingering Manx Shearwaters, 21 Common Scoter, a Shelduck,
an Arctic Skua and a Great Skua. |
Hoopoe - Southwell, April 17th 2004 © Debby Saunders |
April
18th |
The Serin remained at
Southwell where it was joined by a second individual for a good part
of the day; the Hoopoe was also still there although it was
always elusive. After a wet and windy night, new common migrants
were thin on the ground, but did include the first Garden Warbler
of the year at Southwell, 2 Redstarts there and another at
the Bill, a Lapwing at Reap Lane, a Firecrest at
Culverwell and a Grasshopper Warbler at the Bill; single Pheasants
were at Culverwell and Avalanche Road. The sea provided a flurry of
movement early in the morning but was quiet later in the day; totals
at the Bill included 160 Manx Shearwaters, 33 commic
terns, 7 Great and 2 Arctic Skuas, 6 Whimbrel,
2 Teal and a Great Northern Diver. |
April
17th |
Quite good variety today but numbers
of common migrants were on the low side. A Serin was found at Southwell in the
same spot that one was present a couple of weeks ago (and looked as
though it could be the same individual) and a Hoopoe that
showed up nearby late in the afternoon was probably the bird seen
yesterday at Culverwell, but otherwise the pick of
the scarcer migrants were 5 Grasshopper Warblers, 3 Firecrests,
a Turtle Dove, a Black Redstart and a Ring Ouzel
scattered around the Bill area, 2 more Turtle Doves at the
Grove and another Ring Ouzel at
Verne Common. Seawatching there produced 650 Gannets, 193 Manx Shearwaters,
17 Common Scoter, 14 Arctic, 5 Great and 2
Pomarine Skuas, 4 Sandwich Terns, 3 Red-throated
Divers, 3 Whimbrel, 2 Mallard, 2 Red-breasted
Mergansers and a Brent Goose. |
Hoopoe - Culverwell, April 16th 2004 © Martin Cade |
April
16th |
Culverwell provided the quality today
with an elusive Hawfinch soon after dawn, and a Hoopoe
that showed for half-an-hour or so shortly afterwards. Commoner
migrants around the southern half of the island included 200 Willow
Warblers, 50 Wheatears, 30 Whimbrel, 10 Redstarts,
10 Grasshopper Warblers, 6 Goldcrests, 5 Whitethroats,
2 Ring Ouzels, 3 Sedge Warblers, a Lapwing, a Cuckoo
and a Bullfinch, whilst elsewhere there were another 5 Ring
Ouzels at Verne Common. Hirundines, Meadow Pipits,
Linnets and Goldfinches were again on the move in good
numbers along the West Cliffs. Sea passage was quite disappointing,
with just 21 Manx Shearwaters, 8 Common Scoter, 7 Red-breasted
Mergansers, 2 Great Skuas and an Arctic Skua
passing the Bill. |
April
15th |
Fairly
quiet again on the land with just a small arrival of new migrants
everywhere. Scarcer species included 3 Grasshopper Warblers,
2 Ring Ouzels, 2 Firecrests and a Bullfinch at
the Bill and a Black Redstart at Reap Lane; the Pheasant
was again at the Bill, with a second individual seen at Tout Quarry
early in the morning. The sea provided more interest than in recent
days, with the first 7 Pomarine Skuas of the spring off the
Bill, where 377 Gannets, 200 Manx Shearwaters,
106 Common Scoter, 16 Whimbrel, 15 Bar-tailed
Godwits, 4 Arctic Skuas, 3 Common Terns, 3 Little
Gulls and a Great Skua also passed through. Elsewhere the
first 7 Little Terns were at Ferrybridge, where a Little
Ringed Plover was also present. |
April
14th |
Skies cleared overnight and a
pleasant sunny day saw migrant numbers dwindle. Wheatear, Willow
Warbler and Chiffchaff were the only species that just
managed double-figure counts, an Osprey flew over Southwell
at midday but amongst the handful of other
migrants present the only faintly interesting sightings were of 2 Bullfinches,
