August 2021 pt i

August began with a single Great Skua passing west off Pulias on 2nd and waders continuing to appear in small numbers with a small flock of Turnstone growing at Jaonneuse and Green Sandpiper at Claire Mare on 7th.

More exciting was the opportunity of going out on a pelagic on 9th but this excitement was cruelly snuffed out upon arrival at the docks when we learnt that the choppiness of the water was a little too rough for an expedition out into the deep Channel. We had to be content with a jaunt to the far side of Sark where birds were few and far between and it was a little disappointing. We had a few good views of Balearic Shearwater but these tended to speed past quickly rather than hang around. Other than that it was just a couple of Manx Shearwaters, a few migrant Swifts and waders that were of interest. A single Ocean Sunfish waved his fin at us and we did have great views of plenty of Grey Seals at the Humps, the most I’ve seen in Guernsey. Not a pelagic really, more of a boat trip. Oh, and I was a bit sick :(

Grey Seal - Humps, 9 Aug 21

Grey Seal - Humps, 9 Aug 21

Grey Seals - Humps, 9 Aug 21

Grey Seals - Humps, 9 Aug 21

Grey Seal - Humps, 9 Aug 21

Grey Seal - Humps, 9 Aug 21

Balearic Shearwater - near Sark, 9 Aug 21

Balearic Shearwater - near Sark, 9 Aug 21

Balearic Shearwater - near Sark, 9 Aug 21

Balearic Shearwater - near Sark, 9 Aug 21

SUNFISH - near Sark, 9 Aug 21

SUNFISH - near Sark, 9 Aug 21

However, things soon brightened up because I was finally able to go visit the family in Yorkshire after a good 20 months without leaving Guernsey - that is a pretty long time, most people managed to get off Alcatraz quicker than that. A Black-browed Albatross had been present at Bempton Cliffs on and off since late June and I was hoping perhaps it would cling on for a bit longer. But unfortunately it hadn’t been seen at all for at least six days and I was resigned to being a bit too late for the party. However, as I was sat in departures in Guernsey Airport, I noticed on Twitter that it had returned and was flying round the cliffs again. It was game on!

I would have been a little rude to drive past my family and straight to the headland! So I played it cool and planned to go down the next morning, 14th August. After negative news early on, just as my dad, my sister and me were about to drive off to Bempton, news came on the phone that it was sat on the cliffs! *fist pumps a-plenty* So we pulled up in the RSPB car park and headed towards the cliff-top. I wasn’t expecting so many Gannets to still be in situ and it was a terrific sight.

As I walked east, I passed birders letting me know it was still present, and my twitching-walk kicked in, gaining pace and accelerating away from the pack. We eventually reached a little huddle of birders on the clifftop looking back across the cliffs towards where we’d walked from. Of course, as I’d flown in for just the weekend with tiny hand-luggage, I only had my bins and was struggling to pick out where the other birders were directing me. After a while it became clear that from that angle you could only see a tiny bit of its back - no wonder I couldn’t pick it out! So I scrambled to the far side of the group and could now definitely see the bird in question. Of course, there were plenty of kind birders there who let us look through their ‘scopes and what a fine bird it was - a flippin’ Black-browed Albatross!!

This was the first albatross I had ever seen. To be honest, I was beginning to think that I would end up never seeing an albatross at all, especially with everything occurring at the moment, so seeing one in my home county was really terrific. I was a little disappointed that it never took flight whilst we were there and we stayed around for a bit just in case. But I cannot complain of course after being a little jammy that it returned just for me and I knew that quite a few people had dipped out.

On the photo below, the bird was sat on the sharp little headland jutting out, just up the slope from the flat bit above the arch. And you may be able to pick out a little huddle of birders on the far cliffs after the next bay - that’s were we were looking from. We didn’t really see much else there, a few Tree Sparrows and a Ringlet butterfly is what I can remember.

Bempton, 14 Aug 21

Bempton, 14 Aug 21

BLACK-BROWED ALBATROSS - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

BLACK-BROWED ALBATROSS - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

BLACK-BROWED ALBATROSS - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

BLACK-BROWED ALBATROSS - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

BLACK-BROWED ALBATROSS - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

BLACK-BROWED ALBATROSS - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

Gannet  - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

Gannet - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

Gannet  - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

Gannet - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

Gannet  - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

Gannet - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

GannetS  - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

GannetS - Bempton, 14 Aug 21

The rest of the time we stayed quite local in Driffield and the adjacent Wolds. Around the town there were some nice chalk streams and bank-side walks to enjoy them, with quite a lot of Stream Water-crowfoot growing, a new plant species for me. I found the Driffield Canal interesting. A very shallow, wide waterway cut into the chalk, to link the market town with the River Hull to transport goods away. An evening walk along here saw Common Sandpiper, Kingfisher, Little Grebes and a superb Fox. I also learnt it was quite a good spot for seeds and peas.

Driffield Canal - 14 Aug 21

Driffield Canal - 14 Aug 21

Little Grebe at dusk - Driffield Canal, 14 Aug 21

Little Grebe at dusk - Driffield Canal, 14 Aug 21

Driffield Canal - 14 Aug 21

Driffield Canal - 14 Aug 21

Driffield Canal - 14 Aug 21

Driffield Canal - 14 Aug 21

It was a very short trip and I didn’t really get much chance to look for much more wildlife, but even watching the Yellowhammers and Tree Sparrows was terrific on the Wolds, there seems to be plenty there. On both drives to and from Leeds-Bradford Airport I saw a few Red Kites drift over the Harewood area. So the albatross was my first new world bird since the Dupont’s Lark in April 2019 - let’s hope it isn’t as long ‘til my next one.

Green Sandpiper - Claire Mare, 7 Aug 21

Green Sandpiper - Claire Mare, 7 Aug 21

Small Tortoiseshell - garden, 11 Aug 21

Small Tortoiseshell - garden, 11 Aug 21