We left Pretoria on 26th July for the long drive south to Pearly Beach. We had picked up the cats once again & they behaved perfectly on the two day drive. We arrived at our house late on 28th. It is always great to be back here. I had never been here at this time of year before, so was looking forward to potential great sea watching & of course Whale sightings. The only downside is that it is cold!
On the 29th July I was up early looking over the sea in anticipation. Sea conditions were rough & there were a few birds about: 707 Sooty Shearwater; 1Southern Giant Petrel; 1 Northern Giant Petrel; 2 Giant Petrel sp.; 7 African Penguin.
The wind increased in the afternoon & so did the birds: 24 White capped Albatross; 1 White chinned Petrel; 3 Southern Giant Petrel; 1 Northern Giant Petrel; 216 Sooty Shearwater; 3 Brown Skua & 4 Antarctic Tern.
Early morning on 2nd August saw 3 adult summer plumage Roseate Terns flew by. These are winter breeders on Dyer Island, but no-one seems to know much about the population these days. Still regarded as a rare bird, but it is regular here. Two more birds were seen in the afternoon. 21 White capped Albatross were also noted.
The sea was very rough on 4th August & the sea watching was excellent: 86 White capped Albatross; 382 Sooty Shearwater; 9 Brown Skua; 2 Roseate Tern. Seeing this many Albatross from land is truly outstanding.
A quick walk along the coast in the afternoon produced 12 Water Thick-knee on the rocks close to the house. I don't know how unusual this is.
The wind again picked up on 6th August & there was an immediate response in the number of sea birds noted. 4,186 Sooty Shearwater swept into the bay along with 45 White capped Albatross & my first Black browed Albatross of this winter. 74 Cape Gannet were also noteworthy.
7th August was exceptional for Terns. Highlight was an outstanding 24 Roseate Terns flying east. 14 Antarctic Terns were also noteworthy.
11th produced 10 White capped Albatross & a Roseate Tern in the early morning sea watch. A nice walk around the village produced an unseasonal Klaas's Cuckoo & a huge winter flock of 60 Red-winged Starling.
A sea watch on 12th August produced an astonishing 18 Roseate & 5 Antarctic Terns. Sea watching the next day produced 43 White capped Albatross & good numbers of Sooty Shearwaters.
The 14th August was a good sea watching day: 44 White capped Albatross; 4 White chinned Petrel; 7,600 Sooty Shearwater & 9 Giant Petrel sp.
The next good sea watching day was 19th August with 14 White capped Albatross; both Southern & Northern Giant Petrels & 1,850 Sooty Shearwater.
Mountainous sea on 20th produced 45 White capped Albatross; 2 Southern Giant Petrel; 2 White chinned Petrel & 84 Sooty Shearwater. Delana & I enjoyed a bracing walk along the beach.
On 23rd August there were 24 Rock Martins roosting on the side of the house, trying to avoid the strong winds. A cycle around the village produced: African Fish Eagle; 2 African Marsh Harriers (new for me in the village); Little Grebe; 6 Red-billed Duck & 4 Yellow-billed Duck. 2 Black Saw-wing were also noteworthy & Klaas's Cuckoos were calling.
A mid-afternoon sea-watch on 26th August was quite interesting & produced: 1 Sub-Antarctic Skua; 75 White-capped Albatross; 6 Giant Petrel sp.; 13 Sooty Shearwater & 82 Common/Antarctic Terns. These birds were too distant for specific identification, but I suspect most were Antarctic Terns.
The sea was still interesting the next morning & produced a lone Manx Shearwater west, which is a bit of a rarity here & also unseasonal. Other species included: 34 White-capped Albatross; 1 Southern & 1 Northern Giant Petrel; 2 Giant Petrel sp.; 1 White chinned Petrel; 45 Sooty Shearwater; 2 Antarctic Tern.
On 28th August 2 Roseate Tern flew west towards Dyer Island. Both were adults in full summer plumage. 38 White-capped Albatross were noted on the afternoon sea-watch on 29th August & increased to 50 the next day. These are impressive numbers of Albatrosses seen from land, but so far there is little variety.
