Snowy Owl is a bird I’ve
wanted to see in Britain since I was very young, having made a small “Owls in
the UK” checklist complete with little photographs to tick off each species as
I saw it – Snowy Owl sitting right at the bottom with “VAGRANT” written next to
it.
Fast forward several years
with all owls now ticked off (even European Scops making it on to the list!)
just Snowy Owl remained, with a big blank square sitting next to its name.
Having never made it to either
the Cairngorms, Scilly Isles or East Anglia over recent times to twitch the
long-staying birds that set up home there, it was therefore a bit of a surprise
and a stroke of good luck and timing when reports of a Snowy Owl seen on
Anglesey came trickling in on a Friday afternoon back in June. Showing well all
afternoon on Point Lynas coastal path, as soon as the first photos of
confirmation came through on Twitter I left work early to try and connect,
beating the rush hour traffic and picking up Alex en-route.
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Snowy Owl! |
Making good time and arriving
mid-afternoon, we were unfortunately met with the news it had just this second
flown over the brow of the hill and lost to view – horrendous bad luck on our
part! Thankfully we didn’t have long to wait for a reappearance, as after just
a tense 5 minute wait the owl was refound further along the track, being
harassed by one of the local Buzzards but standing it’s ground and sitting
serenely amongst the gorse.
Setting up our scopes (my
ankles getting slashed to pieces in the process by the local plant life – ankle
socks were NOT a good idea) we were able to get great and prolonged views as
this majestic arctic owl sat peacefully on a patch of rocky ground, turning its
head regularly and blinking obliviously at its small crowd of admirers.
Normally a far arctic species
much more at home in the Canadian, Greenland or Russian expanses, 2018 has seen
a bit of a mini influx of Snowy Owls in to the UK, with individuals of this
stately owl recorded in locations such as Shetland, Orkney, the Outer Hebrides,
Gwent, Gwynedd, Lincolnshire/Norfolk, the Scilly Isles and Pembrokeshire to name
a few.
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The normal range of Snowy Owls |
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And the latest sightings in the UK this year as per Birdguides |
With the St. David’s Head bird
in Pembrokeshire last seen on the 7th April, and subsequent
sightings of a Snowy Owl further north in Ceredigion a day later and on Skomer
Island on the 30th May, it’s entirely plausible that this could be
the same female moving north. However reports of a Snowy Owl on Anglesey have
been doing the rounds since the spring, with a bird reported at South Stack as
far back as the 24th March and again at Rhosneigr on the 13th
April, so it is equally as likely that this is a different individual
altogether from Pembrokeshire bird, having set up home in the remote Welsh
mountains and remaining undetected for long periods of time. Indeed, after
making itself available at Point Lynas, it wasn’t until 3 weeks later that it
was spotted again further west at South Stack, with another month on top of
that before it was reported once more.
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The beautiful views from the coastal path |
Regardless, this was a
fantastic local bird to see in a beautiful, rugged Welsh coastal setting, and a
bird that means I can finally tick off that blank square on my owl checklist
after all these years.