Exactly 15 years and 3 days ago I got in my car and drove all the way to Anglesey all on my own to have a go at seeing the Black Lark that had been there since the 1st of the month. I just hadn't been able to go until then for all sorts of reasons. And I didn't set off till around 2pm. I'm a risky old Hector. I just couldn't resist it, especially because of the historical importance ... it was the last of the notorious " Hastings Rarities" to actually turn up !! But also because all the other birders I knew had gone for it .. and then told me what a corker it was. That sort of thing can eat into your soul. And sole. I wasn't even sure if it was still there ... One big surprise was ,when I got to Bangor where I spent 3 ace years as a student, I didn't go through Bangor !! What ? I found myself on a honking great by-pass. By-pass ? For Bangor ?? The world's gone bonkers. Eventually, I got to the site, and there was nobody there ..well, a few tourists. Bloody tourists eh ! It must have gone !! Bah ! .. I'm going to have to traipse around 477 km² of cacky fields and not find it. ( I hope you all know how to type ² ... you hold down the ALT key, and use the number-pad on the right and type 0178 and then release. If you want ³ you type 0179 instead. It doesn't work on macs though.) But, I got out of the car, walked a short way, and there, in a field, right in front of me, there it was.... hopping about happily in the sunshine. And then someone else turned up ... and we didn't say a word at first ...we just silently watched it, as if we were in church. After about half an hour, we went to see some Choughs. Obviously Then I drove back home. I went through Bangor on the way back. Whenever I see a really rare bird I always think it's the best bird I'll ever see... and this one was.... well, until the next one. Bee-eaters ... they're quite good. On the same day, but in 1989 instead, I saw the Glossy Ibis at Fairburn Ings. An odd thing happened there ... no doubt I'll get round to it. But now, here's all the "Official Stuff " about the Black Lark that I got from that internet thingy ... At about 10.00am on Sunday 1st June 2003, one of the voluntary helpers at the RSPB observation tower at South Stack RSPB, ANGLESEY, stumbled upon a bird that he was unable to identify. It was feeding on the recently burnt area of gorse immediately above the clifftop and was all black in plumage with a contrasting pale bill. After flicking through the Collins Field Guide, the observer felt confident that the bird was a BLACK LARK Melanocorypha yeltoniensis and went back to the tower to inform other interested parties. The bird was seen by a few other naturalists during the course of the morning and early afternoon but none realised the significance of the sighting. The bird was showing well feeding amongst the newly sprouting plants in the charcoal-scorched heather. Eventually rumours filtered through of the bird’s presence and Ken Croft was alerted. He raced over from neighbouring Holyhead and at 4.30pm confirmed the bird’s identity. Indeed, the bird was a BLACK LARK – the first ever to have been recorded in Britain and Ireland. Alan Davies (of Birdline Wales) was also contacted and he too connected with the bird at 5.50pm. Although the weather had been fine and bright all afternoon, heavy cloud came in off the Irish Sea at about 6.00pm and conditions quickly deteoriated. Alan broadcast the news to the nation via his birdline and also contacted direct eminent figures on the North West birding scene and in Wales. Consequently, birders from Ceredigion, Conwy, Denbighshire, Cheshire, Wirral and Lancashire jumped in their cars immediately and made their way towards the Menai Bridge and Anglesey. By 8.00pm, some 30 birders had gathered at the site, including Gary Bellingham, John Gregory, Richard Bonser, Jonathan Williams, Pete Antropus, Steve Williams, Ian Evans, Steve Young, Barry Barnacal, Allan Conlin, Dave King and Roger Wilkinson. The bird was still showing but the conditions were abysmal. It was torrential rain and birders stood getting absolutely soaked. For no apparent reason, the bird flew up at 8.18pm and disappeared from view. It had presumably gone to roost. More and more people arrived but despite searching in heavy rain, no further sightings were had by dark. A lucky 30 birders had connected! As darkness fell, birders from all over the UK were contemplating the fate of the bird. Would it still be around, had it gone to roost, had it died in the atrocious conditions? Nevertheless, birders from as far afield as North Uist (LGRE and others on a Scottish