Thursday, 17 October 2019

Portland Bill and Radipole Lake

With winds increasing and with a SW direction I thought it might be worth trying Portland Bill for a seawatch.  I arrived about 8am in light rain and proceeded to the Bill.  There was quite a lot of bird movement.  Hundreds of passerines were flying over the Bill and many directly out to sea heading south.  It was hard to ID these but the majority appeared to be Meadow Pipits.  Dozens of Gannets were plunge diving and other passing.  About 30 Kittiwakes passed to the west in the hour I was there.  A lot of Auks were moving in both directions, as were good numbers of Cormorants and Shags.  A single Arctic Skua heading west was the best bird.

Shag - Surprisingly resting just below the sea watch point at the monument.  It did not seem too bothered by my presence.



Dark Clouds heading towards the Bill!
The ominous dark clouds off of the Bill were getting closer so I decided to head back to the car.  Just in time as the heavens opened and very heavy rain set in for a time.

I decided to head back to Radipole Lake and try and see a few Bearded Tits before we head back home the next day.  By the time I got there the sun was out!

The Bearded Tits were calling frequently and I saw perhaps twenty or so perched or in flight.  Unfortunately all too brief or distant for photos.  The Cetti's Warblers were in fine voice but as usual singing from thick cover.

It is always worth checking the car park at Radipole Lake for gulls.  Not just interesting species but colour ringed gulls.  You can usually drive quite close and photograph the ringed birds.  There is often a few present.  I was not disappointed and got the two photos below.

Mediterranean Gull - Green "RV70"  - Ringed in France or Belgium.  Details awaited.

Herring Gull - Black "773"  - Apparently ringed in Portland so not a great traveller as yet.

Wednesday, 16 October 2019

Med Gull Bonaza

A stop off at Ferrybridge, Weymouth this morning at high tide was interesting in terms of the numbers of Mediterranean Gulls.  There were 40-50 resting on a gravel bar with another 250 or so on the water!  This is the biggest flock I have ever seen.  Quite a few of the Med Gulls have been colour ringed.  I saw two at Lodmoor the previous day and two different birds this morning. Of the four bird, two appear to be Irish, one from Germany and one from Belguim or Holland. Details awaited.

Mediterranean Gulls - 40+ on or around the gravel bat and another 250 or so on the Fleet to the right.

Mediterranean Gull - Yellow 2C41  This was ringed in Langstone Harbour in June 2017.  It spent the winter of 2017/18 in Portugal.  It then returned to Langstone Harbour in Apr 2019.  This is the first sighting since then..

Mediterranean Gull - White 3RA5  A bird from Belguim(see details below)

White "3RA5" was fitted with a metal ring in Antwerp, Belguim in May 2009 as a chick.
It was controlled at Radipole Lake; Weymouth in January 2011.
Three more controls in Antwerp in March 2018.
It was controlled in Oost-Vlaanderen, Belgium (near Ghent) in May 2019 when it was colour ringed.
So the bird is now over ten years old.


Sunday, 13 October 2019

Lodmoor Strikes Again!

After an afternoon out with my wife and the dog in Weymouth (watching the motocross on the beach) I arrived back at the apartment and saw a message from Adam Bassett advising me of a White-rumped Sandpiper at Lodmoor; all of a 15 minute walk from where we were staying!  So I collected my gear together and off I went.  I soon located the birders watching the bird and got some nice views over a 15 minutes period.  It then moved out of sight to the consternation of the local birders who were still arriving!  I left a short while before dusk and it had not been seen again but almost certainly still on the reserve.

For a while it was feeding next to two Dunlin which gave a good comparison.  I did briefly see it in flight which made the ID easier.  However the well defined whitish supercillium, white underparts, streaked breast, relatively short blackish legs and long wings help to identify this species.

White-rumped Sandpiper



Mediterranean Gull - A first winter bird with colour ring Yellow "RS" but unfortunately I was not able to read the lower character/s.


Saturday, 12 October 2019

Lodmoor on a Wet Day

We arrived in Weymouth mid-afternoon.  After unloading the car I checked the sea from the apartment and found a distant Great Northern Diver and a Little Gull flying past.

Great Northern Diver - Summer plumaged but rather distant!!

I then heard news from Birdguides of a Grey Phalarope at nearby Lodmoor. It was getting late in the afternoon and with fading light I grabbed my birding gear and departed.  Unfortunately I did not pick up my waterproof trousers so when the heavens opened I got soaked!!  I also could not find the Phalarope.

The next morning it was still raining but not that hard so I put on my waterproof trousers and coat, collected my optics and off I went to Lodmoor again.

This time the Grey Phalarope was soon found feeding on some low vegatation.  So despite the rain I managed to get a few photos.
Grey Phalarope - It had apparently present for several days but elusive at times.
A short video of the Grey Phalarope

Several other species were present including Great White and Little Egrets, a Greenshank, a Ruff, Black-tailed Godwits,  Dunlin, Snipe, Marsh Harrier, plus various duck species.

Great White Egret


Ruff - Odd to see one with such a white head.

Greenshank 

Black-tailed Godwit - about a dozen present.