Tuesday 17 March 2015

A Few Migrants!

After a drizzly start a beautifully warm spring day on the peninsular.
06.45-09.30 from the sea watch hide with AJG who collated the numbers:
Brent Goose: 752 E
Shelduck: 3 E
Pintail: 8 E
Wigeon: 3 E
Teal: 5 E
Common Scoter: 15 E
Goldeneye: 2 E
Red-breasted Merganser: 2 E
Red-throated Diver: 17 E
Fulmar: 2 E
Gannet: 44 E
Great White Egret: 1 in just before I arrived!
Oystercatcher: 31 E
Grey Plover: 1 E
Knot: 2 E
Dunlin: 17 E
Bar-tailed Godwit: 19 E
Curlew: 1 E
Whimbrel: 1 E
Mediterranean Gull: 3 E
Sandwich Tern: 2 E
Meadow Pipit: 1 in
Alba Wagtail: 1 in
At the observatory a Firecrest and a Chiffchaff put in a brief appearance in the garden. A walk around the trapping area and Long Pits found 4 more Chiffchaffs, 9 Meadow Pipits over and a few Reed Buntings.
 Hayfield 3 looking good for migrant waders, surely a matter of days before the first Garganey drops in.
 One of 2 White Wagtails at Springfield Bridge
A wander round the hayfields this afternoon found 2 White Wagtails with a mix flock of Pied Wagtails and Reed Buntings at Springfield Bridge. On hayfield 3 a Little-ringed Plover, 4 Redshank, 2 Shelduck, a Great White Egret and a Little Egret.
Part of a flock of 340 past the fishing boats this afternoon.
The highlight of an hour at the fishing boats this afternoon was a flock of 340 Brent Geese, 3 Shelduck and 5 Common Scoter!

Sunday 15 March 2015

Harbour Porpoises!

Another very slow sea watch in a very cold Easterly 5-6, fortunately trying to count the Harbour Porpoises popping up and down kept some interest going.
08.00-09.15 from the sea watch hide.
Red-breasted Merganser: 1 E
Red-throated Diver: 4 E  2 on sea
Great-crested Grebe: 52 on sea
Fulmar: 2 E
Gannet: 3 E
Oystercatcher: 5 E
Turnstone: 1 on concrete road behind hide.
Black Redstart: 2 behind hide
Pied Wagtail: 4 behind hide
Meadow Pipit: 1 behind hide
Harbour Porpoise: 4+

The Patch from the hide found nothing of note.
Black-headed Gull: c1,000
Common Gull: c50
Herring Gull: c500
Lesser B.B.Gull: c30
Great B B Gull: c 150
Cormorant: c60
 Turnstone on the concrete road behind the sea watch hide.
 Meadow Pipit on the perimeter wall.

A check of the Gull roost on The Point found this Yellow-legged Gull of note among the commoner species.

Saturday 14 March 2015

East Wind!

A bright sunny morning on the peninsular was deceptive as the wind was bitingly cold. With nothing passing off shore I had a wander around the beach. A Hare flushed in front of me and disappeared among the sea containers, the male Rubicola Stonechat was still present on the Gorse as was 3 Black Redstarts and a Wheatear, 2 Skylarks, 4 Meadow Pipits and 5 Pied Wagtails were also present.
The red head Goosander and 3 Goldeneye could be seen on a wind swept ARC from the causeway. The 2 Cattle Egrets were in the fields south of Brickwall Farm. At Scotney the drake Scaup was by the double bends per GH.
This evening at the Egret roost, 26 Little Egrets, 3 Great White Egrets and 2 Cattle Egrets came in to roost.

A slow watch!

Another fairly slow watch this morning in the company of AJG and BB.
06.00-09.15 From the seawatch hide:
Brent Goose: 1205 E
Common Scoter: 66 E
Red-breasted Merganser: 4 E
Red-throated Diver: 39 E
Fulmar: 2 E
Gannet: 44 E
Oystercatcher: 12 E
Dunlin: 2 E
Bar-tailed Godwit: 3 E
Kittiwake: 2 E
Mediterranean Gull: 1 E
Auk sp: 26 E
Thanks to AJG for collating the numbers.

