I missed all of the excitement on Saturday, with at least six Two-barred Crossbills turning up across East Anglia, with four of them being in north Norfolk. So today I headed up to Cley where I picked up Mark Golley with the aim to try and find a 2-b Xbill of our own. First though we headed for a quick seawatch to see what was being blown in by the north-easterly winds. The best bird was a pale-phase Pom Skua, slowly gliding by, distinctly more broad and rotund than the 7 or so Arctic Skuas that we also saw. A 1st-summer Little Gull, my first Red-throated Diver of the autumn, a juvenile Med Gull and good numbers of Gannets made for an interesting couple of hours. One of the Arctic Skuas, an adult dark-phase, flew over Eye Field and had a few dive-bombs at a Brown Hare, probably leaving the hare wondering what it'd done wrong!
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Arctic Skua, dark-phase adult, Cley |
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Arctic Skua, dark-phase adult, Cley |
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Arctic Skua, dark-phase adult, Cley |
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Arctic Skua, dark-phase adult, Cley |
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Arctic Skua, dark-phase adult chasing Sandwich Tern, Cley |
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Arctic Skua, dark-phase adult chasing Sandwich Tern, Cley |
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First-summer Little Gull, Cley |
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First-summer Little Gull, Cley |
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First-summer Little Gull, Cley |
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First-summer Little Gull, Cley |
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First-summer Little Gull, Cley |
Mark and I headed off to Walsey hills after the seawatch, but no sign of any crossbills of any kind and then we decided to finish the days' birding off with a walk from Stiffkey Fen along to Stiffkey Woods. The fen look quite good, with 9 Spooonbills, quite a few Med Gulls (adults and juveniles), 2 Green Sands, 5+ Common Sands, Common Terns, Whimbrel and about 50 Black-tailed Godwits. The walk along to Stiffkey Woods was pretty quite with very little to show for our efforts.
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Juvenile Spoonbill |
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Adult Mediterranean Gull |
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Adult Mediterranean Gull |
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Adult Mediterranean Gull |
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Adult Mediterranean Gull |
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Common Tern |
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Common Tern |
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Eurasian Whimbrel |
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Eurasian Whimbrel |
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Eurasian Whimbrel |
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