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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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ian tew
5 February 2026 12:35

The Black-necked Grebes were working the edge of the wall at Salthouse. The single picture is an adult in winter plumage who might be acquiring its summer steepened forehead. Of the two together, I think the right hand one is a young bird judging by the paler eye, duskier cheek and thin feather sticking out of the back.

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ian tew
5 February 2026 12:25

Good day out in the Burry yesterday, makes up for all the quiet days.
Starting at Llanrhidian end of the Marsh road a Buzzard and femal type Marsh Harrier were busy stirring up allthe other birds. A ringtail Harrier was picked up exiting stage right at about 9ish.

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ian tew
4 February 2026 18:19

Just to let you know the third Black-necked Grebe was also at Salthouse today, separate from the other 2. High tide is the best time to get them close, provided you tuck yourself down.

Terry Tovey
Terry Tovey
4 February 2026 16:49

20 siskins in a Briton ferry garden this afternoon.

ian tew
4 February 2026 09:45

2 Black-necked Grebes v close in off Salthouse jetty now, drifted upstream. Photos later.

Stephen Chambers
Stephen Chambers
2 February 2026 11:51

Two Red Kites circling over our Bishopston garden just now.

ian tew
31 January 2026 19:24

This afternoon at Ashlands, Port Tennant, not a lot but a flock of Siskin well over 100 feeding in the Alder and Birch trees on the railway siding. Long time since I’ve seen a flock of that size.

Stephen Chambers
Stephen Chambers
31 January 2026 13:31

Thanks very much Barry, for leading us in the rain, and for your expert knowledge. I went round to Llanrhidian Marsh after the walk ended, as the weather eased a bit. Was rewarded with c150 Lapwing, 1 Marsh Harrier, 2 Red Kite, 1 Little Egret, 1 Green Woodpecker, 3 Hen Harriers (1 ringtail and 2 male, one of which appeared an immature), 1 Skylark, 1 Stonechat, 2 Great White Egret, 1 Peregrine, 35 Shelduck, 1 Rook and c30 Starling. There were also large (c500) aerial flocks in the distance of Lapwing and what were possibly Golden Plover, although the latter… Read more »

Last edited 2 months ago by Stephen Chambers
Barry Stewart
31 January 2026 17:52

Nice one Stephen, great effort 👌 sounds like Golden Plover – they typically spend ages wheeling around high up in a loose flock

Barry Stewart
31 January 2026 11:28

Well done, the 24 brave souls who endured the persistent rain at Salthouse Point this morning. The two Black-necked Grebes that put in appearance made the session well worth the effort. The species was last reorded in the Burry Inlet in 2020, so a noteworthy observation. The weather otherwise hampered sightings of more regular fare, but everyone returned happy with the list of species recorded below (with estimates of numbers): Brent Goose (Dark-bellied) (Branta bernicla bernicla) 100 Common Shelduck (Tadorna tadorna) 20 Northern Shoveler (Spatula clypeata) 1 Eurasian Wigeon (Mareca penelope) 10 Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) 1 Common Woodpigeon (Columba palumbus)… Read more »

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Mark Hipkin
31 January 2026 18:35
Reply to  Barry Stewart

Well done indeed for everyone who braved that rain! Great find with the Black-necked Grebes and thanks for getting the news out. Lukas and I were really happy to catch up with them later when the rain had mainly stopped and I know at least 4 others that were happy to catch up with the Grebes. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen any on the Gower Peninsular

Owain Gabb
1 February 2026 07:34
Reply to  Barry Stewart

Brilliant – well done Barry

Jamie Bevan
Jamie Bevan
31 January 2026 10:29

Flock of about 20 siskins feeding on alder cones at Crymlyn Bog yesterday.

Richard Dann
26 January 2026 16:09

Dipper observed feeding this morning on the river to the rear of Three Cliffs beach, Gower. The attached picture was taken by a family member.

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Jess Stone
Jess Stone
26 January 2026 12:22

There’s a Ringtail hunting over Llanrhidian Marsh this morning and hundreds of Lapwing out on the Green beyond the reeds