Birdwatch

Spaniard on Scilly

Bob Dawson produced the first major find of spring when he came face to face with a fourth for Britain.

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APRIL is a great month for flava wagtails on Scilly. Never common and frequently only one-day birds, they are always delightful given the variety of plumage characters on offer from the males. A few years ago I found a putative Ashyheaded Wagtail on St Agnes which, given an absence of photos or sound recordings, was unsurprisi­ngly filed as ‘not proven’.

Other birders found further candidates in 2019 and 2021, which remain in circulatio­n. In 2018 Graham Gordon turned up Britain’s second accepted record of Iberian Wagtail – though there had been earlier sightings of good candidates on the islands.

Wednesday 13 April was fairly typical, in that I was late heading home for lunch – the commute on Scilly is terrible! I had taken to taking a detour past Little Porth, a small bay familiar to many birders, at the western end of Porthcress­a. It can be a bit of a sun trap and frequently holds migrants that feed on the invertebra­tes associated with the sand and stranded beds of weed. Recent highlights had been two

Siberian Chiffchaff­s and at least five Black Redstarts, as well as the notable presence of a handy bench.

I exchanged pleasantri­es with an islander interested in birds, who thought one of the Black Redstarts was still present and mentioned seeing “a wagtail”. As there had been a number of White Wagtails I thought that the most likely and bid farewell. I had hardly gone a few yards, however, when a patch of vivid yellow caught my eye on the sand.

A quick check with the bins and there was a belter of a flava wagtail. I scuttled back to Tony and lent him my bins to see this ‘Blue-headed Wagtail’. I soon registered the white throat, having a brief ‘bowl of petunias’ moment – ‘oh no, not again’ – and steeled myself for another intergrade encounter.

I popped the news out on WhatsApp as ‘Blue-headed Wagtail with a white throat’. This was rather splendidly interprete­d by some birders as there being a Common Whitethroa­t present too, which lured the Scilly year listers. Sam Viles had come back immediatel­y querying the possibilit­y of Iberian, but I wasn’t so enthusiast­ic – partly as I’d forgotten what they looked like.

Scott Reid had been working nearby and soon arrived to take some photos. As we watched the bird from the path overlookin­g the beach, the wagtail and a Rock Pipit flew up and over the town. Was that it – gone? Thankfully it returned mere seconds later, steeply descending to the beach while calling. The call wasn’t obviously like the North African birds I had lived alongside a few decades ago. It was more flava- like, perhaps with some ‘hardness’. But my hearing is rubbish these days, so I was relieved that the ever-diligent Scott managed to get some decent recordings.

Regardless, by the time people had stopped looking for the ‘whitethroa­t’, Iberian Wagtail was indeed being strongly touted, with the slate-coloured head darker than the Blue-headed (nominate flava) that had arrived the day before. There was a long, narrow but distinct white superciliu­m, set off by an exquisite white crescent on the lower part of the eye-ring, as well as the previously mentioned white throat contrastin­g with yellow underparts. Having read that Dani Lopez Velasco had commented on Mark Pearson’s first for Britain, I messaged him and he supported the identifica­tion as a ‘classic’ iberiae!

The bird stayed until Saturday evening, faithful to Little Porth in the main and providing wonderful views. It had given great enjoyment to a steady stream of admirers, including a number of visitors over for Easter. Remarkably confiding, it often allowed a close approach, at times walking steadily towards me as I was videoing it. Towards the end of its stay it became rather frisky, chasing other birds including a Black Redstart, and seemed to give a bit of subsong. ■

 ?? ?? Iberian Wagtail: St Mary’s, Scilly, 13-16 April 2022
There are only two accepted British records of Iberian Wagtail away from Scilly since the first at Filey, North Yorkshire, in April 2015.
Iberian Wagtail: St Mary’s, Scilly, 13-16 April 2022 There are only two accepted British records of Iberian Wagtail away from Scilly since the first at Filey, North Yorkshire, in April 2015.

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