Monday, 4 May 2026
Bank Holiday Weekend
Friday, 1 May 2026
An even better day
We've been looking forward to today all week with an accurately predicted south east lighter wind and warmer air. After yesterday's great day it was going to be tough to beat.
It was perfect 'Pom conditions' on a perfect 'Pom date' and quite a crowd had gathered from far and wide (including LGRE who was nice to see). Between 5am and 930am it was basically very dissappointing and the day was set to become an epic flop. However salvation arrived at 0938 with a close pale phase Pomarine Skua flying past followed by some close Arctic Skuas , (and three more distant Poms) and then at 1035 two absolute stunning Bee-eaters flew over our heads calling and spent the next 45 minutes flying around Selsey and back over our heads several times. They were around long enough for Marc and Justin to twitch them and Ian was happy as it was his Peninsula bogey bird. Thrown into the punch was a total of 5 Arctic Skuas, a nice flock of 13 Kittiwakes, a bit of Scoter and wader passage, some late Brents, three Diver species and Hobby and Peregrine and I also whipped up egg, bacon and sausage baps from the campervan kitchen for the gang. My list HERE. Full log HERE.
I then decided to do some wader hunting. Ferry is still performing with one Little Stint, 2 Wood Sandpiper, 2 Common Sandpiper, 1 Greenshank, 1 Little Ringed Plover, 3 Bar-tailed Godwit, 1 Black--tailed Godwit, 5 Dunlin and also Cuckoo and Lesser Whitethroat singing from the Discovery area. HERE
Next stop was Medmerry where I used the bike to get down to the Breach and checked out Stilt Pool HERE. Highlights included 13 Whimbrel, 8 Barwits, 1 Greenshank, 9 Sanderling, 8 Dunlin, 1 Lapwing (the only one around) and 9 Ringed Plover.
The Bee-eaters were a Peninsula tick so now on 211 and 170 for the year and 840 for the world year list. In the last couple of weeks I've had Bee-eater, Hoopoe and Woodchat Shrike with supporting cast of Wood and Curlew Sands, Little Stints, full summer Spotted Reds, 14 Poms, Black Terns, Little Gulls, Manx Shearwater, Eiders, Garganeys, Arctic Terns, good wader passage, good Wheatear passage, Ring Ouzel, Nightingale, a Caspian Gull and in early Spring there was Serin and Whooper Swans. I effing love it here. As Adam and I agreed today, nobody in history has ever spoken the words 'I miss living in Croydon'.
Thursday, 30 April 2026
Great Day
A great day today set to a F6 easterly wind.
I started the day off at 530am at Ferry where there was an amazing arrival of 5 Wood Sandpiper, 2 Little Stint, 4 Greenshank, 2 Common Sandpiper and also 2 LRP, 12 Avocet, the Black-tailed Godwit and a Yellow Wagtail. The stints were at the back of the pool in poor light and were difficult at first to identify and while I was trying to sort them out news broke from Paul Bowley of 5 Poms already past the Bill.
I therefore abandoned the stints, quite sure they were Littles (which were confirmed later) and headed to the Bill. It was one of my best days there HERE with a further 12 Poms (4 at 0820, a flock of 7 at 840 and a single bird around 930), 4 Arctic Skuas, 6 Black Tern, 51 Common Scoter, 16 Grey Plover, 12 Whimbrel, 185 Bar-tailed Godwits, 4 Turnstone, 86 Knot, 75 Sanderling, 22 Dunlin, 138 Little Tern and a few hirundines. Full log HERE
Due to the arrival and passage of waders, at lunchtime I drove over to Snowhill Marsh to check it out but there was only 4 Greenshank, 2 Barwits and 5 Whimbrels there but it was very exposed and windy.
In the late afternoon another go at the Bill produced a few more waders but no more Poms unfortunately (one more was seen before I got back there by Justin).
A great day! The Little Stints were a year tick. Now on 169 for the local year and 839 the world year list.