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The Birds of Pembrokeshire and its Islands. 


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RAMSEY ISLAND. 


THE SOUTH END OF 


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AND ISLANDS 


ROCKS 


THE 


BIRDS OF PEMBROKESHIRE 


AND ITS ISLANDS. 


BY 


THE REV. MURRAY A. MATHEW, M.A., F.LS., 


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MEMBER OF THE BRITISH ORNITHOLOGISTS’ UNION, OF STONE HALL, 
PEMBROKESHIRE; AND VICAR OF BUCKLAND DINHAM, SOMERSET. 


ONE OF THE AUTHORS OF THE ‘‘ BIRDS OF DEVON.’ 


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LONDON : 
RoE hORAMEAR, 
18, PRINCES STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE. 


1894 


[All Rights Reserved.] 


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HAVING been compelled to resign the living of Bishop's 
Lydeard, in West Somerset, in consequence of long continued 
ill health, we were induced to settle in North Pembrokeshire 
on account of the healthiness of the climate; and were 
further led to select this remote part of the kingdom through 
anticipations of the sport to be enjoyed by its trout streams and 
on its moors. A time entirely given over to open-air pursuits 
was recommended as the best course to be adopted for the 
recovery of health, and we are thankful to state that this 
pleasant prescription met with entire success. Much of our 
eight years’ residence in the county, which was not without 
its clerical duties, as we became curate of our small parish, 
was devoted to a study of its birds. All the noted bird 
resorts were visited, as well as the various collections of 
stuffed birds we could hear of within the county; while from 
numerous sporting friends, and from others with a taste for 
natural history, whatever information they were able to impart 
was sought after and noted down. We now present the 
result ; although meagre, it may serve as the foundation upon 
which an ampler account of the birds of the county may some 
day be based. 


Buckland Dinham, 1894. 


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CONTENTS. 


Preface ... 

Table of Contents 

List of Illustrations 

Key to Frontispiece ... 

Materials for Book poe as 
Physical Geography of Pembrokeshire 
The Islands: Ramsey 


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The Pembrokeshire Light-houses and Migration... 
Census of the Birds of Pembrokeshire 
I.— Residents 
II.—Summer Visitors ae 
III.—Autumn and Winter Visitors 
IV.—Passing Migrants 
V.—Occasional Visitors ae ore 
VI.—Accidental Visitors, Waifs and Strays 
VII.—Former Resident 
VIII.—Introduced Species 
IX.— Some Noticeable Absentees 
X.—Some Characteristic Birds 
XI.—Species Nesting in the County 
Catalogue of Birds, with an account of each Species 
Addendum 
Index 


Xs 
xiii. 
XVil. 
Xxxii., xxiii. 
XXVil. 
XXX. 
XXXIV. 
XXXV. 
xl. 
xlil. 
xliv. 
xlv. 
xlvi. 
xlvi. 
xlviii. 
xlviii. 
xlviii. 


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LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 


Frontispiece, Rocks and Islands at the south end of Ramsey Island, 


from a water-colour sketch by H. B. Wimbush... w=: sloiface Title 
Key to Frontispiece ... ot ee ane ors Ban ach ees xi. 
Gannets on their Nests, Grasholm... ori ae ae “ ae 60 
Landing Place, Grasholm, with Kittiwakes on their nests... 103 


.. At end of Book 


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KEY TO FRONTISPIECE. 


South end of Ramsey Island. 


1.—Ovof Thomas Williams, z.e., the Cave of Thomas Williams. Just here 
is shewn the entrance to the cave; it is much frequented by Guillemots and 
Kittiwakes. A little further round is a favourite Seal cave. 


2.—Y Moel, z.e., the Conical Hill. This is the south end of Ramsey ; it is 
a lofty cliff, at whose base is a rocky and pebbly beach, and between it and 
Ynys-y-Cantwr (i.e., the isle of the Singer) there is a dangerous race of the 
tide, known as 7w/-y-Gwyddel (z.e., the Irishman’s Hole); on the other side 
of the Cantwr is Twil-y-dylan (.e., the Hole of the Ocean), the gorge through 
which one passes. The little upright rock in the middle has no particular name ; 
a boy fell off it about four years ago and fractured his skull. 


