On arriving off the train I walked straight out to the hide and on settling into position to scan the estuary I noticed that there were very few birds on the island in front of the hide with virtually all the birds roosting out on Finger Point instead.
On the island were 2 grey plovers, 1 in summer plumage, a common sandpiper and a few gulls while out on Finger Point there were oystercatchers including an albino/piebald bird, cormorants, gulls and Sandwich Terns. I managed to pick out an adult little tern amongst the roosting terns before it flew off and up into the estuary, never to be seen again. A juvenile black tern was also picked up flying around the roosting birds before settling on a buoy in the river channel and a few common terns were found too but despite searching I didn't pick out any roseate terns.
As the tide receded the terns began to fly over to the island and a juvenile little tern appeared out on the mud in The Bight before flying off out towards the sea. The black tern also reappeared, flying very close to the hide before also heading out to sea.
Also seen from the hide were a black-tailed godwit, a curlew on the golf course, a few whimbrel feeding out on the mud, ringed plovers and dunlins, 2 adult common gulls and 2 adult winter plumaged Mediterranean gulls while along the beach a few sanderling were seen. A juvenile wheatear on the golf course, chiffchaffs in the brambles and swallows overhead were the only land birds of note.
I had a look for brown argus in the Greenland Lake area but only found some very brown argusy looking female common blues amongst the males and more distinctive looking females. Small copper, red admiral, meadow brown, gatekeeper, painted lady, small white and green-veined white were also seen along with 6 spot burnets and an emperor dragonfly.
Common Blue - female
Common Blue
Common Blue
Common Blue
Common Blue
Common Blue - female
The train journey home was delayed by 20 minutes so I have again reclaimed 12.5% of the ticket cost through the Delay Replay scheme so not a bad day out all round!
Tuesday 6th August and I decided to catch the bus to South Efford Marsh at Aveton Giffard for a quick look around after a report on the internet the night before of 2 wood sandpipers and a green sandpiper being seen there.
I visited South Efford Marsh in August 2013 and saw wood, green and common sandpipers (a Trio) but in August 2014 I only saw green and common sandpipers (a Duo) and on this visit I only saw common sandpipers (a Solo) - so I guess my next visit will be sandpiper-less.
A few other waders were seen on the high tide - 8 greenshank, 5 curlews, a whimbrel, 2 dunlin, a redshank, a ringed plover and a black-tailed godwit - and Canada geese, little egrets, a grey heron, mallards and a pair of shelduck with 5 well grown ducklings were also noted.
Greenshank, South Efford Marsh
Painted Lady
Gatekeeper
Wall
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