a Firecrest, a Brambling and a Reed Bunting
at the Bill and the first Lesser Whitethroat of the year at
Verne Common. Seawatching there produced 37 Common and 2 Velvet
Scoter,
3 Canada Geese, 2 Manx Shearwaters, 2 Shelduck,
2 Arctic Skuas and a Sandwich Tern, whilst 2 Great
Skuas flew over Ferrybridge and Portland Harbour in the evening. |
Redstart and Pheasant - Portland Bill, April 13th 2004 ©
Guy Edwardes www.guyedwardes.com
(top) and Martin Cade (bottom) |
April
13th |
Common migrants keep arriving in
quantity, with another good fall this morning. At the Obs more birds
have been trapped and ringed in the last six days than were ringed
during the whole of last spring (a total of 870 birds between 8th
and 13th April as against just 827 in the three months from March to
May last year). Willow Warblers and Chiffchaffs
continued to dominate, with 400 of the former and 100 of the latter
at the Bill; other counts there included 75 Blackcaps, 50 Wheatears,
30 Redstarts, 7 Grasshopper Warblers, 3 Tree Pipits,
3 Yellow Wagtails, 2 Redshanks, 2 Goldcrests, a
Black Redstart, a Firecrest and a Pied Flycatcher.
The only oddity reported was the Pheasant
that continued to roam the Bill area. The first 5 Whimbrel of
the spring passed through off the Bill, where 21 Common Scoter,
2 Red-throated Divers, 2 Arctic Skuas and a Manx
Shearwater were also logged. |
Ring Ouzel, Woodlark and Wryneck - Southwell and Portland Bill, April
12th 2004 © Debby Saunders (top left) and Martin Cade (top right and
bottom) |
April
12th |
A
cracking end to an excellent Easter bank holiday weekend, with
another large fall of common migrants and several more quality
scarcer species. The Bill area again came up with the best of the
numbers, with 400 Willow Warblers, 300 Chiffchaffs,
120 Wheatears, 60 Blackcaps, 25 Redstarts, 8 Grasshopper
Warblers, 3 Redwings, 3 Fieldfares, 3 Firecrests,
2 Ring Ouzels, 2 Black Redstarts and ones and twos of
all the other expected early April migrants. Passage overhead was
dominated by hirundines and finches, with fewer Meadow
Pipits passing through than in recent days. The pick of the
commoner migrants elsewhere were another couple of Ring Ouzels
and Black Redstarts and a Pied Flycatcher at Southwell.
Rarity interest was provided by a Wryneck trapped and ringed
at the Obs, a Little Ringed Plover and a Serin
passing through on the West Cliffs, a Woodlark at Avalanche
Road, Southwell, and a Pheasant wandering around the Bill
area. Not much attention was paid to the sea, but a short watch at the Bill in the morning produced 15 Black-headed Gulls, 10 Common
Scoter, 3 Sandwich Terns, 2 Velvet Scoter, a Red-throated
Diver and an Arctic Skua. |
Redstart and Osprey - Portland Bill, April 10th 2004 © Martin Cade |
April
11th |
No repeat of yesterday's good numbers
on the ground but still plenty of passage overhead. The Bill area
produced 90 Willow
Warblers, 25 Wheatears, 20 Chiffchaffs, 20 Blackcaps,
3 Redstarts, 2 Ring Ouzels, a Tree Pipit and a Redwing;
overhead there were 750 Swallows, 500 each of Meadow Pipit,
Linnet and Goldfinch, 200 Sand Martins, 40 House
Martins and yet another Osprey. A similar sprinkle of
common migrants were reported from elsewhere around the island. With
the light breeze still blowing offshore the only movement on the sea
was of 113 Common Scoter, 18 Black-headed Gulls,
2 Red-throated Divers, 2 Arctic Skuas and 2 Sandwich
Terns passing the Bill. |
April
10th |
Near-perfect 'fall' conditions at
dawn, with a weak weather front having arrived from the north after
