Saturday, 28 February 2026

February Sand Martins

Fullfilled a lifetime birding mini-wish today- to see a 'summer migrant' in the UK in February. 

I was actually out this morning trying to find my own one by checking out Ferry and the Tramway HERE . Highlights were the Green Sand, 3 Red-breasted Mergansers and a flock of 160 Golden Plover flying around by no summer migrants. The new habitat on Ferry keeps looking better and better with muddy margins- there was Green Sand, Redshank, Curlew, Oystercatcher, Lapwing (only 1) and Avocet plus still good numbers of Shoveler, Wigeon, Teal and a few Gadwall. Also there was a Little Grebe on the flood and Coots too. 

In the afternoon news broke of 3 Sand Martins at Chichester Gravel Pits so I dashed over there to try to get the February summer migrant and indeed when I got to Peckham Copse there were 4 flying around. Found by visiting birder Colin Jupp. Very nice indeed. Also had 52 Pochard and 108 Tufted Ducks. HERE

Now on 128 for the local year list . 

Sand Martin
Pochards
Golden Plvoers and a single Dunlin over the Tramway. ChatGPT reckons 160 birds in here.

Friday, 27 February 2026

The Phantom Branta

News broke late morning of a Red-breasted Goose from North Wall so Marc and I met up to track it down. Marc got to North Wall first and there was no sign. The bird was reported with 2 Pale-bellied Brents and 3000 Dark-bellied Brents but that was a bit odd as in recent days there has been a big clear out of Brents from the harbour. Maybe a new group had migrated in from further south? 

We then checked out the fields east of Marsh Farm where the geese had been getting this winter. There were 300 Brents in the fields but nothing with them. 80+ Cattle Egrets was some compensation. Our next place to check was the Rookery Lane fields but only 2 Brents there.  

Marc had to get back to work but I continued the search. As there has been some movement between the harbour and the Ham fields at Medmerry I drove over to check that area but again no Brents there.

The only other place on the Peninsula that concentrates Brents is West Wittering and East Head so I went over there and indeed there were 1500+ Brents in the West Wittering fields but nothing with them. It would have been odd if I found the North Wall birds there as we generally assume the Chichester Harbour and Pagham Harbour birds are from different populations. 

I had basically checked everywhere and couldn't even find the 3000 Brents! I spent the rest of the afternoon walking round East Head to see if the Snow Bunting was still there but alas I dipped that too but there was some compensation with my first Black-throated Diver for the year and a couple of Great Northern Divers off East Head. Checklist from today HERE

Marc got some more information from the Bird News Services and it turned out the record of the Red-breasted Goose had come from Bird Track by a birder nobody recognised the name of. After a bit more detective work by Andrew the best explanation is that someone had put historical data into Bird Track but forgot to change the date because there was actually a Red-breasted Goose off the North Wall with 2 Pale-bellied Brents and 3000 Dark-bellied Brents on 27th February but not in 2026 but alas in 1986. 

So it appears I spent all day trying to track down a bird from 40 years ago. Got to be the deepest dip in birding history!

The Black-throated Diver puts me on 126 for the Peninsula year list. The first Wheatear appeared in the county today. 

The Brents at East Wittering (above and below)- despite the complete waste of time looking through them it was actually nice to have a good look at them as soon they will all be off to Russia

Cattle Egrets at Marsh Farm East fields- at least 80 birds
I checked out Snowhill Marsh while at East Head- the highlight was 31 Snipe feeding on the edges 
No Snow Bunting at East Head but singing and displaying Meadow Pipits and  Skylarks (above) and a couple of male Stonechats
A poor photo of one of the Great Northern Divers off East Head and a shockingly poor photo of the Black-throated (below). 

Thursday, 26 February 2026

Harbour clear out

Had a quick look at Ferry and the harbour from the tramway this morning while I was procrastinating at work. The main observation was I only saw 10 Lapwing HERE (down from 4000-5000 just a couple of weeks ago). The clear out was confirmed by Les et al on East Side HERE who didn't see any Lapwings and reported that the Blackwits were down to 50 birds (1500 just a couple of weeks ago). 