A bitterly cold afternoon found the Cattle Egrets were still in the sheep field in Dengemarsh Road and the elusive Slavonian Grebe was still on Dengemarsh.
Late afternoon 220 more Brent Geese passed the fishing boats, 2 Wheatears, 2 Black Redstarts and 2 Stonechats including the stunning male rubicola were on the beach.  

Friday 13 March 2015

Iceland 5th-10th March

 As soon as DW, GH, PB and myself picked up the hire car from the airport we drove the short distance to Keflavik where the White-winged Scoter was quickly located among a few Common Eiders, Red-breasted Mergansers and Black Guillemot. We then did another short drive round the bay to Helguvik Harbour, unfortunately security would not not allow us in, so we had to view the harbour from the top of the surrounding cliffs  where we were confronted by literally 1,000s of Common Eiders to trawl through with our scopes to find a drake King Eider which we eventually did, but the views were not really satisfactory. 
White-winged Scoter
Black Guillemot.
From Helguvik we drove to Reykjavik Harbour to hopefully see the Glaucous-winged Gull which hadn't been seen for a few days. We also failed to find it in the poor weather and failing light so made our way to our base at Grunadfjadur.
 DW scanning The Patch at Grundarfjordur sheltering from the wind and snow.
I managed to drive off the road and get stuck! Many thanks to the local police for pulling us out.
The weather was mainly atrocious heavy snow, strong winds every day and appalling light for photography, but the birding was brilliant particularly for white winged gulls. I have never seen so many Fulmars tens of thousands of them, wherever you looked out to sea or around the mountains they were wheeling around.
 Feeding by the fish factory sluice.

 We saw this King x Common Eider hybrid in the same place last year.
 Borealis Common Eider.
Up to 15 Harlequins were seen every day at Grundarfjordur.
A flock of 400+ Snow Buntings could be seen around the town.
All the images below were taken at Grundarfjordur unless stated otherwise.
 Iceland and Kumlien's Gulls
Adult Kumlien's Gull

 2w Kumlien's Gull
 Adult Kumlien's Gull
2w Kumlien's Gull
Adult Glaucous Gull
 Herring x Glaucous Hybrid?
Herring x Glaucous Hybrid?
2w Iceland Gull (Stikkisholmur) 
We also connected with a Gyr falcon here and drove back to Grundarsfjadur in a white out with nil visibility at times, at least DW managed to keep the car on the road, which was more than I did.
 1w Iceland Gull
Herring, Glaucous, Iceland, Kumlien's and a Thayer's candidate.
This gull was spotted the previous day by DW while I was looking at Eiders.
Thayer'sGull?
 Thayer's Gull?

White-tailed Eagle seeing off a Raven.
 This hybrid in Reykjavik Harbour was no compensation for the Glaucous-winged Gull.
On our last full day we ended up back at Reykjavik Harbour trying for the Glaucous-winged Gull again to no avail. We did see a Brunnich's Guillemot, Great northern Diver and a summer plumaged Black Guillemot.

 In the last hour before our flight home we went back to Helguvik harbour where 2+ Blue Fulmars showed very well among the 100s of Fulmars, 2 King Eiders were also found.



Thursday 12 March 2015

Back at Dungeness!

