Yesterday Rich made a bit of a twat of himself. Seawatching over the last few days had been productive, albeit slow at times, with the 23rd Bardsey record of
Tufted Duck, three
Eider, the first
Red-breasted Merganser and
Grey Phalarope of the year, a trickle of
Leach's Petrels,
Balearic Shearwaters and
Sabine's Gulls, reasonable numbers of the commoner two
Skuas and a smattering of
Black Terns. But yesterday we'd had little more than a few
Mediterranean Gulls to show for our morning's efforts. Heavy showers through the night and early morning must have downed something, perhaps some of the plethora of
Buff-breasted Sandpipers that are everywhere, including on nearby Anglesey. So it was with
Buff-breasts on the mind that we set out to check the wind battered South Tip. And there it was! As we came out from behind the Lighthouse and scanned the tip, a distant wader could be seen on the deck near the South Hide. Rich swang his scope off his shoulder and struggled to keep it still in the wind. Buff underparts, short billed and it was away, instantly swept south where it joined another three. Back to bins and all four were the same size and with white underwings. The expected dark crescents couldn't be seen but the birds were distant, struggling away westwards in the wind and the bins were bouncing. We radioed the news of four possible
Buff-breasts as we watched the birds disappear around the Lighthouse and towards the Narrows. We gave chase and got a visual on them as they disappeared behind a hump near Solfach. But they'd landed. We crept along a wall and popped our heads over. Bollocks! Three
Golden Plover were stood alert. It didn't make sense, where was the original bird? Why had it been the same size as a Goldie? It was there, on the edge of the group, and it was a bloody
Ruff. Others arrived just in time to witness the giant balls up. So the moral of the story? Don't go expecting rares when the ordinary are much more likely? Definitely. Suppress all birds until you've got an ID? No way, it's far better to occasionally look a twat but get people on potentially good birds. And who wants to be the git who says, 'yeah, I had them five minutes ago' when someone picks up a flock of four
Buff-breasts sat in a field.
Having spent the day doing paperwork and fuming about what a knob he'd been, the weather improved and Rich eventually returned to the South End. The Ruff was now with five Golden Plover. The similar size of the two birds suggests that the Ruff is a male, the female Reeves being much smaller, potentially 45% shorter in length were the two measured bill to tail. This was approximately the 70th record for Bardsey and the first since 2008. (c) Richard Brown
Had the upperparts been seen when we first saw the Ruff in flight the distinctive white uppertail coverts would have given its true identity away. The group of five Golden Plover had increased to eight by the end of the day. (c) Richard Brown
A Hummingbird Hawkmoth found hiding near Cristin was the first of the autumn. (c) Richard Brown
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