tour), Aberdeenshire, Dunbarton, Northumberland, Yorkshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, East Kent, Sussex, Dorset, Devon and Cornwall were on their way and attempting to arrive on site by dawn. Monday 2nd June dawned grey and murky, with a cool westerly wind. It was just about birding daylight by 4.25am and within half an hour a phenomenal 700 birders had gathered. The RSPB car parks had soon filled to capacity leaving birders to resort to parking on the access road and by far this had quickly become the biggest twitch of the year. Alan Davies and the South Stack warden sensibly roped the area off and attempted to locate the bird. Careful scanning of the recently burnt area between the first car park and the cliff eventually revealed the presence of the bird and at 5.12am Alan Davies came racing back towards the crowd to attempt an organised approach. Despite some anticipated immediate problems, the huge crowd of birders soon sorted themselves out and orderly created a wide arc around the bird. It was feeding happily in the vicinity of the two coastal footpaths and showed well intermittently as it fed amongst the vegetation. It was like a piece of moving charcoal and could be quite easily picked up with the naked eye. Its black plumage contrasted heavily with the bright array of grasses, Squill, Bird’s Foot Trefoil and Lousewort. The assembled ranks of birders (among them the highest-listing birders in the land) were delighted and watched in awe as the bird fed to within 75 yards. As the morning went on the crowd numbers generally dwindled and the weather improved. The light conditions got a lot better and birders were able to approach the lark to within 50 yards. Consequently, many birders were able to get a series of images of the bird (see the many that accompany this article). Mike Malpass and Rob Wardle took full advantage and managed to get several superb shots (see plates 1-2 & 3-5). It continued to show extremely well throughout the rest of the day and remained until dark. It was still present the next morning (Tuesday 3rd) and showed well again in its favoured burnt area throughout the day. Nigel Blake visited the site and took over 118 shots of the bird (see plates 26-27) and other birders amongst the estimated 700 or so to have visited South Stack during the day included Bob Flood and Ashley Fisher from Scilly and Eugene Archer and others from Dublin. The bird made the Press Association wires and therefore featured in several National newspapers. Being a diurnal migrant it was hardly surprising that it remained for a fourth day but with improving conditions and slack winds it was somewhat remarkable that it was still present on the Friday (6th June). By now it had been admired by over 3,760 observers and was making its way towards the record books of being one of the most observed rarities in Britain of all time. The blackened area of heather and gorse was acting like a magnet to the bird and was obviously full of nutrient-rich plants on which the bird was feeding. Since its burning in May this charred area had been a haven to migrating birds with many groups of Northern and Greenland Wheatears stopping off for several days as well as Whinchats and Willow Warblers. With the ground still being relatively warm, presumably many insects are attracted to it too. This is the first genuine Black Lark to have appeared in Britain and Ireland but follows fraudulent claims of up to 10 birds said to have been obtained in Kent/East Sussex in 1907 & 1915 (see Appendix 1 below) and a probable glimpsed by Barry Spence and Mick Bell at Spurn Point, East Yorkshire, in autumn 1984. Appendix 1: claimed records of Black Lark in Britain subsequently rejected as part of the Hastings Rarity scam. 1907 Kent Lydd, four females, shot, 18th February (British Birds 55: 362-363 & 374-375) 1907 East Sussex Pevensey Levels, four adult females, shot, 29th January (British Birds 55: 362-363 & 374-375). 1915 East Sussex Westfield, single females obtained on 30th January & 1st February (British Birds 55: 362-363 & 374-375). 1915 East Sussex Hollington, January (British Birds 55: 362-363 & 374-375). Elsewhere in Europe, there have been just 17 records (of 25 birds) with only 4 sightings since 1980 (see Appendix 2). The records span 11 different countries and predominate in spring between March and early May. There are just two records in summer and two records in autumn. The farthest west the species has been recorded prior to the Anglesey sighting is Sweden and Germany. Crumbs .... now the music ... this is Birdy with a fine cover of Bon Iver's "Skinny Love"
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