an otherwise clear night, saw the arrival of another bumper crop of
common migrants. Totals from the Bill area included 500 Willow
Warblers, 200 Wheatears, 200 Chiffchaffs, 75 Blackcaps,
25 Redstarts, 3 Tree Pipits, 3 Song Thrushes, 3
Bramblings, 2 Ring Ouzels, 2 Grasshopper Warblers,
2 Pied Flycatchers, a Fieldfare, a Redwing and
a Whitethroat; visible passage was also conspicuous, with
1500 Meadow Pipits, plenty of hirundines and an Osprey
passing through. Common migrants were plentiful elsewhere around the
island, where oddities included a Barn Owl at Weston, another
Osprey passing overhead at Easton, and a
scatter of several more Ring Ouzels, Redstarts and Pied
Flycatchers. The sea provided nothing more than a couple of Red-throated
Divers past the Bill. |
April
9th |
Much quieter today, with a crystal-clear night
and bright, sunny day being less than ideal for dropping migrants in
any quantity. The Bill area produced 50 Willow Warblers,
25 Wheatears, 15 Chiffchaffs, 3 Redstarts, a Common
Sandpiper, a Short-eared Owl, a Grey Wagtail
and a Firecrest, whilst elsewhere an Osprey flew north
at the Grove during the morning, a Hobby was over Southwell
during the evening, and there were single Yellow
Wagtails at Reap Lane and Barleycrates Lane, a White Wagtail
and a Grasshopper Warbler at the latter, a Tree Pipit over
Weston and a Corn Bunting at Watery Lane; overhead passage
was less conspicuous than yesterday, although Swallows were
still on the move in good numbers. Two Buzzards - presumably
the 2 semi-resident birds that have been roaming the north of the
island lately - were seen widely between Southwell and the Verne,
and 4 wintering Purple Sandpipers were still at the Bill.
Seawatching at the Bill provided totals of 64 Common Scoter,
6 Manx Shearwaters, 5 Sandwich Terns and a miscellany
of 5 identified and unidentified divers. |
Willow Warbler - Portland Bill, April 8th 2004 © Martin Cade |
April
8th |
After a quiet start to the month a good arrival
of migrants was on the cards and today duly produced the goods. A
classic Portland spring day - something sadly lacking during the
whole of last spring - saw a good arrival of grounded migrants, some
heavy visible passage overhead and a few quality rarities. Grounded
migrants in the Bill area totalled 200 Willow Warblers, 100 Blackcaps,
50 Chiffchaffs, 40 Wheatears, 5 Redstarts, 2 Grasshopper
Warblers, a Sedge Warbler and a Brambling, whilst
overhead 500 Meadow Pipits, 500 Linnets, 150 Swallows,
75 Goldfinches, 10 Sand Martins, 2 House Martins,
a Grey Heron, a Merlin and a Tree Pipit passed
through. Rarity interest was provided by an early morning Hoopoe
at Southwell that quickly left to the north over the village, a Serin
that flew north with Linnets at the Bill, a Hen Harrier that
arrived in off the sea over the Bill and an Osprey that flew
north-east over the north of the island. |
April
7th |
The strong north-west wind had abated
somewhat but there was still precious little to see around the
island. A fly-over Yellow Wagtail was a first for the year at
the Bill, where there were also 5 Wheatears, 2 Purple
Sandpipers, 2 Chiffchaffs and a Goldcrest;
seawatching there produced 57 Common Scoter, 10 Manx
Shearwaters and a Sandwich Tern. Elsewhere the
only interest was generated by another instalment in the ongoing Pheasant
saga: today one paid a brief visit to a garden in Wakeham. |
April
6th |
A really grim day with a blasting
north-west wind and frequent showers spoiling any attempts at
serious birding. The Serin was reported again at Southwell
early in the morning but couldn't be found later in the day.
