This week I focused almost entirely on looking for seabirds, partly because there was nothing much on land and partly because this is often the peak week for Short-tailed Shearwaters, as this graph of my past records from 2006-2012 shows
Watching for seabirds is called 'seawatching', which is exactly what it is - 99% of your time is watching the sea and 1% watching birds.
But the 1% can be very exhilarating. Unfortunately, it wasn't such a good week for Short-tailed Shearwaters, only seven seen in a total of 16 hours spent 'watching the sea'.
Here some photos
The last two photos here were taken with a new toy I'm experimenting with - a Canon PowerShot SX50, an small, lighweight camera with an amazing 50x optical zoom.
The problem with it is - finding the bird in the viewfinder! At 50x mag, the area covered by the viewfinder is very small and a moving seabird is no easy target. But as you can see, when you find it, the results are quite good compared to my heavy 10x magnification Canon 300x1.4 lens camera. I believe Sony make a similar lightweight 50x camera which may be even better than the PowerShot.
Also seen, a large flock of over 250 terns which started wheeling around high up and then flew away low across the sea but at long range
I called them Common/Aleutian Terns but I'm pretty sure that most, if not all, were Aleutian.
Also in the week, a few Red-necked Phalarope, an Arctic Skua and eleven Greater Crested Terns as well as many, mostly local, Bridled and Black-naped Terns. Here the skua and a Greater Crested, also taken with the PowerShot
And, to keep me from going completely insane from boredom, a large pod of 50-100 dolphins which came down the channel quite a way off shore
Not quite sure what species they are but obviously not Finless or Chinese White
On land, a few Yellow Bitterns and a single Pale Martin, as well as the very late Pallas's Leaf Warbler photographed so well by Herman
I'll try again next week for shearwaters and maybe some bitterns, but that may be my last trip as I'm not available the last week in May
[
Last edited by wgeoff at 18/05/2013 20:59 ]