I’ll start this week with seabirds. My focus of attention was on sea watching, and I spent more than 25 hours at it with the objective of seeing large numbers of Short-tailed Shearwaters. I saw only one. The background to this disaster of forecasting appears elsewhere.
I did see some other birds worth recording, including a Streaked Shearwater, a Brown Booby, five skuas (2 Pomarine, 3 Long-tailed) and 9 species of tern with over 400 White-winged, 80 Whiskered and 40 Aleutian. In all, it worked out at about one bird for every two minutes but since the White-winged arrived in large flocks, there were many rather boring periods.
Here photos of the Short-tailed Shearwater, the Booby, Bridled, Black-naped and a rather scrappy looking Whiskered Tern
Sea watching in spring usually provides a few land birds coming in off the sea, this week a Striated Heron, a Black-crowned Night Heron, an Indian Cuckoo, two Brown Shrikes, one of which unfortunately ditched in the sea just 100 yards from safety, and three Black Drongos. Here the Night Heron and the Cuckoo.
Usually these birds are prime targets for a Peregrine but for some reason there are no Peregrines around this year
On the land, there were two rainy days, Friday 7th and Saturday 15th. Both caused falls of Brown Shrikes as well as some other migrants of interest.
Bird of the week was the Malayan Night Heron which arrived with the first rain and stayed until at least Thursday. These birds look like chickens, except they can fly. Brown Shrikes could be seen all week, as could Grey-streaked and Asian Brown Flycatchers.
Other good birds included a late Chinese Goshawk which arrived with the MNH and stayed all week, a Chestnut-winged Cuckoo, a Brown Hawk Owl, a very attractive Black-capped Kingfisher, a Pechora Pipit, a first-ever Po Toi Pheasant-tailed Jacana which came in with the Saturday rain together with an Intermediate Egret, and a pair of Hill Mynas – where did they come from?
Here photos of the Night Heron, Goshawk, Jacana and Intermediate Egret
The second half of this spring has been quite dull. This could be saved by a good fall of small bitterns over the next 10 days, but without any rain forecast I don’t think this will happen. Although sometimes my forecasts do go wrong ….
In the past, this thread has occasionally criticized apparently mindless government spending on useless projects on Po Toi – but not any more. Following the spending of $200,000 on securing a regular supply of water, they have now replaced both ageing electricity generators with two brand new machines, total cost in excess of $600,000.
So, $800,000 in total for the benefit of 20 residents works out at $40,000 per resident – does it make sense? Well, maybe it does. Perhaps there is a master plan behind putting solar panels on the toilet or widening the jetty by one foot
– perhaps Po Toi will be the next Discovery Bay?
A multi-storey shopping complex on top of the restaurant, expensive flats with 180 degree sea views around the harbour, a golf course on the football field, and every resident becoming multi-millionaire property developers with the government pocketing billions in land sales. I can see it all.
PS I have been warned that people who spend too long on remote islands can sometimes lose their minds.…..