At ARC it has been possible to watch five pairs of nesting Avocets amongst the islands. This is a great increase from 2024 when there were 3 nesting pairs on ARC up to the 21st June when on the 22nd this went down to only one pair which successfully fledged one young on 20th August from three chicks. Today the 26th June the first three Avocet chicks have hatched to one pair and the other four pairs remain nesting all with sitting birds.
Avocet pair with three eggs
One of the three newly hatched Avocet chicks at ARC
It is still proving tricky to work out what the Common Terns are up to at ARC. I think that there are still at least 15 nesting pairs in the colony but over the past few days their behaviour has been strange. At times for no apparent reason that I can understand all the terns suddenly lift into the air and fly away from the colony area only to return after a few seconds. Whether the strong winds are causing them to spook easily as I cannot see any predators overhead, I just don't know and I wonder if we will get any chicks from this colony? Still, it does allow me to count them and this morning I had 52 in the air together. Elsewhere on the reserve there are at least four sitting common terns on Burrowes and another three sitting birds at Dengemarsh with seven to eight chicks with a couple of them near to fledging.
I wondered what this Common Tern had caught and it looks like a young Pike
Common Tern chicks at Dengemarsh
Common Tern chicks at Dengemarsh
Adult waders are starting to turn up on the reserve in low numbers, with Green, Wood and Common Sandpipers, Bar and Black-tailed Godwits and Grey Plovers.
Adult Black-tailed Godwit
Common Sandpiper
Wood Sandpiper
This adult Redshank is one that has successfully fledged one chick at ARC
Juvenile Redshank
A flock of six Mediterranean Gulls dropped in to ARC on the 25th June. One of them was ringed with a Yellow Darvic ATSS, and is likely to originate from Germany.
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