Sunday, 26 August 2018

Barry Buddon and Easthaven

I took advantage of the opening of Barry Buddon on Friday which appears to remain free of live firing for the rest of the month. There were 9 Wheatears near the lighthouses and a Kestrel chasing another small raptor which could have been a Merlin or a small male Kestrel. On the beach were 17 Grey Plover, 1 Golden Plover, 3 Bar-tailed Godwits, Curlews, Sanderlings, various gulls and around 150 terns, Arctic, Common and Sandwich.


To me, the tern third from the left is a Roseate Tern. I've used various tools to check the beak colour and measured the bird against the other terns for length and looked at many photos. I note it also has rings on both legs. I had seen it on the beach from afar and when a Great Black-backed Gull flushed all of the terns I took a few speculative shots and look to have got lucky



Grey Plovers, some of a flock of seventeen on the beach north of the lighthouses at Barry Buddon


Very wary birds, photos from around 70 metres 



There were seven of these young Swallows on the roof of the "North Firing Range Hut" which borders the golf links. Elsewhere along the beach many Swallows appeared to be migrating southwards


It was raining at this point but not enough to stop the adults feeding the youngsters






Antler Moth on Barry Buddon


Peacock Butterfly, near Happy Valley on Barry Buddon 



Tapered Drone Fly on Barry Buddon



A very wet male Reed Bunting in front of the car park at Easthaven



There are very large numbers of Starlings along the beach just now, they are feeding on the stranded seaweed. On the day after I took this we were watching a young cow which had got into/under this device and had Starlings around its feet, when a female Sparrowhawk flew under the structure trying to take a Starling, it failed but didn't go far, waiting for a second chance



Golden Plover, one of six at Hatton


Wheatear north of Hatton, one of seven along the beach fence line where the tank traps are situated


Bar-tailed Godwits, Hatton


Curlews, Hatton


1 comment:

  1. As suspected, your tern is indeed a Roseate. They stand out as being really pale compared to the more greyer plumage of both Commons and Arctic, which makes them a lot easier to find than you expect them to be when you see them in books. The 2 rings is more or less confirmation, though since last year they have apparently only been ringed with 1 - from what I remember the style of code is different to usual metal ring presentation (2 characters over 2, I think).

    ReplyDelete

Search Blog

Blog archive