Fleetwood Bird Observatory

Thursday, 28th June 2012

›
Offshore An evening seawatch produced 21 Manx Shearwater west, 6 Gannet, 12 Common Scoter, 1 Auk sp., 5 Sandwich Tern and 2 Curlew west. ...

Wednesday, 27th June 2012

›
Offshore 11 Gannet, 5 Manx Shearwter west, 10 Common Scoter, 4 Sandwich Tern and 1 Arctic Tern west.   Others 1 Sanderling, 13 Turn...

Tuesday, 26th June 2012

›
An early returning Wigeon was observed today as well as three Siskins heading east! Offshore 3 Gannet, 23 Common Scoter, 4 Sandwich Tern ...

Monday, 25th June 2012

›
Offshore 5 Gannet, 3 Sandwich Tern and 3 Common Scoters. Others 1 Sanderling, 1 Dunlin, 11 Turnstone and 1 Sand Martin. Ringing 3 Ree...

Sunday, 24th June 2012

›
Offshore 2 Gannet, 2 Sandwich Tern, 1 Common Tern and 45 Common Scoter. A further watch in the evening produced 20 Gannet, 1 Fulmar, 12 ...

Saturday, 23rd June 2012

›
A cracking 8 hour seawatch produced some excellent June records. Offshore 13 Storm Petrel west, 31 Fulmar west, 49 Manx Shearwater west, ...

Friday, 22nd June 2012

›
Torrential rain all day meant that coverage at the obs was limited. Offshore 6 Common Scoters, 3 Gannets and 4 Manx Shearwaters. Others...
‹
›
Home
View web version
Fleetwood Bird Observatory
Although not an official bird observatory affiliated to the BTO, the Fleetwood peninsula has been operated like a bird observatory for many years. Migration monitoring through sea watching, ringing, searching for grounded migrants, and monitoring of visible migration takes place on a daily basis. The purpose of this blog is to summarise the birds occuring at Fleetwood Bird Observatory. Commentary will be kept to a minimum, and no reference to individual sites within the observatory recording area will be made. Fleetwood Bird Observatory is operated by two dedicated patch workers, Ian Gardner and Seumus Eaves, with various help and input from other members of Fylde Ringing Group. A range of habitats can be found within the recording area including coastal grassland, scrub, sand dunes, shingle, open sea, saltmarsh, reedbeds, hedgerows, broad-leaved woodland, mudflats and freshwater pools. Over 260 bird species have been recorded at the observatory, and with increased coverage in recent years over 200 species are recorded annually.
View my complete profile
Powered by Blogger.