September 2022 pt ii

Siberian Stonechat - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22

After months of complaining about the lack of twitchable rare birds turning up on the island, it was good to hear that a Siberian Stonechat had appeared at Pleinmont, albeit a species that I had already seen on the headland 13 years ago. I didn’t rush up there straight away and waited until later in the day when I was able to watch the bird by myself. It was difficult to get very close to the bird as it was feeding along the bramble-line between the two Societe fields, with no cover to hide behind. It was great to watch though, constantly sallying up to catch flies against the pale blue sky. When it did it flashed its main feature, the pale buff rump patch. Nowadays, the “Eastern” Stonechats seem to have been split further but the caucasian birds have white in the tail, and the far-eastern birds tend to be darker and oranger. This very pale bird with clear, sandy upperparts matches what would expect from a “maurus”.

Siberian Stonechat - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22

Siberian Stonechat - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22

Siberian Stonechat - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22 - The firstthing I do with my photos striaght off the camera is to reduce the original size by 50% to maintain the detail and sharpness. With birds which are a little distant though, this makes them a little small in the frame. The two photos above show the differences. It is difficult to know which is best - size vs sharpness - I guess it depends on the situation but it’s something to think more about in future.

Siberian Stonechat - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22

I had a little wander round in the sun and found a Whinchat and a Pied Flycatcher on the headland. Also, there was a Vestal moth hiding in the grass by the Sibe Stonechat field, and a wonderfully showy Clouded Yellow on the cliff path feeding voraciously on Autumn Squill. Despite the increase in many southern species, Clouded Yellows seem to have suffered a decline in sightings. We used to see them more regularly but this was my first good look at one for a few years.

Clouded Yellow - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22

Clouded Yellow - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22

Vestal - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22

Wheatear - Pleinmont, 17 Sep 22

The rest of September was pretty poor for migrants and uncommon species. On 18th September a Great Spotted Woodpecker overflew the garden. This is the first year that this has started to happen but I suppose that it will become regular with the species’ expansion. I would not be surprised if they started breeding in the huge trees in the gardens just to the north of where we live, visible from our front window. The best bird found was a Wryneck on 21st by the pond at the Peninsula Hotel. That area of mowed grass and reeds is pretty good for migrants which like that kind of habitat, and if I was able to visit more often than just once or twice a week then it may produce some better birds. Perhaps it is attractive to such birds because, since it is not public land, there are no dog-walkers there flushing all and sundry - the blight of west coast birders!

Wryneck - Rousse, 21 Sep 22

Wryneck - Rousse, 21 Sep 22

Pond behind the Peninsula

Grey Wagtail and Water Rail returned to Pulias on 22nd. Due to favourable seawatching winds - something of a rarity this year - I called in for a brief seawatch at Pulias on the way home from work on 28th hoping for a Balearic Shearwater or a Great Skua or similar. However, the only bird I picked out in the 20 minutes was a Sooty Shearwater, only my second record for the site - “patch-gold” as they say!

Dunlin - Pulias, 20 Sep 22

Dunlin - Pulias, 20 Sep 22

Dunlin - Pulias, 20 Sep 22

Great Spotted Woodpecker - Grand Pre, 19 Sep 22

Vazon Bay

August/September 2022

The second half of August and the first half of September saw plenty of uncommon and interesting migrants but, as like much of 2022, lacked any real rarities to add a garnish of excitement. On 24th there was the unusual sight of a Pied Flycatcher flying below me, low over the rockpools at Rousse, confusing my brain at first. The same day saw a Tree Pipit calling over the house. Visited a few spots on 26th with a selection of commoner waders seen, plus another Tree Pipit, this time perched in a tree by Beaucette Marina.

Redshank - Claire Mare, 26 Aug 22

Grey Heron - Vale Pond, 26 Aug 22

Went out to Pleinmont early morning on 28th August because Andy had put a moth trap had been left of the cliffs due to the Societe open day in the morning. Nothing obvious new to me but there were a few migrants in, including a whopping 7 Convolvulus Hawk-moths! Amazing stuff, but not a surprise due to the influx from the south. Just standing around the weedy strip area, sorting stuff out, we managed to pick up a Redstart, a Pied and a Spotted Flycatcher, all in the same few Blackthorn bushes. Also, we noticed a load of gulls take flight from round the Hanois, and saw a large raptor flying over the sea, really far out. We managed to identify as (the expected) Osprey but it never came close. On the way home, called in to see a Curlew Sandpiper from the hide at Claire Mare. Not a bad morning’s haul from such little effort! (on my part, I must add - lots of effort from other people!)

ConvOLVULUS Hawk-moth & friends - Pleinmont, 28 Aug 22

Curlew Sandpiper with Dunlins - Claire Mare, 28 Aug 22

Returned up to the headland the next day, 29th August, and was pleased with some pleasant birding and a nice scattering of migrants. Round Pleinmont and Mont Herault there was at least 20 Whinchats, 2 Tree Pipits, 3 Yellow Wagtails, 2 Swifts and a Golden Plover which looked like it had just arrived over the sea. These totals are comparatively low compared with previous autumns, but it seems to be par for the course in 2022. I am hoping that these paltry migrant numbers are just a temporary glitch, but there are indications that this may be the sign of things to come. I suppose though, if most species become rare, then there are more rare species to find! errr…….maybe.

Golden Plover - Mont Herault, 29 Aug 22

Golden Plover - Mont Herault, 29 Aug 22

Golden Plover - Mont Herault, 29 Aug 22

juvenile Med Gull - Perelle, 29 Aug 22

Yellow-Legged Gull - Perelle, 29 Aug 22

Another trip up to Pleinmont on 2nd September was similar to the last but there were two particular species I saw that I haven’t seen for a while. One was a Clouded Yellow flying across the BBC field which I don’t think I have had in a few years. The second was catching up with a recent Dartford Warbler in the Pleinmont gorse, something that I hadn’t seen in over a decade on the island as they became extinct a while ago. There has been the odd migrant sighting since but not by me. I didn’t see it for very long but it was good to soak in some retro 2000s vibes. Fingers crossed for a re-colonisation.

Whinchat - Pleinmont, 2 Sep 22

A glutton for punishment, I returned to Pleinmont again on 4th September for little reward. Returning to work, a few waders were at Vale Pond on 6th September - 3 Black-tailed Godwits and 2 Greenshanks - but the oddest sighting was a Kingfisher flying across the road in front of me as I turned inland from Vazon - probably heading for the ponds at Grande Mare. A quick visit to Pleinmont again on 11th revealed a nice Pied Flycatcher but very little else, but a Ruff on the saltmarsh at L’Eree on the way home was the first I’ve seen for ages. So, a pleasant month’s birding but, even if I didn’t find a bonus bird, it would have been nice to see someone else’s rare find. Local twitches feel like they are getting less regular. Are the birds not here? Are less people searching?

Black-tailed Godwits - Vale Pond, 6 Sep 22

Pied Flycatcher - Pleinmont, 11 Sep 22

Ruff - L’Eree, 11 Sep 22

Med Gulls - Perelle, 4 Sep 22