Clive found a couple of Lesser Whitethroats yesterday morning, right in the centre of Seaton around the Bowling Green. I was very pleased to spend some time with one of them this morning, and this post was going to be all about them, however later on today I went gulling...
The Lesser Whitethroat post will happen, and truthfully it's not just the gulls that have delayed it. I want to spend more time with them and hopefully get some more photos and maybe even some sound recordings, before constructing a blog post. The question I want to try and answer is how far north/east have they originated from? So do check back soon...just not too soon as I want to gather as much detail as I can.
I managed to squeeze in a look along the Estuary at about 3pm today. Not huge numbers of gulls present but one of the first birds I saw at the southern end of the Estuary was this second-winter Caspian Gull. On structure not a big bird at all, and any Casp lacking the usual impressive Casp stature worries me, especially when its a second-winter lacking a P10 window. It still looked pretty smart though...
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| Bottom right - the one with a snowball for a head! |
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| That thick and dark neck shawl gave it such a striking appearance! |
The next decent gull greeted me when I arrived at Coronation Corner. On the near bank was an absolute stonker of an adult Yellow-legged Gull. All adult Yellow-legged Gulls look good, but some look really good, like this one...
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| Come on. What a stonker. |
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| It wouldn't stop preening though, so getting photos of its head out was a bit tricky |
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| It then went for a walk to the waters' edge... |
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| Where it stayed until I left. |
Next up was a distant third-winter bird. Am not ashamed to say I thought this was a Yellow-legged Gull based on head and bill shape, as well as leg length. However on reflection its mantle colour (only a smidgen darker than nearby Herrings), and far more importantly Gav's much better photos of a 3w Casp he found on the Estuary a few hours earlier, have brought me to the conclusion this is the very same bird. So a third-winter Caspian Gull...
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| Right of centre at the near edge of the flock, the rounded soft headed slightly darker mantled bird |
The final gull worthy of mention, other than three Med Gulls, was what I think is a Herring x Lesser Black-backed. When I first saw the dark mantle and yellow legs I presumed I had come across a second adult Yellow-legged, but its short dull yellow legs, streaky head and the 'off' colour of the mantle meant I landed on hybrid...
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| Preening in the above shot, above the head of the left hand preening Herring Gull in the water in front. Can see the short yellow-ish legs here |
If the gull quality continues like this throughout the winter, it's going to be a good one! I wouldn't say no to some more classic-looking Caspian Gulls though...






































