May 2025 part ii

The bird of the second half of May was bumped into whilst in the car on a family outing. There were lots of birds of prey in the sky on the sunny afternoon of 18th May and, as well as plenty of Buzzards, I had already seen 3 different Marsh Harriers during the journey. As we climbed the hill along Pleinmont Road, about level with Mont Herault, I noticed yet another Marsh Harrier flying low over the fields to my right. After passing it, my brain clicked into gear and I had a sudden thought it was not a harrier at all. I asked Rosie to stop the car and I jumped out to look back. Straight away, I saw a Black Kite gaining height and moving easterly towards me.

Black Kite - near Mont Herault, 18 May 25

It carried on soaring for a wee while and I managed to get my camera out and fire off a few shots. It was only then I realised I was standing in the middle of the main road over a blind summit, and I really should move. The family thought so too with their frantic gestures. There had been a Black Kite seen 48 hours prevuisly but not at all the day before so I was considering whether this may be a new bird in. However, when I compared my photos with those taken on Friday, the nicks and gaps in the flight feathers matched the pattern exactly so it was the same bird as before. Black Kite is still a surprisingly rare bird here as we thought records would increase and it would become a regular visitor. This is only the 14th in Guernsey and only the second since 2020.

Black Kite - near Mont Herault, 18 May 25

The rest of May was quiet for birds with just the regular passage species noted. On 30th May I managed to get out in perfect conditions to look for insects on the cliffs, warm, dry and not very windy. The cliffs in Spring are full of insects in these conditions and I saw lots of interesting species. There were four lifers seen with Scarce 7-spot Ladybird being the one I was especially looking for and wasn’t hard to find in the end as they are nearly always by the large ants’ nests. The large Honeysuckle-feeding sawfly Abia fasciata (or Banded Clubhorn) was photographed. The other two new species were Spiked Shieldbug, of which I only saw a tiny nymph which was predating springtails, and the Broom-feeding weevil Polydrusus confluens.

Evacanthus interruptus - Corbiere, 30 May 25 - a pleasing photo of a distinctive leafhopper

Scarce 7-spot Lapybird - Corbiere, 30 May 25 - It looks pretty much like your standard 7-spot, with the main difference being a couple of extra white spots on the underside.

Abia fasciata - Corbiere, 30 May 25 - one of the larger sawflies

Pammene aurana - Corbiere, 30 May 25 - a very typical moth on the spring on the cliffs which is more or less the only place I see it

Grey Bush-cricket nymph - Corbiere, 30 May 25

Violet-winged Mining Bee - Corbiere, 30 May 25

Spiked Shieldbug nymph - Corbiere, 30 May 25

Corizus hyoscyami - Corbiere, 30 May 25

May 2025 part i

First day of the month, I called in at Fort Hommet before work and was greeted by a trio of flycatchers in the pines - 2 Spotted and a Pied. These few trees are definitely the best place to see flycatchers in Guernsey. There were also two Common Sandpipers on the beach. It was one of those days when you wish you could just drive on past school and carry on birding.

Pied Flycatcher - Ft Hommet, 1 May 25

Spotted Flycatcher - Ft Hommet, 1 May 25

On 2nd May there was a notable influx of Painted Ladies and I counted 12 along a short stretch of Thrift along Pulias headland after work, and a few more by Rousse car park. The winds on the day were not particularly southerly but I think the butterflies must have been pushed up the previous day by the warm breeze from the south.

Painted Lady - Pulias, 2 May 25

After work on 6th May I went down to Rue des Bergers/Grand Mare to specifically look for a Red-footed Falcon as there had been a big UK influx. The boldest gamble but you’ve got to aim high. There were quite a few hirundines and raptors in the air and I gasped slightly when a falcon swooped in to view. However, in the bins it was a Hobby - not quite as hoped but never to be sniffed at, it was a cracking bird.

Feeling liberated on 9th May, I heard of a White Stork on the grapevine flying about not too far away, no doubt the Knepp-ringed bird that had been seen the previous day. So I took my bins into the back garden and, surprisingly, it very soon came in from the south and flew past the house. We seem to be getting Knepp birds regularly at the moment and I don’t feel ready to tick them yet, not even for my garden list. I saw the bird a second time, flying over the car at Saltpans on our return from the supermarket, and then a third time late afternoon flying to the north of the house towards Oatlands. Quite an exciting bird to see despite its jewellery.

White Stork - over the garden, 9 May 25

The following weekend was pretty wet, but I tried Pleinmont anyway with little success, mainly dodging the heavy showers. A summer-plumaged Bar-tailed Godwit on the beach at L’Eree at first light was the pick of the birds seen. Migration had pretty much stopped for the spring, but Fort Hommet had another Spotted Flycatcher, a Grey Plover and a Reed Warbler over the next few days.

Bar-tailed Godwit - L’Eree, 11 May 25

Grey Plover - Vazon, 12 May 25

With the temperatures warmer, the invertebrates started to appear in numbers. The conditions were not great for moth trapping but it seems to be a good year for Little Thorn with a couple in the trap and a couple also seen in the field. I had only my second Guernsey Golden-brown Fern Moth (Musotima nitidalis) at the window on 13th May, a species which is no doubt on the cusp of proliferating on the island.

Tropidia scita - Grand Pre, 10 May 25 - a common springtime hoverfly although a new species for me

White-shouldered Shieldbugs - Grand Pre, 10 May 25 - these recent arrivals appear to have spread throughout the island

Nursery-web Spider - Grand Pre, 10 May 25

Blue-tailed Damselfly - Grand Pre, 10 May 25

Woodpigeon - Garden, 9 May 25

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