Monday, 2 July 2018

A good day at Cemlyn yesterday



I spent a few hours over at Cemlyn yesterday morning, and these are the photos I took whilst I was there. Sandwich Terns are doing well so far this year considering the colony deserted early last summer. 


Arctic Tern




Numbers were low initially at 300 pairs, but they have risen recently to over 1200 birds, which is fantastic news. Good views of Common & Arctic Terns (small numbers of each nesting) and a single Roseate Tern has been showing up sometimes. Passage waders are often around and a Black Guillemot is usually in the bay.

Sandwich tern


                            Check out the latest updates on the Cemlyn Wardens Facebook page.
Walks with a Warden: This year's wardens are Tim and Tarik. At least one of them is usually to be found                                 on the shingle ridge and will fill you in about the latest sightings. 



Adder


Hummingbird Hawk-moth

On Sundays at 2pm one of them will be leading a guided walk, starting from the West car park. This is every Sunday up to 22nd July. No booking needed, just turn up. Donation to NWWT would be welcome.


Ruby tailed Wasp


Little Egret


Sandwich terns

Sandwich tern


Anglesey and beyond: Early July update



Anglesey and beyond: Early July update




As we go into July a Quail has been heard singing on the 1st and 2nd near Cemlyn at Hen Borth in the Wheat fields. One of the first signs of Autumn is the first wave of waders that breed in the high Arctic starting to head back South. On the first of July between the Inland Sea and the Alaw Estuary there were 4 Common Sandpipers, 3 Greenshanks, 5 Bar tailed Godwits, 6 Black tailed Godwits and 26 Mediterranean Gulls near the Anchorage. A Cuckoo was seen in Trearddur Bay on the 1st July. A Hobby flew in off the Sea at Cemlyn on the 30th June which is a great record for this site.
Spring and Summer is a great time for wildlife locally. After a slow start at Cemlyn the Sandwich terns started to settle and although numbers are down on previous years there were still over 300 pairs nesting which appear to have risen to over 1200 birds as we've gone into July, plus Common and Arctic terns so there's still plenty to see and photograph. Roseate's have been seen on several occasions with 2 on the 26th June and a single the following day. Also, if you pop onto the ridge the Wardens Tim and Tarik will give you the latest up-to-date information. Two fine breeding plumaged Ruffs were a welcome sight on the lagoon at the start of June. Further afield 2 Hooded Crows were between South Stack and the Range and a single bird was at Carmel Head throughout May.
In June there was a few dozen Eiders around Puffin Island with the peak count being 32 on the 17th June. The female King Eider that over wintered at Aberdyfi was a bit further north on the 19th June. It had been photographed at Criccieth in early June. However it was also reported on the Alaw estuary on the North Anglesey coast on the 10th June by a visiting birder. It. couldn't be relocated that day or the next, but a female Common Scoter was an unusual record at the Alaw Estuary on the 11th June






This year there was quite an influx of Rose coloured Starlings into the UK.
One was at the Plantation at South Stack on the 4th June, another was at Aberffraw on the 2nd June and a pair were at Trearddur bay on the 27th May.
A Honey Buzzard drifted over Cemlyn on the 30th May, it then headed over to Wylfa before drifting over Cemaes windmill and football pitch before following the pylons to Rhogoch and away.
Other less scarce Raptors seen moving through the area included Red Kites passing over Llanerchymedd on the 5th May, over Llangefni then Benllech on the 19th May, 1 Bryngwran 4th June,1 Cors Goch 18th June, 4 Alaw estuary 24th June, 1 Cemaes 24th June, 2 Inland Sea 24th June, 2 Cemlyn Jam Factory, 26th June, 2 Benllech 25th June and 1 was over Llanfechell on the 27th June. An Osprey was photographed on the estuary at Malltraeth on the Newborough forest side on the 17th June

Photo by Daniel Owen


However on Anglesey, bird of the month was surely the female Snowy Owl that appeared along the coastal footpath between Amlwch Port and Point Lynas on the 15th June. It showed well all afternoon but was last seen that evening flying North towards Bull bay Golf course. It is thought to be the same bird that was in Pembrokeshire and the Isles of Scilly earlier on in the year.
This followed on from another exceptional record, 2 Orcas lingered off South Stack for two hours, the previous weekend on the 9th June. What an amazing sight for the lucky observers who were at South Stack that day!


On the 28th May A Marsh warbler , a rare relative of the Reed Warbler from further East in Europe popped into the marshy field near Cemlyn at Cafnan. It's probably best know for its song as it is great at mimicking other birds. We heard it copy the calls of Quail and Rosefinch, birds commoner in Eastern Europe during it's brief stay. Although there was a Rosefinch seen at Soldier's Point Holyhead briefly on the 15th May.





Wading birds of note included 2 Curlew Sandpipers at Dulas at the end of May, a Little Stint was on the Alaw estuary on the 26th May, a Wood Sandpiper was at Malltraeth RSPB on the 23rd but the most striking waders we had visiting our area this Spring were Dotterel.
There was a very confiding beautiful bird on the 10th May on the Range at South Stack and a further 3 birds had previously passed through that site on the 30th April. They nest on the mountain tops in Scotland and Scandinavia and spend the winter in the Atlas mountains of North Africa.
Offshore a pair of Pomarine Skuas passed the Range on the 16th May.



Yellow wagtails of various races passed through the Cemlyn area in May. A male Grey headed Yellow Wagtail from Scandinavia was seen on the 18th May after a fine male Black headed Yellow Wagtail had visited Hen Borth Briefly on the 6th May. The chap who spotted this bird from Eastern Europe also had an Arctic Iceland Gull from Greenland nearby on the same day. I saw the Iceland gull again on the 8th May flying over Cemaes Bay out to sea.




If you have any interesting sightings post them on twitter on the  Anglesey bird news twitter page @AngBirdNews, alternatively email me at SteCul10@aol.com or phone  01407 710542 ,  all the best Steve Culley.