November/December 2024

I finally managed to find a little of migration happening when I went up to Pleinmont at first light on 3rd November. There were plenty of common species milling about up there with Redwings and Skylarks circling the headland in the dull light. A single Brambling called above the car when I was setting out, but I couldn’t see where it was. One of the first birds I saw was a Short-eared Owl flapping slowly over the Blackthorn and away over the Societe fields. There was not a great deal on the deck but a single Golden Plover warily wandered around the large bare field, until the dogs appeared. Surprisingly a few groups of Lapwings were noted passing overhead - first a group of 5, then 24 and then a large group of 60. A total of about 110 was counted during the morning. Unfortunately, the wooded valleys were quiet for warblers with just a few Chiffchaffs present, but a Teal in Pezeries Bay was a new species for me for Pleinmont. To finish off a nice selection of species, I saw the ringtail Hen Harrier hunting over the fields as I drove away from the headland.

Pulias had a late Wheatear looking sorry-for-itself on 6th November and the first Black Redstart of the winter was there two days later. There had been a small influx of wildfowl during the week including a Scaup which had appeared on the pond on the golf course at Grande Mare. So, with a couple of free hours on Saturday 9th I went down to take a look. It was still present on the same pond that the Lesser Yellowlegs was on earlier in the autumn. This pond is brand new and has attracted lots of good birds, although I suspect that this will not continue in this vein when the golfers start hitting balls across, and into it. This was the first Scaup in the island for well over a decade and only the second I have seen here, the first being on a different pond on the same golf course.

Scaup - Grand Mare GC, 9 Nov 24

The new pond on the new golf course - It has had lots of good birds so far, mainly because the course is not open to golfers yet!

Also, the small pond next door had a Mute Swan swimming around on it, still pretty uncommon but now off the rarity list after an increase in sightings. And as I drove past the other new pond, along Rue des Bergers, I discovered that the Pochard “flock” had increased to four birds, 2 male and 2 female, a pretty decent count for the island.

Mute Swan - Grand Mare GC, 9 Nov 24

Mute Swan - Grand Mare GC, 9 Nov 24

2 male and 2 female Pochards - Rue des Bergers/Grande Mare, 9 Nov 24

With tide conditions at a nice level, I went to Richmond, Vazon after work on 15th November and found a Water Pipit back for the winter. It is difficult to tell on these dull photos, but in the field, I find that the snowy-white tone to the rear flanks is always the best way to pick out a Water Pipit from the brighter Rocks. With the wildfowl visitors on the island, I thought Rue Mainguy pond was worthwhile checking the next day and there was a male Tufted Duck amongst the throng of Mallards - my first of the year! The rest of the month was quiet.

Water Pipit - Vazon, 15 Nov 24

Water Pipit - Vazon, 15 Nov 24

Tufted Duck - Rue Mainguy, 16 Nov 24

December was a very dark and dull month, but I managed a few interesting sightings in the few times I was out and about. Two male Common Scoter were resting in Vazon Bay on 11th and I finally saw my first Kingfisher of the year, resting on the shoreline rocks at Rousse on 16th. I am convinced wintering Kingfisher numbers are going down on the island, I don’t see them half as much as I used to. The Great Crested Grebe at the Reservoir had been joined by another bird when I went on 23rd. Perhaps they may be pairing up? There are plenty of places that they could nest there. The final sighting of note for the year was on 27th with a female-type Red-breasted Merganser off Bordeaux.

An old Beech tree in Foulon Cemetery

There’s not much insect activity at this time of year but there was a weekend of exceptionally mild weather on 29th and 30th November, with winds blowing right up from the Sahara. Unfortunately, I didn’t pick up any properly rare migrants but there was a couple of Palpita vitrealis and a Pearly Underwing, which may have arrived from further south. There were quite a few Feathered Thorn, a species I rarely record, as my trap is usually in hibernation by this time of year. And also a Chestnut, only my second ever after the first I had earlier in 2024.

3 Feathered Thorns, 2 Large Yellow Underwings, 2 White-speck and 2 Palpita vitrealis.

Polypody hanging basket

St. Peter Port town centre on Boxing Day evening

October 2024

The local birding in October was not very productive. Very few migrants appeared and no rare birds were seen at all. The weather was dismal also. Due to recent changes in circumstance, I have more family commitments than ever before and long hours out in the field are not very likely in the near future. In times of plenty, my brief stops and searches are OK and I find a few stuff. However, in lean times, birders really need to commit and dig out good birds by putting in the time, which isn’t really an option at the moment.

The most surprising sighting was at low tide on a nice sunny day at Pulias on 4th October. On my patch, ducks are at a real premium and, apart from the ubiquitous Mallards and Shelducks, I see very few. So it was weird to see a male Gadwall just swimming off the rocks, looking lost. It slowly drifted north-east along the coast and disappeared round the corner never to be seen again. A quality patch tick, my fourth of the year.

Gadwall - on the sea off Pulias, 4 Oct 24

Wheatear - Fort Doyle, 5 Oct 24

Sombre Brocade in the early morning sun - garden, 4 Oct 24 - the nights were too poor at weekends for moth trapping apart from this one night early in the month

During the last week of the month we headed out to Iceland on our school trip. We hadn’t been since before covid so it was great to get on track and hopefully keep it going in the future. Our first night was spent in the field studies centre at Juniper Hall in the Surrey Hills. This was just a few hundred metres from Box Hill where I visited a few years ago. It was just a quick overnighter though although I was pleased to hear lots of “yaffling” of a Green Woodpecker early in the morning which is something I have not heard for a while.

The Surrey Hills

Of course, the school trip to Iceland is not really set up for birding but I am always in hope of seeing something decent. At this time of year most things have already moved through and the stops we make are mostly at particular tourist sites and also inland which means there is less likelihood of picking up birds. Most of our few hours in coastal Reykjavik was in darkness but a brief visit to the shoreline saw a few Glaucous Gulls, Eiders, Common Scoters and a couple of Black Guillemots swimming in the bay. Unluckily this spot was just the other side of the harbour to where the White-winged Scoter was hanging out! Around the town there were lots of Redwings and Blackbirds on the roadside verges. Leaving the city, there was plenty of roadside ponds and lakes but we just whizz past on the coach. I did see a Goldeneye/Barrow’s Goldeneye female on one of the ponds - I am not sure which is more likely. One noticeable difference this year was that I saw much more wildfowl than I did the previous two trips feeding in the flat fields in the south including lots of small groups of Whooper Swans dotted around. There were goose flocks too with Greylag being the most common, and at least three large groups of Pink-footed Geese which may have numbered into the 1000’s. I also saw one flock of Whitefronts which must have been Greenland White-fronted Geese. Other passerines were not very much in evidence but I did have a small flock of Redpolls fly around whilst swimming in the hot springs. A White Wagtail was living its best life inside the heated greenhouse which was growing tomatoes - this one was probably not going to be migrating south.

a low flyover from some whooper Swans

A geothermally-heated White Wagtail inside the greenhouses

Tomato greenhouse, Iceland

Looking north across the flatlands towards the volcano

Hekla Volcano

Gullfoss

The Westmann Islands and sunset

Seljalandfoss

Rainbow over the glacier

Walking on the glacier

Reykjavik cathedral

Aurora Borealis - not my photo as my phone or camera would not pick it up - My first proper Northern Lights were very exciting