March 2025

March birding was limited due to a couple of important visits to the UK, but the first proper summer migrants started coming in as usual. The first obvious migrants were 2 Chiffchaffs in the coastal bushes at Fort Hommet on 4th, but I didn’t get my first Wheatears until 14th, a little later than usual. A Swallow heading up the coast at Cobo on 17th was an early sighting but the hirundines were pretty late coming in, with 28th the first real obvious date for Sand Martins.

I did miss one or two good birds being away, and one of them was a super-rare American Herring Gull found by Wayne the day I first departed. It disappeared before I returned, only to reappear again just as I was going on my second journey. When I came back late in the month I had a couple of looks for it to no avail, but thankfully I got a call from Wayne on Saturday afternoon, 29th March, that it had returned to its regular spot on Perelle Beach. I raced down there and was pleased to see it still present. Not only a new species for me in Guernsey, but also in the UK and the World! Of course, when I was a young birder, AHG was not actually a species, but a subspecies, so I didn’t really pay attention to it at the time, so I may have seen it in Canada years ago but I don’t know either way.

American Herring Gull - Perelle, 29 Mar 25

As can be seen from the photo above it was a first-winter bird, but it wasn’t a super-obvious individual and kudos for Wayne for picking it out. It does have quite a few features though once you look at it that give some clues. AHGs are often bigger and bulkier than European Herrings (EHG) but this bird was not obviously so. Its underparts were a different colour than you would expect on a EHG, being a more uniform soft brown colour, with gently paler fringes, and an almost velvety texture (seen more clearly on the photo below). EHG is typically whitish below with dark brown blotches of varying degrees. A good feature is a darker, more solid brown upper mantle and hind-neck which was very obvious on this bird, contrasting with the rest of the plumage. AHG heads can be quite whitish, this one was whitish in base colour, but still had lots of streaks, including a darker mask behind the eye. Bills of AHG can be very pale and “dipped in ink” - this one’s bill was a bit manky, but had the basic pattern albeit faded. I found that the bird had a bit of the Frankenstein’s monster about it - looking like a few different gulls’ body parts stitched together!

American Herring Gull - Perelle, 29 Mar 25

American Herring Gull - Perelle, 29 Mar 25

In the photo above you can see a few other features. The underwing is a very dark chocolate brown. Both the upper and undertail coverts and the rump are heavily barred with brown - each feather being more brown than it is white. EHG is much less heavily barred in these areas. You can also see the very dark tail.

American Herring Gull - Perelle, 29 Mar 25

The tail pattern can be seen more easily in this flight photo. Every tail feather is fully dark brown with no pale base at all. Only the outer tail feather’s outer fringe has a row of pale dots along the edge. EHG would generally show some pale bases to the tail feathers, even on dark birds. The plumage of this bird is in a bit of a state, with the outer primaries snapped off, especially on the left wing.

American Herring Gull - Perelle, 29 Mar 25

A rainbow over Vazon

February 2025

February sightings included a true historic moment for Guernsey birds, with the first ever pair of Great Crested Grebes nesting on the island and laying an egg. I had heard that the long-staying pair of GCGrebes had built a nest in the middle arm of the Reservoir, so with an hour or so spare on 15th February, I went to have a look. The nest was surprisingly easy to find, right at the start of the walk and right out in the middle of the inlet. I was pleased to see the single bird sitting there but was even more pleased, when the bird pushed off for a swim, there was a single white egg in the nest. This species has never bred here before, and if fact hardly ever gets seen in freshwater habitats, so this was superb to see. It is very early in the year, so whether the eggs hatch or not remains to be seen.

Great Crested Grebe - Reservoir, 15 Feb 25

Great Crested Grebe - Reservoir, 15 Feb 25

After here I visited a few spots in the pleasant late-winter sun, and saw some Cattle Egrets along Rue des Hougues, Castel in their usual fields, and saw the wintering Scaup bathing furiously in the new pond along Rue des Bergers, where the Mute Swan was hanging out.

Cattle Egret - Rue des Hougues, Castel, 15 Feb 25

Cattle Egret - Rue des Hougues, Castel, 15 Feb 25

Cattle Egret - Rue des Hougues, Castel, 15 Feb 25

Cattle Egrets - Rue des Hougues, Castel, 15 Feb 25

Scaup - Grande Mare GC, 15 FEB 25

Scaup - Grande Mare GC, 15 FEB 25

As usual, the rest of the month was pretty quiet for birds. There was a Little Grebe in the quarry near the house on 2nd - I’ve not seen one on there for ages. I drove past the Mute Swan on the way to work on 12th as it swam in Albecq Bay and Sandwich Tern, Razorbill and Great Northern Diver were all recorded on patch. On 27th I went to Foulon Cemetery to see one of the Hawfinches and hopefully photograph one but, as is my wont, all I got was a couple of brief flight views between trees.

65 Brent Geese - first light at a calm Vazon Bay, 11 Feb 25

Buzzard - Vazon, 18 Feb 25 - the Fort Hommet Buzzard is getting a little too cocky!

Buzzard - Vazon, 18 Feb 25 - a pic through the car window

A little time at the microscope looking at wasps was quite fruitful with 3 species of Cerceris identified, including Cerceris arenaria, new to me, and the non-British spider-hunting wasp Evagetes siculus. I also finally managed to identify, using a decent key found online, one of the large nocturnal orange wasps that I regularly see at windows, or at MV light. It turned out to be Enicospilus inflexus, a new species for Guernsey. ID wasn’t too tricky as it has a distinctively shaped, bendy vein in the wing.

Enicospilus inflexus - garden, 10 Aug 24, to MV

Fence lichens - reservoir, 15 Feb 25

Winter Heliotrope leaves - Reservoir, 15 Feb 25