1 of 2 Firecrests in the lighthouse garden yesterday
With a light south easterly blowing this morning I spent a disappointing hour in the seawatch hide in the company of AJG and BB. A few Red-throated Divers, Gannets and Common Scoter flew up channel, along with 200+ Brent Geese, a Goldeneye and 3 Sandwich Terns which went past before I arrived. 
On the shingle between the fishing boats and the lifeboat 3 Wheatears, 5 Black Redstarts, 3 Skylark, 4 Meadow Pipits and a superb Rubicola Stonechat.
A Black-necked Grebe was at the southern end of the New Diggings and couple of Goldeneye on the ARC. Scotney was disappointingly quiet but at least the Cattle Egrets were still in Dengemarsh Road.
This afternoon a wander up to The Pines found just the 1 Chiffchaff in the Sallows but many Reed Buntings and Chaffinches, A Green Woodpecker was doing its best to bring down the telegraph pole behind the screen hide, while 2 Marsh Harriers quartered the Tower pits.
Walking from the ARC to the back of Hookers saw 2 Great White Egrets, 3 Little Egrets, a Bittern, more Marsh Harriers, c100 Golden Plover, 6 Tree Sparrows and 2 Bearded Tits. While I was at the back of Hookers, a call from CT about a Slavonian Grebe on Dengemarsh gave me the spur to make my way to the hide there. There was no sign of the Grebe from the hide but CT could see it from Springfield Bridge. I made my way round the Hayfields seeing another Great White Egret and 3 more Little Egrets along with 3 Redshank in them. Finally reaching Springfield Bridge I eventually got views of the Slavonian Grebe through the reeds as it became more elusive. While waiting for it to show again 2 Peregrines put in an appearance along with a Great White Egret and a Bittern seen only by PT.

Wednesday 4 March 2015

Cattle Egrets!

Most of my day was taken up with domestic stuff but I did manage to catch up with the Cattle Egrets again.



R.I.P

Tuesday 3 March 2015

Windswept Dunge!

07.40-08.40 from the sea watch hide:
Westerly 5 with showers:
Brent Goose: 95 E
Common Scoter: 5E
Red-throated Diver: 9E  3W  5 on sea
Great-crested Grebe: 6 on sea
Fulmar: 4W
Gannet: 20E  2W
Oystercatcher: 1W
Kittiwake: 1W
Auk: 3E  4W
Not the most exciting hour!
Herring Gull/Glaucous Gull Hybrid????
Another interesting Gull in the roost on The Point picked out by DW, looks like its got some Glaucous Gull in its lineage.
At a wind swept Scotney the 3 Black-necked Grebes were sheltering in the Kent pool, 2 Curlews and 50 Golden Plover could be seen on the turf along with the lonesome Barnacle Goose.
On Walland no sign of the Bewick Swans and Whooper Swan, presumably the Bewicks are on there way back to Russia. I have no idea about the Whooper!
The 2 Cattle Egrets were showing well in the ditch by the chicken sheds today! 
Early evening at the Egret roost 9 Littles, 4 Great Whites and 2 Cattle Egrets came in. While I was waiting 2 redhead Smew and a Goosander flew over, as did 6 Marsh Harriers.

Monday 2 March 2015

Thin Fare!

 07.30-08.30 from the sea watch hide:
Brent Goose: 1w
Common Scoter: 4E
Red-throated Diver:  23E   5W
Great-crested Grebe: 14 on sea
Fulmar: 4W
Gannet: 4E
Kittiwake: 2W
Guillemot: 1E
Auk sp: 4E
At The Patch among the 100s of  Black-headed Gulls a striking leucistic individual was the only bird of note there.
Leucistic Black-headed Gull


In the Gull roost on The Point  a 1w Caspian Gull picked out by DW, as I got on to it and lifted the camera all the Gulls flushed and the Caspian flew off.
Another look at the sea this afternoon produced nothing in the very strong westerly winds.
The ARC from the causeway just a single red head Smew of note.
Burrowes Pit and Dengemarsh were very rough, apart from a couple of Marsh Harriers and Little Egrets, Shoveler, Gadwall and 5 Goldeneye little was seen here.
Scotney was more like an ocean with waves breaking over the islands and the wind howling across the turf, not surprisingly there was very little to be seen there.
The Cattle Egrets could be seen in the ditch by Brickwall Farm sheltering from the wind.