Tuesday, 7 April 2026

Martin's Haven

Pretty quiet at the start of the weekend due to the wind(!), but Sunday and Monday were lovely.

Not much in the way of passerines: 2 each M&F Wheatear passed through, and a trickle of Swallows.

There is a very wet corner of one of the Trehill Farm fields just by the entrance to West Hook Farm. This still has some standing water, and looks good for attracting migrants for as long as the water remains. We had a Ringed Plover there Sunday morning, and a pair of Shelduck yesterday. 

Several Snipe heard in the valley in the evenings, but noting flushed there, or on the Trehill fields.

A big blitz of Gannets and likely 30++ Common Dolphin off Martin's Haven mid-day Saturday.

Easter porpoise watch at Strumble Head

Twenty + visitors turned up for our Easter Porpoise watch and were rewarded with great views of close Porpoises and also Common Dolphins for the whole two hours! Birdwise, star of the show was a single "commic" Tern. Several Wheatear were feeding in the field nearest the car park and towards the end of the watch, small flurries of hirundines. Mainly sand martins with a few swallows, swept by low and fast in the blustery SE blow.

Monday, 6 April 2026

Preselis

Nice to see 2 Willow Tits at a traditional site in the Preselis today, and at the same site we heard our first Common Cuckoo of the spring.

A single Black Guillemot in Fishguard Harbour late afternoon. (Dave & Lisa)

2 Ospreys fishing at Llys-y-fran Reservoir today (Cerianne Palmer).

Brent Geese

From Carl Mitchell: Three (late) Pale-bellied Brent Geese (hrota) off Pickleridge (SM814066) at tide edge.
16:00 on 6/4/26

Sunday, 5 April 2026

Hirundines and wheater NT Castell

 Steady passage of swallows along the coast south of the Fishguard Bay caravan park this afternoon (all heading towards Fishguard) , a few sand martins in with them and 2 house martins . 

2 male wheatear in the field in front of Tŷ Castell 

Friday, 3 April 2026

Marloes Mere

An hour at the mere late afternoon. Pair of lapwing with the male displaying and later chasing off a raven and a herring gull that got too inquisitive. The black-tailed godwit still here the only other wader. 32 coot. Shoveler 22 pair, plus 16 m, 1 female, Teal 15 pair plus 1 m, 3 f,  Gadwall 3 pair, plus 5m, 3 f. C20 wigeon. 3 pair Tufted duck. 2 pair Little grebe, 2 pair moorhen. Chough feeding in the car park. Couple of nice flocks of 50-100 linnet in the fields on either side.

Late afternoon at Strumble 2/4/26

  A brief watch at the lookout, WNW breeze, circa 30-40 well spread out  Common Dolphins  feeding.  Manxies coming out of the bay in dribs and drabs 5-10 at a time, where on recent visits just odd singletons.

Thursday, 2 April 2026

 Jay-East Haverfordwest

Jay returns to garden, after two years of absence. Posing with tulips whilst gathering peanuts, presumably to feed young. 



Marloes Mere - Ringed Lesser Black-backed Gull

Some details of a LBB Gull sporting a blue ring that was at Marloes Mere a few days ago. Although the ring is broken and slightly abraded on the side in view there is sufficient to confirm it as being of the form

F:XXX, in this case F:09?.

This narrows it down to being one of 10 birds ringed in 2014 on Flat Holm Island near Cardiff.

If anyone sees it and can read the full number on other side of the ring the ringers will be very pleased to hear confirmation of it.

Identity Crisis

 An old saying often used to guide newcomers to birding is "A rook on his own is a Crow, a Crow in a crowd is a Rook"  Of course as with anything in the natural world, there are often exceptions, but generally this holds true. 
For birders with any experience of course, there is no difficulty separating the two, but what about the birds themselves?

This year in Sutton, the Rookery has definitely increased in size with the nest count likely to top 100, but among the raucous clamour, there is a persistent 3 or 4 note call, yes, a Carrion Crow seems to have decided to become a member of the family, and he is very determined, been here with the same pair of Rooks (who are not best pleased) since February. Every now and then they try and see him off, and on one occasion it developed into a right old scrap, but the Crow had the upper hand (Beak?) and so won his seat.

We have over the years had some odd occurances at the rookery, it was displaced by Ravens from an earlier location, the chicks were predated on for about 3 years by an opportunistic Buzzard and later again by a Raven, the Crow who would be a Rook is just the latest episode in the drama.

