A blue tit ringed at Oxwich in October 2020 and recaptured at Rhoscrowther, Pembrokeshire (62 km west) ten days later.A distance of 266 km! This is likely to be one of the longest dunnock movements in the UK this year based on recent ringing reports. A dunnock ringed at Oxwich in August 2017 that has apparently moved to Rutland where is was captured in August 2020.Given how little opportunity we have had to get out to site due to Covid and autumn weather, we would surely have had a record year for the species in 2020 if we had been less restricted. The twentieth stonechat of the year at Oxwich.Not exceptional for the species, but nice nonetheless. The site is very coastal, and we normally only get seven or eight coal tits in a year. Not a bird we catch regularly or target, but a good one for trainees to look at in the hand Five skylark caught in the open field.A first winter, with pointed, slightly faded and abraded outer primaries, and an apparent adult with more rounded primary tips and pristine dark flight feathers. The fourth ringed by the group this year. Maybe the bird had been foraging around winter-flowering shrubs in the UK – but it would be interesting to hear any views on how this might have occurred or from others with similar experience. It is never something we have noted in late autumn / winter before. This results in a waxy horn of feathers above the bill. This is a feature we normally see in spring, and is attributed to wintering birds foraging in flowers in the Mediterranean / further south before returning to Britain. It was also interesting that one of the two had a very prominent pollen horn. The first of the two also called on release not a typical chiffchaff call. The two birds were carrying reasonable amounts of fat (scores of 4 and 5 respectively based on the BWG system) – which the more typical chiffchaffs were not on either date – suggesting they were moving or had moved. The underparts were far whiter than in collybita, and both had black legs. These birds both showed washed-out greyish brown head and mantle feathers that contrasted with their olive-green flight feathers. Of the four birds recorded on 23 November, two showed characteristics of eastern race birds ( tristis-type). On both days we had very light winds, enabling us to set nets in some more open areas than we usually try. We managed two sessions at Oxwich in late November, one on 23rd and one on 29th.
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