I noticed on the vis-mig whatsapp that thermal imaging was revealing an exodus of birds over Surrey over the previous couple of nights (the birds were silent so not being picked up by noc-miggers). So clearly waterbirds that have been wintering on the coast are heading back in land or further afield to their breeding areas. This was a pattern I noticed when in Oxfordshire when the breeding waders (Lapwings, Redshanks, Oystercatchers and Curlews) would appear on breeding territory in late February e.g. See HERE. Presumably some of the waders there (presumably arriving now) have originated from areas like the Peninsula. 

There was also northward movements along the east coast of various species including Pink-footed Geese and Woodpigeons etc and the first Chaffinches were moving around Dungeness so clearly there is a general mass exodus occurring at the moment. Sand Martins are appear but scattered right across the country HERE. There's even been a recent Red-rumped Swallow in Ireland. 

Beside the negative sightings I also had the Green Sandpiper on Ferry and a Firecrest was singing in the discovery area (presumably a migrant). 7 Redwings were flying round the lane this morning too. 

The moth trap was more lively last night with 20 indiviudal moths including Depressaria daucella, Agonopterix hericliana and alstromeriana, Dotted Border, Early moth, Small and Common Quakers, Hebrew Character and 2 gorgeous Oak Beautys. 

Firecrest- not that many around this winter and seemingly not wintered in our garden as I haven't seen or heard one for many weeks 
Green Sandpiper 
Oak Beautys- stunning

Wednesday, 25 February 2026

A Wonderful Fool's Spring Day

The weather was lovely today, even more so as the last couple of months have been non-stop grey and rain. The wind was a light southerly and temperatures were around 15 C and it was sunny all day. 

I was at the Bill at dawn in order to make the most of the day. There was a bit on the move HERE with highlights including a nice first-winter Little Gull, a flock of 15 Shoveler moving east, 6 Red-throated Divers , 5 Great Northern Diver, Kittiwake, a few Common Scoters and a few Brents. Also Black-headed Gulls were on the move with 88 moving east with a few Med Gulls- there was a similar but larger movement off Dungeness today amongst a good days general passage HERE

I had to get back to the Lodge for 9am for a planned work day in the garden with Matt and Holly. We did a bit of a Spring clear out with a visit to the recycling centre and drew up the Spring garden plan. Was keeping my eyes out while working- highlight was a Red Kite. This morning while doing the moths I had Coot and Moorhen calling and last night a Wigeon flew over calling. Checklist from the garden today HERE.

After Matt left I went over to Church Norton to make the most of the fine weather. Highlight was catching up with the Spoonbill (albiet distant views as it flew towards Chichester cathedral) which was found earlier in the day and there were a few Siskins in the Severals alders and a nice Greenshank in the harbour.  About 20 Cattle Egrets were also gathering in the trees at Owl Copse. Checklist HERE

Red Kite and Spoonbill were local year ticks so now on 125 for the year (the community total is 147- another record for the Peninsula). 

Despite the amazing weather the moth trap was quiet (too clear and humid) but there were a few day flying insects including Bumblebees and a Peacock butterfly.

Glad to make the most of the glimpse of Spring as soon the rain is starting again and no doubt we still have a bit of winter sting to endure yet before Spring proper. 

Greenshank
Adult Red Kite over the garden
Siskin
Adult Med nearly in summer plumage- more birds were calling today too
Shovelers on the move- the first migrating ducks I've seen this Spring
Black-headed and Med Gulls on the move 
Neat Cosmet, Mompha divisella. I caught this dusking yesterday evening. A site first if confirmed by gen dent. I had a candidate last year HERE but didn't retain it so hopefully will get a confirmation this time. Only one previous confirmed Sussex record according to the Sussex Moth Group website. 
Dingy Flat-body, Depressaria daucella- nearly double figures yesterday evening 

Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Another first for I-Naturalist from West Papua

Appears there hasn't been a lot of moth trapping in the Arfaks, West Papua by I-Naturalist users with news today from Shelley B and Rob de Vos from the Papua Insects Foundation HERE that we had our 7th first for I-Nat on our 2022 Wise Birding trip. Previous updates on this HERE and the latest addition is Sinapex nigrilineata  HERE and HERE. It's an endemic species confined to the Arfaks HERE. It's also possible we had a completely undescribed species HERE. Considering there are nearly 300 million records of 555,000 species on I-Nat adding a few new species to the database is pretty nice although admittedly I just did the donkey work of collecting the specimens and the id is being done by the PIF. 

