There are a few contenders for bird of the day for 5 October, not least flying from Bristol to Knock in 2008 with Paul Chapman and Dan Pointon to be the first British crew to twitch the Little Blue Heron in Galway, or indeed 2013’s Thick-billed Warbler on Shetland. But the winner is the male Siberian Thrush on Gugh.
As the first full week of October 1999 started, my oppo at
work was away for the week (for some reason his wife always wanted to spend a
week in a cottage in Pembrokeshire – lovely indeed, but in October?) Time off
was therefore at a premium, and I was glad that it was quiet and the forecast
suggested it would stay that way. How badly wrong I was! News of the male
Siberian Thrush’s presence on Scilly filtered out around 12.30pm on the Tuesday
afternoon. The North Ron one in 1992 was too early in my twitching career for
me to have gone for it, and I couldn’t get to Norfolk in time in 1994, so this
remained a near-mythical bird for me.
My long-suffering boss of the time kindly said yes to that
afternoon and the next morning off work, on the wildest of promises – the twitch
was on! (Once again living in the southwest and being able to get to Scilly the
same day was proving handy.) James McGill and I left Taunton in a hurry,
heading to Newquay and a 4pm flight to St Mary’s. On the way we had arranged a
lift with an Association boat, but when they saw there were only two of us the
boatmen switched to using their own tiny motorised dinghy. Off over to Aggie in
that – great fun! I alarmed James further by changing my trousers on the boat (I
was wearing white trousers and charging through bramble and thorn in those
didn’t seem a good idea – I’d chased after a Wryneck on Mendip after work only
the week before and came out of the gorse with my legs looking like the Tour de
France King of the Mountains jersey). Luckily there wasn’t much swell, and soon
we arrived at the quay on Aggie, only to find that there was a full boatload of
departing birders there. So we had to land on the other side of the quay, where
there is the small extra wall. It’s a good thing we’re both tall, otherwise we
would never have made it. As it was I made the mistake of trying to carry my
scope and bag at the same time as grabbing the top of the wall – I nearly went
in the drink, but Jimbo gave me a boost up. We got a rousing cheer as we ran up
the quay – thanks, guys!
We were on Gugh by about 5.30pm, with not much more than an
hour of usable light left, and only a few birders still looking, so we realised
the enormity of our task if we were to see the bird that night. A shout went
up, but our first view was thrush sp. – totally untickable. Then a huge stroke
of luck, as a dark-blue shape flew directly towards us then went vertical like
a jet fighter, showing off the Zoothera
underwing and chequerboard undertail coverts. Wow! We teamed up with fellow
Somerset birder Tom Raven, who was staying on Aggie, and a couple of flight
views later he found it perched in a gorse bush and the 20 or so birders
present all got fabulous views. What a bird!
We got the boat back to St Mary’s at about 7pm and settled
into a night of celebrating under fairly cloudless skies. At the airport in the
morning we saw several friends trooping off the chopper with worried looks on
their faces, but they had the last laugh. Not only had the Sibe Thrush stayed,
but as we collected our kit at the heliport, Mega alert went again – White’s
Thrush on St Agnes! A good thing we didn’t need it! Thirty-six hours later we
were back on Scilly again anyway, for the Short-toed Eagle this time, but
that’s another story.
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