I did mention to my wife about going for it at the weekend but she wasn’t too pleased with me going birding again after being out most of last weekend! As it was on arrival at Wilstone on the bank holiday Monday I was alerted to yet another first for Britain having been found in Northumberland.
The next stop was Lower Largo about 2.5 hours north. Again the traffic was kind and I arrived in good time and found a car park. Another birder from the Lapwing had arrived at the same time so we walked down to the Crusoe Hotel to join a dozen or so birders already on site. One of them was Dan Pointon who kindly let us look through his scope at it and within 10 seconds I was laying my eyes on my second first for Britain by 9.13am! A drake STEJNEGER’S SCOTER!
I set my scope up and found it myself with its ‘horn’ protruding from its pinky/yellow bill but it could quite easily vanish and take a while to re find it again. It was part of a scoter spectacular which included over 600 Velvet Scoters (I’d only seen 94 in my 39 years of birding!) many Common Scoters and at the far end of the beach I had only my second ever White-winged Scoter (there has been up to 3-4 of these present!) which was near to a pair of Surf Scoters. I’d only previously seen 3 female/juvenile birds before so it was nice to finally see a drake. After my fill of scoters I scanned the bay and noted year ticks of Kittiwake, Shag, Sandwich and Arctic Terns, Guillemot, Razorbill and Eider. And Matt Eade kindly showed me 2 summer plumaged Long-tailed Ducks through his scope which from memory were my first summer birds.
Happy with my mornings birding I got in the car and headed for home. I arrived back with 887 miles on the clock and 2 more birds on the life list and a further 14 on the year list.
Thank you to my lovely understanding wife for letting me go though I’m sure she’ll get her own back soon!