Still at Sandy Haven, mobile, round and about the chapel area at lunchtime on Saturday.
Rosemary Royle
Still at Sandy Haven, mobile, round and about the chapel area at lunchtime on Saturday.
Rosemary Royle
Here`s a few of the Western Reef Heron, taken earlier today approx 100mtrs downstream from the Church
Following the sighting of this 1st for Britain at Sandy Haven back on 13th May, and it's presence in North Wales from 5th to 20th June, today it reappeared at Sandy Haven! After speaking to a local resident it transpires she saw it yesterday, let's hope it stays for a while so that everyone can enjoy this special visitor to our County.
The bird can range anywhere from Sandy Haven beach up to the top end at Rickeston, subject to tide and disturbance. There are VERY limited places to park along the west side of the pill, the best place to view from is the creek at Aenon Baptist Chapel where perhaps half a dozen cars can be parked safely on the wide side of the bend at the chapel wall. The largest car park is on the east side at Sandy Haven Beach, accessed from Herbrandston, but across the high tide period you cannot access the pill itself much beyond the stepping stones opposite the caravan park (the crossing was cut off today over 3 hours before high tide).
Please do park considerately and good luck! For anyone trying on Saturday please note there is a large cycling event passing through the area, details here.
From Maggie Bissmire: Spotted flycatchers have returned to an old mossy nest in a trellis on an outbuilding in our garden in Henry’s Moat. There are at least 4 fledglings there this morning. Last year they had 2 broods (4 and 2 eggs) but no chicks made it to adulthood from the second clutch.
Young Great Green Bush cricket
Ruddy darter (female)
From Vicky Pearson:
We were out last night (Sunday) to watch the solstice sunset from Carn Ingli. We sat for a the actual sunset on a big rock not far from the Bedd Morris car park. Out a sea, on the east side of Dinas Mountain, not far off the coast, we could see a huge raft of birds, so close together it was just a dark mass, with dots of outliers. (Between 9.15 & 9.45pm). They were moving around, with the ‘dark mass’ dispersing and reforming, flying low over the sea. It looked like a feeding frenzy on a fish ball. They didn’t ‘feel’ like gulls in behaviour and I guess they could be guillemots and razorbills from Needle Rock, but my feeling was Shearwaters. Having seen Chris Peirpoint’s post about Manxies in Fishguard Bay the same evening, I’m hopefully someone can confirm that….
Exactly where I saw a singing male lesser whitethroat on 26.04 (see blog) today a singing male was moving along the roadside hedgerows in Butts Lane by the entrance to the north car park. As far as I could make out a brood was moving about - only brief views as they were keeping below the shrub canopy...(consults book)...says here they can have two broods?
Kayaking along the bottom of the woods at Goultrop Roads, little haven, I saw a pair of common sandpiper. The time is right for breeding as is the habitat (if a bit atypical)! The pair were behaving just like I've seen them when around nests in the lake district. Unconfirmed but interesting.
On a ride up into the hills from Llandilo on a perfect day we recorded nesting House Martins at Ty Mawr (so close to home but they are only occasional flyovers at home). 2 adult Great Spotted Woodpeckers, singing Whitethroat, Reed Bunting, Grasshopper Warbler, Stonechat and Skylark, juvenile Mistle and Song Thrushes and Pied Wagtails and song flighting Meadow Pipits all along the edge of Coed Glyn Aeron. Also here was a singing Greenfinch which was a treat. Then across to Pantmaenog where several flyover Lesser Redpolls and Siskins were heard and juv Coal Tits in the trees. No Redstarts along the quarry track (used to be a cert in bird race days), Moorhen heard on the pond in Rosebush caravan park, 4 Swifts in Maenclochog village then back to our stable where our Great Tits have just fledged.
At lunchtime today a Hobby was, briefly, hawking insects around the pools on the Dowrog. Also, a Cuckoo was being chased off the Dowrog by a Meadow Pipit.
On Saturday, a Great Egret in its summer finery by the Eastern Cleddau at Slebech. This area also seems to be acting as a creche for Canada Geese in particular and also other waterfowl.
There was cacophonous calling from Manx shearwaters, below and to both sides of my tent at Crincoed Point last night, from 00:30-02:15. There must have been a substantial raft of birds down there. Some very close fly-bys too. They arrived in the dark and had left by dawn. Magic!
From Steve: So glad that this juvenile Blackbird in Thomas Chapel had the white ring around the back of its neck otherwise I would have been thinking juvenile Ring Ouzel. I forgot to send it on the 9th sorry for the delay.