3.— Ynys-y-Cantwr. This is a round grassy islet on the side next to Tzd/-y- 
dylan, and has a fine Seal cave. 


4.— Ynys-y-Gwalltawg (z.e., the Hairy Island), a lofty, round islet with a 
grassy top, the abode of a large colony of Gulls its sides are well patronised by 
Guillemots and Razorbills. 


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INTRODUCTION. 


I.—MAartTeERIALs. 


MaTERIALs for compiling a book on the “ Birds of Pembroke- 
shire’ are scanty. The inhabitants of the county, and of the Princi- 
pality in general, are open to the charge, at least in bye-gone years, 
that they were ¢curiost suorum, indifferent to the Fauna by which 
they were surrounded. There are no Welsh ornithologists, so far as 
we are aware, who lived earlier than the present century. It re- 
mained for a stranger like Drayton, in his ‘‘ Polyolbion,” to describe 
the noble race of Falcons that were to be found upon the rocky Pem- 
brokeshire coasts. In an old map of the last century hanging up in 
one of the rooms of the county club in Haverfordwest there are 
some quaint marginal notes descriptive of the local curiosities, and 
among these the salmon leap below Kilgerran Castle, and the 
Falcons to be found on St. David’s Head are specified. In his 
gossiping history of the county Fenton does not wander into the 
fields of Natural History beyond expressing his wonder at the vast 
multitudes of “ Eligoogs ” (common Guillemots) and other sea-fowl to 
be met with in the St. David’s district. Coming to later years, we 
have in the Zoologist for 1850 and 1851, ‘‘A Catalogue of Birds 
taken in Pembrokeshire ; with Observations on their Habits, Man- 
ners, &c., by Mr. James Tracy.” These consist of notes, some 
of them excellent, that were supplied to Lord Emlyn, and by him 
communicated to the Zoologist for 1850 and 1851. Mr. Tracy was 
for many years (c. 1840—1860) a bird-stuffer at Pembroke, whose 
father was one of Lord Cawdor’s keepers at Stackpole. He was 
able to record one or two birds that may be considered classical, 
as they afforded subjects for the beautiful illustrations in Mr. Yarrell’s 
“British Birds.” Such are the young Greenland Falcon, shot on a 
warren of Lord Cawdor’s at Stackpole; the Yellow-billed American 


XIV. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


Cuckoo, also from Stackpole, both illustrated in Mr. Yarrell’s well- 
known work ; and the Red-Crested Pochard ; all three were presented 
by Lord Cawdor to the Zoological Society of London, and may still 
be seen in the Gallery of British Birds, at the Natural History 
Museum at South Kensington. Unfortunately, Mr. Tracy’s notes are 
incomplete, and do not extend beyond the Sandpipers and Plovers.’ 
In the Zoologist for 1866 and 1869 are contained the valuable notes on 
the birds observed by Mr. Thomas Dix in the north-eastern corner of 
the county, on the Cardiganshire borders, which serve to illustrate 
the influence exercised by the Precelly Mountains on the dis- 
tribution of birds in Pembrokeshire. Mr. Thomas Dix was born 
in 1830, at Dicklebury, near Harleston, in Norfolk, and was a 
friend of such well-known naturalists as Mr. Henry Doubleday, of 
Epping, of Mr. Edward Newman, the founder and editor for many 
years until his death, of the Zoo/ogist, and was also a friend and 
correspondent of Mr. H. Stevenson, of Norwich, the author of the 
“ Birds of Norfolk.” He was himself an accomplished and observant 
naturalist, and an excellent taxidermist. He was appointed agent to 
the Kilwendeage estate, in North Pembrokeshire, and this brought 
him into the county, and enabled him to interest himself in its 
natural history. His notes are full of value, and evince close and 
accurate observation. His death, at the early age of 42, can only be 
considered as a serious loss to the naturalists of the county. There 
isa memoir of him in the Zoologist for 1873, from the pen cf his 
friend, Mr. H. Stevenson, of Norwich. We knowof only one other 
published account of Pembrokeshire birds, and this is a most able 
paper on the rarer birds of the county, from the pen of our friend, 
the Rev. C. M. Phelps, Vicar of St. Martin’s, Haverfordwest. Mr. 
Phelps was, for many years, Curate of Tenby, and while he was 
residing at that beautiful watering-place, wrote a paper for one of 
the meetings of the Pembrokeshire Field Naturalists’ Club, which he 
subsequently allowed to be printed in the seventh edition of Mason’s 
“Guide to Tenby,” an excellent and most useful volume, full of 
information. Mr. Phelps is an enthusiastic oologist ; and his expe- 


