Monday, 13 April 2026
Summer visitor build up
Sunday, 12 April 2026
Weekend Round-up
A westerly airflow resumed on Friday which has slowed things down a bit locally which was fortunate as the Easter holidays were still playing out so not much time to get out. My Dad visited at the end of the week so we had a day at Arundel HERE where the birding highlight was a singing Nightingale along the Mill Stream boundary and good numbers of Sand Martins and some nice Mandarins on the river.
We also had a couple of trips to the beach at West Wittering- nothing much to report there apart from about 100 Sanderlings still around.
On Friday morning Isaac woke me up at 4am and I had a lot of work to catch up with so I decided to make a start and when I went out to the garden office to sort out the animals a Cetti's Warbler was singing from the lane- only the second time I've had them in the garden. It was doing a sub-song and considering it was completely dark at first I thought it might be a Nightingale but Cetti's is still good for the garden.
A couple of birding sessions in the garden recently HERE and HERE has produced between 34-37 species of 124- 141 indiviudals with highlights including a pair of Peregrine low over the garden, the six Shelducks still hanging around the fields, Med Gulls regularly going over calling, a Willow Warbler singing, a couple of Chiffchaffs, Blackcap, a Barn Swallow, singing Skylark and the Cetti's Warbler. .
The moth trap has been pretty quiet as night temperatures have dropped again and despite several efforts during a small period of moth migration (mainly out further west) the only sniff of a migrant has been a single Angle Shades.
On the Peninusla Cuckoo has arrived, the Vicar had a Great Egret, Little Rings are hanging around the Ferry (although the field is drying out fast), the first Whimbrels and a Little Tern are in the harbour, a Bonxie is hanging around the Bill and a few Common Scoters and other bits are trickling past the Bill.
So pretty slow, looks like warmer air is back on Tuesday and Wednesday so fingers crossed.
Thursday, 9 April 2026
Warblers pour in
Tuesday, 7 April 2026
Back to Patch
There was quite an arrival of migrants on the Peninsula yesterday HERE in a southeast wind but it was Jacob's 9th Birthday so I had to wait until this morning to get out into the field. There wasn't too much in the way of migration while I was away so seems like this is about the fourth main migration wave this Spring.
The winds were more easterly today but it was still pretty good with one of the best seawatches from Selsey Bill this Spring HERE with highlights including Arctic Skuas, Garganeys, a large movement of Sandwich Terns, Common Scoters moving and the beginning of the Whimbrel and Barwit passage. A couple of Wheatears were also on the beach and a few Swallows, Sand Martins, Linnets and Mipits were moving north. My Ebird list from today HERE.
At about 930 I did the usual Costa coffee stop before heading to Ferry and I did the Ferry area including Long Pool and Mill Lane and back to the Visitor's area. 64 species HERE with highlights including my first Sedge Warbler of the year on the Long Pool, a couple of Blackcaps, about 15 Chiffchaffs, a few Swallows moving north and the Spotted Redshank in the Ferry Channel- now in full summer plumage.
Arctic Skua, Garganey, Whimbrel and Sedge Warbler were Peninsula year ticks, now on 142 HERE. The Arctic Skua and Sedge Warbler were also World year ticks (now on 822) .
Good to be back and looking forward to the next two or three weeks of peak migration. Basically will be waiting for the Palearctic migrants to catch up with us that we saw a few days ago in Ghana.