On 31st August Delana & I had to go to the bank in Hermanus, so we did a little sea-watching from the new harbor. Conditions were not ideal, but the best records were of 2 Roseate Tern & 4 Antarctic Terns.
An afternoon sea-watch on 1st September produced: 6 White-capped Albatross; 2 Southern Giant Petrel; 1 Northern Giant Petrel; 6 White chinned Petrel; 6 Antarctic Tern.
The wind had increased the next morning & sea-watching produced an interesting range of species & some significant numbers of birds:
9 White-capped Albatross; 9 White chinned Petrel; 5 Southern Giant Petrel; 1 Giant Petrel sp.; 117 Sooty Shearwater; 323 Great crested Tern; 1 Antarctic Tern; 3 Sandwich Tern; 202 Common/Antarctic Tern.
Later in the morning around 3,200 Cape Cormorants came & sat on the rocks opposite the house.
Around mid-day I had a walk to Blue Bay on the western edge of Pearly Beach. There were a few Terns sat on the rocks which proved interesting!
The evening sea-watch produced some great Tern records: 216 Great crested Tern; 21 Antarctic Tern & 4 Roseate Tern, all flying west.
The early morning sea-watch on 3rd September produced 5 African Penguin; 15 White-capped Albatross; 4 Southern Giant Petrel; 2 Giant Petrel sp.; 4 White chinned Petrel; 131 Cape Gannet; 19 Sooty Shearwater; 363 Great crested Tern; 3 Sandwich Tern; 26 Antarctic Tern; 2 Common Tern; 183 Common/Antarctic Tern.
A walk along the coast on 4th September produced 6 Water Thick-knee on the wave lashed rocks, including a leusistic bird. The first time I have seen this in this species. It also produced the first returning Common Sandpiper.
Two adult Roseate Terns flew west on the afternoon of 5th September.
The early morning sea-watch on 6th September was surprisingly productive. It was a beautiful sunny calm morning! Highlights: 35 White-capped Albatross; 3 White chinned Petrel; 1 Southern Giant Petrel; 6 Giant petrel sp.; 313 Sooty Shearwater; 10 Antarctic Tern; 19 Common/Antarctic Tern; 5 Sandwich Tern; 23 Great crested Tern.
Sea-watching on 8th September produced 10 White-capped Albatross; 3 White-chinned Petrel & 78 Sooty Shearwater.
A walk around the village the next day revealed that some summer migrants had returned: Yellow-billed Kite; Klaas's Cuckoo; White-rumped Swift; Greater Striped & Pearl-breasted Swallows were all in evidence.
A brief look at the Uilenkraal Estuary on 10th September revealed 35 returning Whimbrel & 2 Grey Plover. No small waders are back yet.
The early morning sea-watch on 11th September was quite exciting: 5 White-capped Albatross; 1 Northern Giant Petrel;11 Giant Petrel sp; a massive 59 White-chinned Petrel; 389 Sooty Shearwater & 43 Cape Gannet.
A trip to Buffelsjagt on 12th September saw 14 Antarctic Terns roosting on the rocks. As we enter springtime this species is getting easier to identify as they come into summer plumage.
The 14th September saw me driving around the coast along the Birkenhead 4x4 trail. It was a very scenic drive but without seeing anything too special. I was looking for Terns roosting but didn't see any!
A walk around the village on 15th September was quite productive: 3 Spotted Dikkop; Three-banded Plover; 1 Common Sandpiper & a host of nice swallows: White-throated; Pearl-breasted & Black Saw-wings being the best.
A look over the Uilenkraal Estuary on 16th revealed more waders returning: 45 Whimbrel; 12 Grey Plover & a Bar-tailed Godwit, which is quite rare here.
I had to travel to Hermanus later in the day, so I made a visit to the new harbor & saw a good passage of Terns: a massive 215 Antarctic; 36 Sandwich & 31 Great crested Terns.
Sea-watching early morning on 17th September produced 4 African Penguin; 2 White-capped Albatross; 1 Northern Giant Petrel; 1 White-chinned Petrel; 12 Sooty Shearwater & 7 Antarctic Terns.
Packing now for our next little adventure: a three month trek around Raja Ampat; PNG, Solomon Islands; Vanuatu: Fiji & Samoa! It should be a blast!
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