Otherwise the only reports of any interest were of 17 Common Scoter,
3 Manx Shearwaters, 2 Red-throated Divers and a Sandwich
Tern passing through off the Bill, and 8 Purple Sandpipers,
a Curlew and a Blackcap on the land there. |
Serin - Southwell, April 5th 2004 © Martin Cade |
April
5th |
The first Serin of the spring
- a rather mobile individual at Southwell - was today's highlight; a
Redstart at the Bill and a Pied Flycatcher at
Avalanche Road were also first records for the spring, whilst a House
Martin over the Bill was the first seen since the exceptionally
early individuals reported way back in February. Despite these
quality new arrivals, common migrants otherwise remained thin on the
ground, with a few Chiffchaffs and Willow Warblers, 3 Swallows,
a Grey Heron, a Grey Plover, a Black Redstart,
a Blackcap and a Firecrest the only other worthwhile
sightings at the Bill. Seawatching there produced 56 Common
Scoter, 3 Red-throated and 2 Black-throated Divers,
2 Red-breasted Mergansers and an Arctic Skua. |
April
4th |
Blustery westerlies and clear skies
promised little and delivered even less. Seawatches at the Bill
produced 18 Common Scoter, 10 Manx Shearwaters, 6 Sandwich
Terns, 3 Red-throated Divers, a Mediterranean Gull,
a Great Skua and an Arctic Skua, whilst the land there
mustered just a handful of Wheatears, Chiffchaffs and Willow
Warblers, 3 passing Swallows and a Black Redstart.
The only report from elsewhere was of a Ring Ouzel at Priory
Corner. |
April
3rd |
Despite the promised wet weather
holding off until late in the afternoon, plenty of fieldwork by the
weekend visitors failed to reveal much on either the land or sea.
Seawatching at the Bill produced 133 Common Scoter, 46 Manx
Shearwaters, 36 Sandwich Terns, 7 Red-throated Divers,
2 Eider, a Grey Heron and a Great Skua, whilst
the best the land could offer was a Black Redstart and single
figure totals of Wheatear, Chiffchaff and Goldcrest. |
April
2nd |
Another seawatching day, although with scoter
passage reduced to a trickle it seemed a lot quieter than yesterday.
Up-Channel passage off the Bill totalled 500 Gannets, 170 Common
Scoter, 86 Manx Shearwaters, 56 Sandwich Terns, 14
Arctic Skuas, 12 Red-throated Divers, 6 Black-throated
Divers, a Great Northern Diver, a Mediterranean Gull
and a commic tern. Passage on the land remained at a virtual
standstill, with a handful of Wheatears, Chiffchaffs, Willow
Warblers and Goldcrests, 6 Swallows, 2 Blackcaps,
a Fieldfare and a Firecrest at the Bill. Finally,
there was a good island rarity in the form of a Pheasant at
East Weare (in addition to the remains of a dead individual found
several weeks ago at Verne Common, there has evidently been a live
bird and the remains of a second dead bird found at that site in the
last fortnight, whilst elsewhere one has been been seen on the Beach
Road near the oil tanks). |
Common Scoter and Gannets - Portland Bill, April 1st 2004 ©
Martin Cade |
April
1st |
All the action was on the sea today,
with a heavy passage of Common Scoter and other quality fare
off the Bill. Day totals of birds moving east there included 1894 Common
Scoter, 50 Teal, 45 Shoveler, 37 Sandwich Terns,
12 Wigeon, 8 Avocets, 6 Red-throated Divers, 6 Garganey,
6 Arctic Skuas, 3 Black-throated Divers, 3 Scaup,
2 Little Gulls, 1 Shelduck, 1 Pintail, 1
Sanderling and 1 Great Skua. The land was again the
poor relation, with 3 Firecrests and a Fieldfare being
the pick of a meagre bunch at the Bill, and 2 Merlins
at Chesil Cove and a Ring Ouzel at
Southwell being the only worthwhile sightings elsewhere. A trickle of
birds overhead included 110 Meadow Pipits, 6 Sand Martins,
a Kestrel, a Swallow and a Grey Wagtail
arriving in off the sea at the Bill. |