‘ But he supplied much information subsequently to Mr. Dix, respecting the 
omitted Gulls and Divers. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. XV. 


riences are chiefly connected with the various nests he had himself 
detected. We have made free use of his valuable paper in our work. 

We must now mention those friends, sportsmen and _ naturalists 
within the county, from whom we have been privileged to receive 
assistance and information. First and foremost of these we rank 
the late Mr. William Fortune, of Leweston. To quote Mr. Phelp’s 
words: ‘At a period when natural history was all but unknown in 
this remote part of Wales, he worked away single-handed at orni- 
thology, oology, entomology, our wild mammalia and reptiles, to- 
gether with ferns and sea-weeds.’’ When we took up our abode 
at Stone Hall, which was within a walk of Leweston, we soon 
formed Mr. Fortune’s acquaintance. This was only two years 
before his lamented death, and he was then a very old man, very 
deaf, and rather infirm, but still a keen and successful salmon 
fisher. We paid him many visits, and had the pleasure of ex- 
amining his beautiful collections, the birds all shot and mounted 
by himself in life-like attitudes. At his death the greater part of 
his birds was presented to the Literary Institute in Haverfordwest, 
and some of the rarities were purchased for the Tenby Museum. 
Among these was a beautiful group of a pair of Montagu’s Harriers 
with their young in down, that had been secured on Leweston 
Mountain. The late Mr. John Stokes, of Cuffern, a near neighbour 
and great friend of Mr. Fortune’s, was another excellent sportsman 
and field naturalist, from whom we received much information re- 
specting the rare birds that had been observed by him on his 
picturesque estate. From Sir Hugh Owen, Bt., we have received a 
list of all the rarer birds he has met with during his long career as a 
sportsman, most of them having fallen to his unerring gun, chiefly 
in the neighbourhood of Fishguard and Goodwick. Mr. Henry 
Mathias, of Haverfordwest, also furnished us with a list of county 
birds, adding his experiences as a collector for many years. We are 
indebted to him for much information supplied both vva voce and in 
correspondence. His collection of birds was presented by him to 
the Museum at Tenby. For the district around St. David’s we have 
to thank our friend and correspondent, Mr. Mortimer Propert, for 
supplying us with many valuable notes. Mr. Propert, together with 


