Cuckoo 2 pair chasing each other around the area
Lesser whitethroat 1 new bird for my walk with the dog
Willow warbler 4
Grasshopper warbler 2
Chiff chaff 5
Sedge warbler 2
Stonechat 4 pair
Kestrel male
Buzzard 2
Red kite 2
Linnet 5 pairs
Swallow 6
Cuckoo 2 pair chasing each other around the area
Lesser whitethroat 1 new bird for my walk with the dog
Willow warbler 4
Grasshopper warbler 2
Chiff chaff 5
Sedge warbler 2
Stonechat 4 pair
Kestrel male
Buzzard 2
Red kite 2
Linnet 5 pairs
Swallow 6
Two juvenile Starlings have been around since last week - Milford Haven (Paul Warren)
Had a quick look after work and the Dottrel (3) were still present on the West Hook Farm fields. Afraid distence and heat haze affected the quality of the images. Hopefully will get to see them again before they move on.
Two Cuckoos near Llangloffan Fen yesterday (Shirley Matthews)
Sand Martins have returned to the small cliff colony at Nolton (Frank)
The Guillimots and Razorbills were getting down to buisness of trying to create the next generation!
The Shag is in its usual very easy to see nesting spot, nest made of very green vegatation at the moment. An adult was sitting tight while I passed by.
Saw my first coastal Swifts of the year and on review of my images one looked to have a bit of grass in its mouth so hopefully thats a good sign they are thinking of nesting along the section somewhere.
Nice to see the Ravens have fledged (just the one youngster) within the last week.
| Swift with grass - hopefully a good sign |
| Razorbills getting down to the buisness! |
| Guillimots on one of the ledges. |
| Juv Raven hanging out on cliff - adult was not far away |
From Alan Seago:
Still present at 1.00pm today. Good views of male and female. At
least three individuals present probably four. Thanks to Dan for the
accurate location. Also a Swift making an appearance.
Newport at high tide yesterday morning : 8 whimbrel, 18 dunlin, 1 ringed plover, 1 greenshank . One adult Med gull in breeding plumage in a small flock of BH gulls . Cuckoo calling on north side of estuary. Sedge warbler near the Parrog.
Brian, thank you for your wonderful post - I realise the odds are bad but there will be an awful lot of crossed fingers rooting for them!
Rosemary
Since late February/early March, after the main wintering flock had departed, up to 3 lapwing have been present on and off around the mere. Not the easiest birds to seperate but from the views I had it looked like 2 male and a female. On the 22 March a lone male was displaying and giving its evocative calls, no female was obvious. By the 3 April a female had turned up and more displaying occured. On the 7 April another male arrived, only one seemed territorial and continued to display, chasing off any other birds inc a pair of ruff, and a whimbrel as well as the more obvious dangers of crows and gulls, the other always kept some distance between the pair. The pair seemed to favour an area at the barb-wire gate end among a raised patch of sedge on what was probably the former southside irrigation pond embankment. On the 12 April the 3 lapwing were scattered and away from the usual spot and ominously an adult GBB was standing in the area the female had been frequenting. 15 April no sign of the female, both males visible (one would often be out from the Britton Hide, the newcomer was often on the grassy bank beneath the cottage or over by the Oriole hide). 23 April, 2 males with the dominant bird chasing off a herring gull. 28 April, first visit when there had been no sign of any lapwing at all and I began to think any breeding attempt had failed. Today (4 May), arriving early at 7am, it was a relief to see the male was back and calling loudly and swooping around out from the Britton Hide, a herring gull was chased off repeatedly and the female was also just out from the Britton hide pecking around, the first time I'd seen her since the 12 April, things were looking really promising. I kept an eye on the female, which wasn't easy as she was in the sedges and her lower half was mostly obscured but I persisted. After a couple of false alarms when a dunlin and then a wood sandpiper pottered close by, at 7:50am I noticed a little fluffy blob a couple of yards away from where the female was pecking around, it could only be one thing! A young lapwing, likely less than a week old. It soon disappeared. Amazing. A sense of pride and emotion almost overwhelmed me, what amazing birds. Back tonight for another look, just the male present, quietly sitting out from the Britton hide. Fingers crossed and may the force be with them.
Footnote: the mere has been transformed in recent years thanks to the National Trusts endeavours and Pete and Gina Smithies, at Trehill farm. Great job.
Dotterel, still present. 4 birds (2 male 2 female).
From Dan Watson, Just found this lovely male, view from footpath only.
By 8pm this evening the rising tide had pushed the small wader flock onto Poppit beach..90 Dunlin, 15 Ringed Plover and a Sanderling. 5 Sandwich Tern were roosting on buoys off the saltnarsh.
Earlier in the day 1 Grey Plover, 2 Whimbrel and a lingering Curlew.
The summer plumage Curlew Sandpiper - now at Newport today.
(Photos Jonathon Bissett)
Also 2 Sandwich Terns
From Alan Seago: Warbler-fest Sunday morning. Blackcap, chiffchaff, cetti's, garden warbler and lesser whitethroat. Mallard, 2 canada geese and moorhen on the water.
A summer plumage Curlew Sandpiper on the Teifi this afternoon in one of the three mobile small wader flocks.
Totals 12 Whimbrel, 60 Dunlin and 15 Ringed Plover.
7 Sandwich Terns flew in off the sea at 7pm on the high tide.
A walk from town to Uzmaston and back today was pretty quiet, but on the way out a 50 gull roost of Herring and Lesser Black-back gulls had assembled at the SWT outfall by lunchtime. On the way back the numbers had increased to around 130, so worth a count and a closer look. As often the case, the count was disrupted by a different gull, a subadult Caspian Gull showing many classic features and posing next to a Herring Gull for comparison.
A couple of Great Black-back Gulls also turned up later.
Haverfordwest town was bustling with visitors to the food festival, but all were apparently oblivious to a Dipper feeding just across the river and feeding on a caddis larva and, just 5m away, a Grey Wagtail was hunting for food for the chick following on behind.
There was plenty more evidence of new spring life with a Mallard and at least three small ducklings on Merlin's Brook and a pair of adult Greylags with six small goslings north of the town. A dead, apparently Blackbird chick was on the path beside Bridge Meadow Trust playground, apparently fallen out of the nest as a reminder that they don't all make it.
Lesser whitethroat singing from the blackthorn bushes this evening.
Also plenty of chiffchaff and blackcap around and a male singing
siskin.
Alan Seago
A minimum of four Tree Pipits were singing and displaying in Minwear Woods this morning - three in a large clearing, and a further one near the picnic area adjacent to the road. I also encountered at least three Marsh Tits in the woods near the clearing, and there were a good number of Willow Warblers and Blackcaps, along with Mistle Thrushes, Coal Tits and various other birds.
Yesterday at South Hook, it was good to hear a singing Lesser Whitethroat.