The Overnighters Skomer Island Experience... Part 6
By this time I had been in the South Moor Hide for just over an hour or so, but I really wanted to try to get a glimpse of some passage waders - as we had been told by the wardens that now
[August] is about the time of year when they start to make an appearance on Skomer én route to wherever they are én route to! However, looking at the weather – wet one minute foggy the next, I wasn’t confident that I’d see anything more than the Greater and Lesser Black Backed Gulls I had already seen around the pond; squawking and fighting as they vie for the best spot on which to roost.
Once again though, Skomer got the better of me and proved me so very wrong.
Some on here may have seen some of the many Wagtail shots I have taken and posted recently, well I couldn’t not post one could I...? I couldn't have a trip to Skomer without at least one Wagtail shot eh, so here goes. I only saw several Pied Wagtails, but the hide did its job very well and presented me with an opportunity to get some relative close ups of this flighty bird. As I have posted many Wagtail shots these last few months, I will keep this Skomer series to just the one… the obligatory one!
Pied Wagtail
There were three Pied Wagtails I spotted in total, and they were all there at the same time, but only this one decided to keep still long enough to make a useful pose and smile for the camera. Nice birds… I like ‘em anyway… ☺
The weather hadn’t really changed; one minute there was very little fog or mist, but the next minute it could be seen rolling over the valley as the wind picked up and brought with it drizzle in waves. Often it was down to less than what I considered was approx 30/40 yards visibility – and with this the rain pelted down intermittently too; but being safely tucked up in this wonderful waterproof hide, I was actually in Skomer heaven!
At this time, which was mid-to-late afternoon, I was still hoping for even one wader, just the one, which would have made my day. Eventually Skomer delivered and I got just that and spotted one… just the one mind you, and as it happens it also turned out to be a ‘first’ this year (2008) for Skomer Island – so this was a double whammy for me and I was delighted later that evening when, at the Bird Sighting Discussion with the Warden and the RSPB staff, I informed them I had seen (
and photographed) a wonderful Green Sandpiper. He/she was a little way off for a decent shot at first, but then came a lot closer as he scurried along the waters edge looking for shrimp or larvae/insects etc. He came close enough for me to get a half decent ‘grab’ shot (
but not really a ‘printer’ shot) which, with the E-3 + Sigma 50-500mm I could crop and come away with a decent enough image for my photo library. Actually, come to think of it… I may have a pop at printing this one myself on my crappy Epson printer. If it turns out OK I may send it off to Photobox for another of the wall mounted prints I have on my conservatory wall. Oh yes... I guess now is the time I should explain my conservatory.
My conservatory is my haven, my sanctuary; away from the TV, the sounds and noises of kids and a busy family life, where I can doodle at will until I am doodled-out on my synths, I can twiddle until I am all twiddled-out with the knobs in Lightroom and Photoshop, and generally hide away from all that’s going on around me. The thing is… everyone [the kids that is] knows where it is, and I can’t seem to hide in there anymore!! Hmmm... maybe there's another use for my pop-up hide eh
OK OK I know... back to the Green Sandpiper ☺
Though not a rare species, Green Sandpiper turn up on Skomer around August / September time, and wohoooo… I bagged the first reported one on Skomer for 2008. Differentiated from the Common Sandpiper in the main by being a little smaller, overall darker in plumage and having no white patches across the wings so more easy to ID in flight. Nothing spectacular to look at in all honesty, but here she is feeding along the waters edge;
Green Sandpiper
Nothing else
new appeared on the water for some time, but I heard a commotion alongside the hide and opened up the viewing slats on the side of the hide to see what was going on. The side of the hide looks out onto the side of the hill leading back up the path to the farmhouse and accommodation. One can’t see the accommodation from the hide as it is well hidden in a small valley, well down from the top of the brow of the small hill that leads back to the farmhouse. So, looking out over the sedge, thistle and bracken I spotted many small LBB’s, but they were a tad too far away to accurately identify. As one does, I kept looking, and as they say, patience is a virtue, I was rewarded with some super close ups of another ‘first’ for me, the Sedge Warbler.
Literally only several feet from where my Sigma 50-500mm was perched, hanging out of the hide over the egde, two Sedge Warblers appeared scurrying around in the bushes back and forth. Only at one point did one of them see the opportunity for immortality and decided to pose in that classic Warbler photo pose… and to think, they did this just for me, how kind of them!
Here’s a selection of images.
Sedge Warbler
After I had taken the Sedge Warbler shots, I felt the hide had delivered to me all it was going to deliver at that time, vowed to come back before I left the following morning, and decided to pack up and make way back to the farmhouse for some grub.
Hmmm… grub for me was going to be two sandwiches of Coronation Chicken, a sausage roll and a raisin cake bar, all washed down with a nice cuppa. Glorious.
Weather update: the skies had actually started to clear a little and I managed to bag myself the first view of the Irish Sea since jumping off the Dale Princess several hours earlier. Not being able to see the sea, on such a small island, just goes to show how poor the weather was. Ho hum….