Xvi. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


his father, Dr. Propert, and his brother, the Rey. Sydney Propert, has 
formed a very beautiful collection of birds’ eggs, all obtained around 
St. David’s, and on the islands of Ramsey and Grasholm, the 
Bishop’s Rock, &c. These are chiefly sea-birds’ eggs. The series of 
Guillemots’ eggs is hardly to be surpassed in any private collection ; 
and there are some very fine and handsome specimens of the eggs of 
the Chough, Raven, Common Buzzard, Peregrine, &c., &c. There 
are no very important collections of birds in the county. We have 
already mentioned those of Mr, Fortune, and Mr. Mathias, and we 
have only one other to describe, and this, perhaps, the most interest- 
ing of the three, is that in the possession of Lord Cawdor, at Stack- 
pole. Although several of the rarest of the birds were long ago pre- 
sented, as we have already related, to the National Collection, yet 
there are many scarce and valuable birds still preserved in it. Most 
of the birds were shot on the Stackpole estate, and were set up by 
Mr. James Tracy, of Pembroke. We were allowed the privilege of 
inspecting this interesting collection, and were at the time furnished 
by Lord Cawdor with particulars respecting the capture of some 
of the rarest of the birds. We have been informed that there is 
also a collection of birds at Slebech, the seat of Baron de Ritzen, 
but we have not seen it, and consequently are unable to state 
what it contains. The Rev. Clennell Wilkinson, Rector of Castle 
Martin, and for some time President of the Pembrokeshire Field 
Naturalists’ Club, gave us much information respecting the birds 
of the Castle Martin district, and we had the pleasure of visiting 
the celebrated Stack Rocks in his company. We are indebted to 
many friends, too numerous to mention, for delightful days ot sport 
over the romantic covers of North Pembrokeshire ; thus giving us the 
opportunity of rambling, gun in hand, over some of the wildest 
portions of the county, and of observing the birds that frequented 
them, and we must, while thus recording our thanks, pay a tribute 
of gratitude to our old friend, the late Colonel John Owen, of 
Rosebush, through whose kindness we participated in many a 
good Woodcock shoot at beautiful Trecwn, and in the wild covers 
adjoining the Tufton Arms. 

We must not forget to record our indebtedness to Mr. Frederick 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. XVii. 


Jeffreys, the bird-stuffer in Bridge Street, Haverfordwest, who has now 
for several years sent us information of every rare bird that has come 
into his hands. Mr. Charles Jefferys, naturalist, of Tenby, has sup- 
plied us with many valuable and interesting notes respecting the birds 
to be found in his neighbourhood, and also on Caldy Island, almost 
the only one of the beautiful Pembrokeshire islands we have not our- 
selves visited. In the National Collection of British Birds at South 
Kensington there are many labelled as having been the gift of the 
Rev. A. Morgan. This was the late Chancellor Morgan, of Machen, 
Monmouthshire, uncle to Sir Hugh Owen, to whose gun most, if 
not all, of these specimens were due. Our thanks must be given 
also to Dr. Propert, of St. Davids, who has kindly assisted us in 
compiling our account of the various Pembrokeshire islands, cor- 
recting what we had written, and adding some interesting matter 
from his own extended experience. 


II.—Puysicat GroGRAPHY. 


Pembrokeshire is one of the smaller Welsh counties, and 1s ex- 
ceeded in area by nearly all the English counties, Bedford, Hunting- 
don, Rutland, and Middlesex excepted. It occupies the south- westerly 
portion of the Principality, and is bounded on the north-east by 
Cardiganshire, on the north, north-west and west by the St. George’s 
Channel, on the south by the Bristol Channel, and on the east by 
Carmarthenshire and Carmarthen Bay. It lies between 51° 36’, and 
52° 7', N. lat., and 4° 30’ and 5° 20’ W. long. The length, from 
Strumble Head on the north coast to St. Gowan’s Head on the south, 
is 31 miles. The average width from east to west barely exceeds 21 
miles. The area is 628 square miles, or 401,691 acres. The chief 
geographical feature of the county is the extent of its sea-coast, 
which must exceed a hundred miles in length, owing to indentations 
in the form of numerous bays and estuaries. Its western shores 
furnish many wonderful and conspicuous examples of denudation by 
atmospheric and marine agencies; the hard and igneous rocks, for 
instance, stand out boldly on the north and south extremities of St. 
Bride’s Bay, but the softer old red sandstone, silurian, and coal 
measure strata lying between them have been weathered by the 

