https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z5fAWpv_axs
Everything seemed to crank up after half-term and free time seemed to slip away quickly. However there were some dirty hits of rare birds and twitchery that were too good to miss. Adding to the Mediterranean flavour of the Yorkshire twitch a Roller pitched up at the end of June not far out of the Ely10 at Icklingham on the edge of the Brecks. It took 5 days before I could squeeze in an after work visit but it was well worth it. The flambouyant predator doing it's huge Shrikey thing from roadside wires.
A surprise came in the form of the return of a Black-browed Albatross to the cliffs at Bempton. With the returning North Sea BB Albatross mauled and hacked by a flock of 9 Sea Eagles off the Danish coast earlier in the spring there was a general malaise about the prospects of an Albatross making it onto the cliffs of the Great White Cape again. Seems there's been a second bird out there all along and there was jubilation as it returned and settled into some level of predictability. During the late 80's as youngsters based in York we always fancifully dreamed, on our YOC trips to Bempton, that an Albatross would settle in the growing Gannetry - as one had done at Bass Rock from 1967 and then on Shetland from 1972 to 1995.
A pre-dawn drive led to a 5am arrival at the clifftop where within minutes I had my eyes on this iconic bird, although I have seen many Albatross on pelagics off New Zealand and Australia, this was different and a tremendous buzz.
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