Birdwatch

The big stories

Bob Flood’s careful checking of St Mary’s Airfield produced a major surprise on 26 April, when he dug out a national mega and sixth for Scilly.

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Scilly scored the big one, with a Common Rock Thrush, while a notable inland passage of Little Gulls took place and a tricky wagtail was in Ireland.

THIS is my 22nd year of walking St Mary’s Airfield during the evenings of April and May hoping to find a Calandra Lark. On 26 April, at 6.30 pm after dinner, I set off on the well-trodden route around the perimeter, scanning as I went. By 6.50 pm I’d reached near to the end of the southern runway by the turning circle at the coast. There was a handful of Northern Wheatears on the runway and a continual stream of Manx Shearwater­s passing close inshore.

At that moment, I saw a thrush-like bird flying straight towards me from beyond the turning circle; it landed in some brambles. I lifted my binoculars and focused on the bird and as I did the blur turned into a pinsharp image of a female Common Rock Thrush. It was an awesome moment. I watched it for 30 seconds, looking at details of the plumage and structure, as far as possible. The remiges and all greater coverts looked particular­ly brown and I suspected a secondcale­ndar-year bird. The photo on

page 274 (bottom left) in Shirihai and Svensson’s Handbook of Western Palearctic Birds: volume 1, of a 2CY female taken in May, with all juvenile greater and primary coverts and remiges, is a dead ringer for the Scilly bird.

I hastily turned to my new investment, a matchbox-sized Nikon Coolpix camera, and took a few photos. It’s a tool for record shots. The rock thrush sat motionless for a while, flipped onto a yellow airport light where it stayed for several minutes, and then dropped onto the side of the runway where it stood motionless for some time. I got the impression that it was very tired.

It was urgent to spread the news. The local network system in Scilly has been brilliantl­y designed to create blackspots at the main rarity-finding sites and this includes the turning circle. So, I hastened up the inclined runway searching for a signal, while trying to keep an eye on the thrush.

The signal wouldn’t click in and my excitement turned to frenetic

frustratio­n. I reached the windsock at the crossroads of the runways when, finally, the mobile registered a signal and I rang my pal Ashley Fisher, but the signal dropped out again! This part of story goes on a bit so I’ll fast forward …

Ashley answered and instantly went into turbo drive as he needed rock thrush ‘bad’, having missed two previous birds. Rob Lambert jumped in Ashley’s car and others raced to the turning circle, with only 90 minutes of good light left. Scott Reid was first on the scene, with Andy Holden, Joe Pender and John Higginson not far behind. About 20 birders arrived in total. Just one problem: the bird had vanished.

A frantic search ensued, with the sun sinking ever lower. No sign and time was running out. Ashley went into bird-brain mode and said: “If I were a rock thrush, I would be sunning on rocks like Blue Carn.”

So, we headed that way and ‘bang!’ – there it was, sitting near the top of Blue Carn. No signal again and so waves alerted

Lucy McRobert, who waved to people further along the coastal track, who in turn waved to the remainder by the turning circle, completing the chain. Thankfully, everyone was alerted and arrived in time to get decent views.

Next morning, birders searched early doors from 6.30 am but there was no sighting. The only consolatio­n was a Common Nightingal­e that had been around for several days.

I remember a few years ago reading with great envy Adam Hutt’s gripping finder’s account of a rock thrush at Spurn. As I read through it, I dreamt that one day I might share a similar experience. Lady Luck took care of that. Now onto the next 22 years of walking the airfield for a Calandra Lark … ■

 ??  ?? The St Mary’s Common Rock Thrush, Scilly’s sixth and the first since 2017, poses in the evening sun.
Common Rock Thrush: St Mary’s, Scilly, 26 April 2021
The St Mary’s Common Rock Thrush, Scilly’s sixth and the first since 2017, poses in the evening sun. Common Rock Thrush: St Mary’s, Scilly, 26 April 2021

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