Cc 


XViii. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


atmosphere, and worn back by the ceaseless beating of the ocean 
waves, so as to form the picturesque bay which now commands our 
admiration. The same influences account for the multitude of 
beautiful islands that stud the coast. We propose to treat of the 
chief of them in some detail further on. Pembrokeshire possesses 
numerous streams wherein trout are abundant, and also sewin (salmo 
cambricus), the latter being known only within the borders of the 
United Kingdom, in the streams and rivers of Wales, Devonshire, 
Cornwall, and Ireland. It is exceedingly well watered, also, by 
numerous springs, but it is without any important river. The 
Eastern Cleddau and the Western Cleddau, uniting at Landshipping, 
broaden out into the noble estuary of Milford Haven, and alone are 
entitled to the name of river, while the Nevern, and Gwaen, in the 
north of the county, each flowing through a beautiful, wooded valley 
to the sea, are well known for the excellent sport they afford the fly 
fisher, and are the only other streams of sufficient importance for 
mention. The climate of Pembrokeshire is, as may naturally be 
expected, mild and humid, when it is stated that the prevalent 
winds are from the south-westward, and right over the sea where the 
Gulf Stream flows. The rainfall, too, is sometimes excessive. We 
are informed by a writer of authority that the annual rainfall of the 
county varies from about 31 to 4o inches, and may be averaged at 
about 36 inches. These figures are possibly quite correct if the obser- 
vations of a long series of years be taken. We have, however, for 
the sake of comparison, taken the daily records of measurements of 
rainfall in ten different parts of the county for the comparatively 
short period of ten years; that is, from 1881 to 1890 inclusive, and 
we find the annual average of these ten years to be 43 inches, the 
highest annual average, 59 inches, occurring in 1882, and the lowest, 
30 inches, in 1887. But in spite of these drawbacks the air, a de- 
lightful compound of sea and mountain breezes, is fairly bracing, and 
in fine weather the skies appear to be bluer than they are in England. 
The surface of the county is diversified by hill and dale, and the 
soil varies in quality according to its locality. The anthracite coal 
measures extend from St. Bride’s Bay due eastward to Carmarthen 
Bay, and seem to divide the county into two unequal parts, differing 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. abd, 


from each other in many particulars. In the southern portion the 
soils afforded by the carboniferous limestone and old red sandstone 
are of good quality, and the farms on Lord Cawdor’s estate in Castle 
Martin and the adjoining parishes may vie in excellence and fertility 
with any in the kingdom, This district is celebrated for a compact 
and hardy race of pure black cattle, which has been long known and 
highly prized as the ‘“ Castle Martin breed.” Horses, too, of the 
“Pembrokeshire breed,” find their home here, and are often sent 
away into the English markets. The soil of the coal districts is very 
poor, but there is some improvement to the northward, and all along 
the coast line it is eminently suited to the cultivation of barley, the 
crops produced in the neighbourhood of St. David’s obtaining high 
prices for malting purposes. The northern part of the county is 
chiefly composed of ‘‘ mountain,’ 
covered with furze and heather, with occasional parcels of good 
alluvial land in the valleys. The lofty Precelly Mountains, that form 
the chief watershed, are drawn zigzag across from the northern coast 


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z.e., barren, uncultivated ground, 


south-eastward through the heart of the county, cutting off a small 
portion on the Cardigan side. Their loftiest peaks, Foel Eryr and 
Foel Cwm Cerfwyn, rise 1,700 feet above the sea-level. The latter 
is marked on the ordnance map as 1,758 feet, and is surmounted by 
a cairn and flag-staff. These beautiful hills materially affect the dis- 
tribution of the summer migrants in the county. On their north- 
eastern, or Cardigan side, the Redstart, Garden Warbler, Wood 
Wren, and Wryneck are all to be noted, whereas, on their western 
side, and in the central and southern portions of the county, these 
birds are either entirely unknown, or but very rarely seen. The 
coast on the north of the county is more lofty and precipitous than 
it is in the south, where sandhills and warrens, or ivy-covered cliffs 
of inconsiderable altitude make up the sea front. Following the 
coast from the northern boundary of the county from Cardigan Bar 
at the mouth of the Teifi, a noble salmon river that forms the north- 
eastern boundary for some distance, we meet with a succession of 
bays, and lofty promontories. First comes Newport Bay, bounded 
on the south-west by the bold and rocky Dinas Head; then follows 
Fishguard Bay, with the sands and oozes of Goodwick. To the 


