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Guidelines for Reporting Rarities and Submission of Annual Records
Detailed records of nationally or locally rare species (guidance on these is here) should be sent to the County Recorder Eddie Hunter (goweros23@gmail.com) as soon as possible after the sighting. An appropriate description should be provided of the species, your previous experience of it (and similar species), the circumstances and weather conditions in which the sighting occurred and any other pertinent information (such as photos). He will then circulate to the local or national records committee as relevant.

Day to day observations, including of nest sites, flocks of birds and species of local interest, should be collated in the Annual Record Form and sent to Eddie as an email attachment following each calendar year. Receiving these by the end of January is ideal as an early start can then be made on compiling the annual report.

PLEASE NOTE

Please could we ask that detailed locational information that may lead to the disturbance of the nest sites of species listed under Schedule 1 of the Wildlife & Countryside Act (1981) is omitted from any posts. This may otherwise lead to an offence being committed.

Schedule 1 species that regularly breed in the recording area are Dartford warbler, chough, honey buzzard, crossbill, goshawk, kingfisher, hobby, red kite, barn owl, peregrine, little ringed plover and Cetti’s warbler.

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Chris Brewer
19 January 2024 20:10

you beat me to it ! i didn’t get to see any Avocet late morning , but a distant flock on the water got my looking with 17 Coot . bit on the surreal side , hope they got a bit of grub!
6 snipe at Penclawdd pill the only other icy exposed birds i saw . temps rising , so feeding should get easier

Paul Larkin
19 January 2024 22:10
Reply to  Chris Brewer

Chris,

Yesterday theAvocet moved round the back of the salt marsh and dissappeared as the tide rose.

Barry Stewart
19 January 2024 17:58

There was just a single Avocet at Loughor Bridge late morning when I looked at HT. But just as exciting was a flock of 16 Coots, which were intimidating a flock of around 900 Herring Gulls mid-channel. I can’t recall EVER seeing a Coot in the main estuary channel in over 30 years of looking! These and 3 others a little further down channel presumably had been displaced from the wetland centre, so should be back onto freshwater tomorrow, now the temperature’s shooting up.

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Barry Stewart
19 January 2024 18:20
Reply to  Barry Stewart

Avocet

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Paul Larkin
19 January 2024 22:08
Reply to  Barry Stewart

Barry,

Some years ago I had a Coot flying west Port Eynon whilst sea watching, I was even more surprised!

Alun John
20 January 2024 10:06
Reply to  Paul Larkin

Almost as exciting as my first ever coot on the Margam Abbey Pond this week…

Brian Pawson
Brian Pawson
19 January 2024 16:35

55 sanderling, 4 turnstone and 2 dunlin on the foreshore south of the Footgolf Course just after high tide this afternoon. Also at least 450 oystercatcher at Blackpill (with maybe 700 there just before high tide). Also 3 mistle thrush at Ashleigh Road playing fields.

Gary
18 January 2024 17:06

I checked a location in Pennard to see whether Dart Warblers are surviving the cold nights, and found two, either two females or female and immature male. Still a lot of winter to go.

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Barry Stewart
18 January 2024 16:20

A few observations during a mid-day outing: At Berthlwyd 127 Greylag, 129 Canadas, 287 Wigeon, 3 Goldeneye & 3 Kites. At Dalton’s Point 2 Water Pipits, 1 Rock Pipit, 1 Spoonbill & 1 Spotted Redshank. At Crofty 1 Green Sandpiper, 2 Spoonbills, 1 Kingfisher, 27 Linnet & 1 Water Pipit. https://photos.app.goo.gl/83x1z1z6YycfHN6W8

Last edited 2 years ago by Barry Stewart
Richard Dann
18 January 2024 15:21

2 Cattle Egrets flew low over my garden on Pennard Cliffs this morning, flying in an eastward direction. It was the first sighting of this species from the garden.

Paul Larkin
18 January 2024 12:53

Loughor Bridge on the run up this morning. Redshank 57, Dunlin 37, Goldeneye 2 fem types, Wigeon 15, Pintail 10, Canada Goose 12, Teal 19, GC Grebe 3, Ringed Plover 2, Avocet 4, again roosting with Oystercatchers, Spoonbill 1, later roosted on the salt marsh, Bar t Godwit 42, Greenshank 1, Brent 13, Marsh Harrier 1 fem type, later flew over the church and whilst driving home I saw it heading NE inland over Gorseinon, WaterPipit 2. I also saw what I think was the Pallid Harrier heading south across the estuary but the distance and poor seeing made it… Read more »

PAUL GRIFFITHS
17 January 2024 23:39

Cwm Ivy, marsh 39 shelduck, Cwm Ivy Woods 1 woodcock. Track to Whiteford Point ; female merlin suddenly appeared from dunes, just missing a reed bunting drinking at a pool, going on to harry and screech at a carrion crow before veering off down a muddy creek in hot pursuit of a redshank; thirty seconds of aerial madness.

Paul Larkin
17 January 2024 11:25

Loughor Bridge on the HT this morning

Avocet 4 roosting with Oystercatchers (my first Gower record since I found one at Blackpill back in the 80s), Bar t Godwit 95, Teal 7, Wigeon 21, Goldeneye 1 female type, Oystercatcher 58, Redshank 16, GC Grebe 3.

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Paul Larkin
16 January 2024 22:59

This afternoon.

Dalton’s Point.

Knot 7, Dunlin 923, Bar t Godwit 11

Broughton Bay

Wigeon 49, Common Scoter5, GC Grebe 2

Penclawdd

Brent Goose 5, Canada Goose 114, Greenshank 1, Snipe1

Matthew Hunter
16 January 2024 19:07

This morning 2 pairs goosander on river tawe just downstream from liberty stadium

Alan Seago
16 January 2024 15:05

Black Pill this morning on falling tide

Curlew 16, Oystercatcher 50, Black-headed Gull 50, Common Gull 5, Lesser Black- backed Gull 2, Dunlin 200, Ringed Plover 50, Bar-tailed Godwit 20, Sanderling 1, Cormorant 2, Redshank 4, Herring Gull 5, Pied Wagtail 3 and usual covids. One Black-headed gull in summer plumage.

Last edited 2 years ago by Alan Seago