I thought it was unusual enough to make a post about though. 

Egyptian Geese.

 3 at Westfield Pill this morning.In a lifetime of birding in the county, my only other sightings were at Mathry and Llysyfran in the late 70's,early 80's.Potential county tick for some, if not disturbed by dog walkers.

Tuesday, 31 March 2026

North Pembrokeshire, 30th/31st March 2026

Two Greylag Geese, a gander and goose, were seen yesterday (30/3/26) on the pond just before the railway bridge on the back road between the A40 and Mathry, where in 2024 also 2025, goslings were raised.

Swallows were passing by Strumble Head as were Manx Shearwaters. Today a single partially moulted Turnstone, and a single Wheatear were on the Green Breakwater, Fishguard Harbour. Also in the harbour, three winter plumaged Great Northern Divers and a Black Guillimot were also present

Ring Ouzel at Morfa Common yesterday; some observations in south Pembs yesterday and today

Rob Davies from Llanunwas managed to get an unusual flight-angle photo of a fine, and apparently very obliging, male ring ouzel at Morfa Common yesterday. He noted some wheatears there too.

Down in the south, we had a walk around Penally yesterday and Manobier to Lydstep this afternoon. It was good to see rooks busy in a wooded area at Penally that they have been mostly absent from for the last few years, and at a possible new small rookery at Skrinkle. 

A few swallows were passing along the coast yesterday and also today. A male was back in a breeding territory near Skrinkle – visiting a likely nest site and singing on a nearby fence. There were no obvious females in the area though. 

Like Rosemary's observation, a bit early here too but not especially so. Having noted passage in North Pembs in the first few days of March, presumably they have been arriving earlier in some other places too. 

This male swallow spent several minutes singing on a fence near a building it also visited this afternoon, where there has been evidence of breeding in previous years

Kestrels were back in likely breeding areas; an adult female/immature male noted at Penally yesterday and a fine adult male at Manorbier this afternoon.

It was also good to see a few starlings at likely usual breeding locations at Manorbier. Their breeding populations are quite scattered in Pembs. but, in south Pembs, the area between Manorbier Newton/Jameston to Tenby and to Pentlepoir seems to be a regular breeding zone. 

Choughs seem to be settling in too at most expected places in south Pembs. At this time of year, we often see courtship feeding, where the female will sometimes call a bit like a recently fledged juvenile, and raise and quiver her open wings, to encourage her partner to feed her.

We've been observing some pairs doing this at a few places in recent days, but at one location yesterday a lone individual (probably a female) was behaving this way with no obvious male around at all. This very approachable bird landed in front of one of us (Bob) and, from only a few feet away, started to call and wing-quiver as if it was expecting to be fed! Whilst I probably do know the choughs quite well along the south Pembs coast, having been observing them regularly during the breeding season for more than 40-years, this is possibly the first time that I seem to have been singled out and solicited by one of them!  

This chough definitely seemed to want my attention from only a few feet away!

Watching this bird as it came closer to me, I had immediate recollections of similar chough behaviour on Islay, in the Hebrides, from some photos sent to me by Eric Bignal who monitors choughs there. He used to regularly feed (possibly still does) a small flock at a winter-feeding station. They waited for him and started wing-quivering as soon as he got out of his vehicle. I wondered if this bird was also used to being fed by someone. Future visits will hopefully reveal if it does have a feathered partner somewhere. If not, with any luck it will have one soon. Choughs are very intelligent birds and their individual behaviour is sometimes unpredictable but always fascinating to watch! 

Swallows

2 swallows on our electricity wires today!! If they are "our" breeding swallows then this is incredibly early - usually they arrive about 17th April. 

Rosemary Royle

Goshawks

 After days of cold wind it was, unexpectedly, warm enough to sit outside in the garden and I’m glad I took advantage.  Early afternoon I looked up to see a large raptor soaring overhead and with binoculars to hand found it was a Goshawk. After being approached by a Crow it moved on and started displaying briefly with some slow wing beats. A second Gos then appeared chasing the first bird and they both flew off eastward.

Westfield Pill.

A stunning drake Mandarin.3 drake, one female Gadwall,with signs of nest building taking place, and a very vocal Cetti's warbler. 

Sunday, 29 March 2026

Swallow

 A single bird flew across  the road in front  of me at Rickeston as I was returning  from Milford  about an hour  ago.

Sandwich Terns

 Two close inshore  at the Gann this afternoon.