30th November
29th November
28th November
27th November
26th November
25th November
The first frosty dawn of the season gave way to a day of unbroken sunshine and in just the lightest of breezes it was very pleasant to be out birding. Unfortunately, migrant numbers were less than impressive, with 10 Black-tailed Godwits at Ferrybridge and 2 Siskins, a Blackcap and a Brambling at the Bill as good as it got for new arrivals. Wintering fare included singles of Merlin and Short-eared Owl at the Bill, 5 Red-throated Divers through on the sea there, 4 Black-necked Grebes, 2 Great Northern Divers and the Goosander in Portland Harbour and 520 Dark-bellied Brents, 4 Shelduck, 2 Pale-bellied Brents and 2 Bar-tailed Godwits at Ferrybridge.
Any Black-tailed Godwits are a good record at Portland but these ten turning up in mid-winter at Ferrybridge were quite unexpected © Debby Saunders:
American Golden Plover is a weirdly really rare bird in Dorset - there's only ever been one at Portland and if we remember rightly there hasn't been a see-able bird amongst the handful of other county records - so it was well worth popping over to Lodmoor this afternoon for a look at the one found there today. It was a surprisingly subtle bird - OK if you were specifically looking for it but no doubt very easy to pass over if you only gave a big flock of Golden Plovers a cursory scan; nice to see and a good find by ?Daragh Croxson © Martin Cade:
Merlin @ Portland Bill Top Fields today 25/11/23 more images on My Blog : https://t.co/RQqp0UamAj@BirdGuides @RareBirdAlertUK @DorsetBirdClub @PortlandBirdObs pic.twitter.com/V4V5S2zWAe
— Steven Carey (@stevecarey33) November 25, 2023
24th November
— Mark Eggleton (@radareggleton) November 24, 2023
23rd November
22nd November
Today was a bit of a slow burner, with a decent little list accumulated after a less than promising start. A Hen Harrier that lingered all day at the Bill stole the show but it had a worthy back-up cast of late migrants that included 590 inbound Starlings, 180 departing Wood Pigeons, 25 Blackbirds, 20 Stock Doves, 18 Lapwings, 15 Redwings, 8 Siskins, 7 Redpolls, 2 Fieldfares, a Brent Goose and a Woodcock at the Bill, another Woodcock at Southwell and 2 more Lapwings over Ferrybridge. Lingerers/winterers included a Merlin and a Black Redstart at the Bill, 226 Dunlin, 43 Ringed Plovers, a Goosander and a Sanderling at Ferrybridge and 3 Black-necked Grebes in Portland Harbour.
Any Hen Harrier's a good record at the Bill but an adult male gets even more plaudits © Pete Saunders (top two) and Martin Cade (bottom two):
21st November
20th November
19th November
18th November
17th November
16th November
15th November
14th November
13th November
12th November
11th November
10th November
Whilst there's still plenty of time for a sting in autumn's tail today was very far from that sort of day. A buffeting northwesterly was always a disincentive for spending time in the field and the day's only worthwhile sightings from the Bill were of a Merlin still knocking about, 167 Goldfinches and 70 Linnets through overhead and 2 Great Northern Divers and an Arctic Skua through on the sea; elsewhere, the Long-tailed Duck remained at Ferrybridge.
9th November
A day that looked to be fizzling out largely uneventfully sprung to life quite out of the blue when visiting birders tapped into a rich vein of sea movement that saw amongst others 3 Leach's Petrels, a Storm Petrel and a Grey Phalarope pass through off the Bill in quick time either side of midday. Earlier, the principal interest from the sea concerned the lingering Arctic Tern, whilst later 2 Balearic Shearwaters, a Great Skua and a Little Gull passed through; a steady day-long westbound passage of Lesser Black-backed Gulls - totalling at least 90 - was also of note. Once an early shower had cleared through some overhead passage developed at the Bill that included 575 Starlings arriving from the south and 390 Goldfinches leaving in the opposite direction; a Merlin was again in attendance and a Short-eared Owl was also overhead. Elsewhere, another Merlin was at Broadcroft, the Long-tailed Duck remained at Ferrybridge and a Black Redstart was at Chiswell.
Always a exciting thing to see during November: the majority of our late autumn Starling movements involve flocks arriving in from the south having presumably left northern France soon after dawn; invariably the flocks are a fair size and are at barely more than wave-top height over the sea - this is one of today's flocks of 200 birds that flew straight in towards the Obs, shot right past us at a rate of knots and are likely now tucked up for the night on the Somerset Levels © Martin Cade:
Red-headed Chestnut and White-speck from a small catch of migrants moths at the Obs last night pic.twitter.com/Qmq37GSNXU
— Portland Bird Observatory (@PortlandBirdObs) November 9, 2023