Festival Week - my least favourite week of spring. Too many people, too much noise. I only stayed 3 days, Tuesday to Thursday.
Not too many birds, but plenty of interest.
Early April is cuckoo time on Po Toi, this week saw the first Indian Cuckoo returning, a singing Hodgson's Hawk Cuckoo early on Wednesday morning, and the long staying Chestnut-winged Cuckoo. Also the first Black Drongos to arrive back on Po Toi - my least favourite bird, they have already taken up residence in the tallest trees and are scaring off everything else. With the Black Drongos, an early Hair-crested Drongo.
Other new spring species this week, for me at least, Red Turtle Dove, White-throated Needletail, Eyebrowed Thrush and Asian Brown Flycatcher. Most of the 'colourful' flycatchers have now left, maybe the next cold front will bring in some more or maybe we have seen the last of them for this year. It has been an excellent year for Narcissus, a good year for Ferruginous and Blue-and-white but no Mugimaki as yet.
Here photos of a passing Grey-faced Buzzard (the last of the year?), two more photos of the superb White-throated Needletail on Thursday, an Eyebrowed Thrush, an Asian Brown and a Narcissus Flycatcher.
Most of the Narcissus this year have been male first summer birds, still with some winter plumage like this bird, and looking very messy.
At sea, migrations of three different species this week, all in the early morning as is usual in April.
21 Greater Crested Terns passed in 2 hours on Wednesday morning, in groups averaging 4-5 birds. This is my highest ever count but I have regularly seen small flocks of Greater Crested Tern at this time in past years so I imagine these sorts of numbers are normal in mid April.
A substantial migration of Pond Herons on Thursday morning, total over 200 birds including one flock of 71, most of them heading up the East Lamma Channel.
Also on Thursday morning, a passage of Red-necked Phalaropes, 360 birds in 2 hours flying steadily out of the East Lamma Channel heading for the northern tip of Dangan Island. Good visiblilty seems to be the key driver for this type of Red-necked Phalarope migration, when they can see Dangan Island clearly.
Also seen at sea this week, the last remnants of the Heuglin Gull migration and the first skua, probably a Long-tailed but quite distant, and a single Swinhoe's Egret which flew up the channel and landed on the south coast rocks. Here a single Greater Crested Tern plus the Swinhoe's Egret
I have given up dreamimg of the next cold front, it never seems to arrive this year.
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Last edited by wgeoff at 15/12/2009 06:02 ]