All our West Papua Observations HERE and the research grades ones HERE. As this is supposed to be a birding blog here's all our bird records too HERE (as usual click all details in the report to see the photos). 

There's still another 300 photo specimens to go through!, so more likely we've added a few more species too and there's always the possibility that we caught something really exciting. Will see. 

Moth trapping in West Papua 

Monday, 23 February 2026

Spring Shoots

Back in the field today. Started off at the Bill where we (The Hunters, Ian, Andrew, two Pauls and I) witnessed a nice little trickle of Spring migration. The first day of any movements for me but Brents have been trickling east for the last couple of days. Highlights included 1-2 Fulmars (my 500th bird of the year), a cracking male Eider, I had 19 Brents moving east, an Avocet went west, 3 Curlews went past, a Great Northern Diver was on the sea, five Red-throated Divers went west, 6 Skylarks came in-off and there was a Meadow Pipit in the sea cabbage. My sightings HERE and full log HERE

After coffee with Paul and Liz at Costa I met Andrew at the Ferry Pool (8 Lesser Black-backs were the highlights) and then I headed over to East Side and did the walk from White's Creek to Pagham Spit and back. 73 species of approx 6000 birds (half of what I had a few weeks ago) with highlights including a Ruff, 2 Spotted Redshanks, 1 Greenshank, a clear increase in Pintail to approx 200 birds and a Stonechat. Still about 1000 Blackwits and 450 Golden Plovers but seemingly a decrease in Lapwing and Brent Goose numbers which accounted for most of the reduction in individual birds. Checklist HERE

If I'm not mistaken I'm now on 123 for the Peninsula year and 125 for the county HERE and with the Eider and Fulmar  I'm on 501 for the world year. 

I've had the moth trap out on a couple of recent mild evenings (back up to about 9 C at the moment at night) and had some early spring moths including Dotted Border, Common and Small Quaker, Angle Shades, Grey Shoulder Knot and Hebrew Character. 

I'm declaring today as my personal first day of Spring 2026 what with the visible migration today, the uptick in spring moths and also plenty of early flowering plants now out locally. 

We've got some mild southerlies predicted for the next couple of days which could be interesting. The first Sand Martins were in the country yesterday.

Fulmar
Ruff, Teal, Spotted Red and Redshank (right to left)
Brents on the move- it has begun.
Avocet on the move
An increase in Pintail including a couple of these deeply stained or pigment saturated birds (below) which could indicate some kind of origin associated with an environment that caused that. I haven't seen any others this winter looking like that so they are presumably new from elsewhere or else it's related to plumage transformation in situ?

Knot-nice to see one close
Stonechat- I haven't seen Stonechat on my rounds on this part of the harbour for several weeks so it's possible this is some kind of migrant
Common Quakers
Angle Shades 
Hebrew Character 

Sunday, 22 February 2026

Ghana Revision and a bonus lifer

Everyone in the family is down with a winter cold today so I took the opportunity to work through photos from Ghana to revise some birds and eventually upload all my photos to Ebird. Amongst the photos I found an excellent lifer- Yellow-casqued Hornbill which had got lost as Jaffa and I saw them at Kakum on an extra day before a tour started so they didn't appear in the trip report so the species didn't make it on my lists and hence got lost in time. 

Also found some nice pics that I haven't published on the blog before . Here's a few pics from the archive and will post a link when I've uploaded all my old photos onto my Ghana Ebird HERE.

Also added some more herps to the Ghana I-Nat project HERE

Yellow-casqued Hornbill (male above, female below). 

Black Dwarf Hornbill
African Pied Hornbill
Female African Piculet
Honey Buzzard
African Pygmy Kingfisher 
Long-tailed Glossy Starling 
Black Bee-eater 
Egyptian Plovers
Spotted Night Adder 
African Saw-scaled Viper