The forecast said SSW gusting to 40-odd mph from the early hours, plus loads of rain. A seawatch this morning was inevitable.
I arrived at 07:07 and, as per usual, the first things moving were ex-roost gulls, mostly Black-headed. Exactly eight minutes in I picked up a small, dark bird amongst the gulls, very close inshore but off to my right. It was a Leach's Petrel. I expected it to head east past me and provide some crippling views, but it failed to make any headway and ended up drifting slowly away west instead. I also expected it to be the first of a few, but it was the first of one. The rest of the seawatch was dire: 21 Med Gulls, four Dunlin together and singles of Red-throated Diver and Gannet. I am almost desperate enough to include the probable Common Scoter, but not quite. By 09:00 I'd had enough.
I really was not surprised to see another Leach's Petrel, but honestly...
What is it about West Bay?!
I've said it before, but will repeat here for context: in all my years of seawatching from Seaton I saw just two Leach's Petrels, both on the same stormy November morning in 2005. Up until Sunday, even Steve had only recorded the species once on a Seaton seawatch (see here). West Bay has been way more productive:
- 2nd November 2022: 10+ Leach's Petrels (probably 14 or 15).
- 8th November 2022: 3
- 24th November 2022: 1
- 3rd January 2023: 1
- 1st November 2023: 2+ (a third petrel sp was almost certainly Leach's too)
- 8th November 2023: 1
Based on my previous Lyme Bay seawatching experiences at Seaton, a total of 18+ Leach's Petrels across six dates in just over a year is nothing short of amazing. I'm not sure what West Bay's secret is, but look forward to seeing if it continues to be as generous. I hope so.
Taken with 500mm zoom, which I think is roughly equivalent to 10x
magnification. Sadly no birds to look at here, but then there rarely
were. |
Elsewhere in West Bay...
Looks good for sinensis Cormorant. |
Purple Sand heading for another soaking on the West Beach rocks.
Amazingly the Axe patch has never recorded Purple Sandpiper, so
this photo is a cut-out-and-keep search image for Seaton birders. |
West Pier froth. |
Rock Pipit, pipitting on a rock. |
When I get down your way Gav, I intend to be armed with an horizon busting telescope. Give the primary lens a coating of Rain X and good to go.
ReplyDeleteYou can't count birds flying along the French coast! 😄
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