XK, The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 


west of Fishguard Bay rises the grand promontory of Pen Caer, a 
mass of trap and granite, attaining the height of 800 feet above the 
sea, and visible from almost every part of the county, appearing at a 
distance like vast fortifications and castles.! Here, too, is Strumble 
Head. Continuing the rocky and lofty coast, in which wooded 
valleys, each with its little stream, make an occasional inlet, we next 
reach St. David’s Head, forming, with Ramsey Island, the northern 
point of the grand crescent of St. Bride’s Bay, the island of 
Skomer constituting the southern point. Looking down upon 
St. Bride’s Bay from the high ground above it, from the top 
of Cuffern Mountain, for instance, we have a glorious scene. 
Its islands, Ramsey and Skomer, to the north and south, 
with Grasholm some fifteen miles from the shore out in the centre 
of the bay, and many another small rocky islet close in shore, 
afford points to catch the shifting lights, here dark with passing 
clouds, there bathed in sunshine, the deep green waters of the bay 
shining likea mirror. Bordering on St. Bride’s Bay are the extensive 
Newgale Sands, to the north of them the romantic little port of Solva 
is cut out in a deep fissure between the cliffs, and stands on its tiny 
stream. Southwards are the favourite watering-places of Broad and 
Little Haven, with their sandy shores, and then we turn the promontory 
to the south, where the famous estuary of Milford Haven broadens out 
beyond St. Ann’s Head. To the east of Milford Haven succeeds a 
tamer coast, much indented, and with many a “point” or “head” 
projecting southwards into the Bristol Channel. Soon after turning 
Linney Head eastwards we reach the well-known “ Stacks,” famous 
in the summer for their hosts of cliff birds. Then, after rounding 
Lord Cawdor’s beautiful park at Stackpole, we soon arrive at Tenby, 
with Caldy Island fronting it to the south-west ; and then a mile or 
two brings us to the boundary of the county, to Marros Sands and 
the Laugharne Marshes in Carmarthenshire. The general character 
of Pembrokeshire is bare and wind-swept ; the few trees on the high 
grounds are all bent towards the east by the prevailing westerly 
winds ; and, although in many parts of the county there are some fine 


' Pen Caer—the Castle Hill. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. SX 


and extensive woodlands, yet from their being situated chiefly in deep 
valleys, these seldom catch the eye until they are closely approached, 
and so do not take away from the universal treeless appearance of 
the landscape. And when they are entered they will be found to 
contain no lofty forest trees ; there are none in the county, except at 
Picton Castle, where in the grounds there is some fine timber ; the 
Pembrokeshire trees in general are of no height or size, and are chiefly 
the ash, oak, sycamore, alder, and beech. The elm is very rare, 
especially in the north of the county; plantations of larch, spruce, 
and hazel thrive, and grow rapidly ; the soil of the county is excel- 
lently suited to the rhododendron that affords a favourite cover to 
pheasants and woodcocks, and attains, as at Trecwn, a gigantic size 
in its lofty and wide-circling clumps. Hedges and hedgerow timber, 
are almost entirely absent; the fields are fenced by banks con- 
structed of stones and turfs, which afford but slight restraint to the 
active little black cattle, that leap them at will like deer, and are 
commonly to be encountered straying far from their pastures. In 
many places lofty masses of trap rock crop out from the ground, 
rising up like islands ; some of these are castellated, others are of 
grotesque shape, such as the well-known “Lion” rock at Treffgarne, 
that resembles a couchant lion, a conspicuous object at a great 
distance, and visible from almost every part of the county, like Roch 
Castle, a ruin standing on a rocky eminence about a mile inland 
from St. Bride’s Bay, that also forms a point not to be avoided in 
the landscape. Many of these isolated rocks afford nesting sites to 
Buzzards, White Owls, Kestrels, Jackdaws, and Starlings. Although 
we were, on the whole, much disappointed with the Ornis of the 
county; its native birds being but few in number, and only one or 
two of the species abundant ; and its visitors—considering the great 
extent of its diversified coast, that trends so far into the sea 
towards the south and south-west that it might well be expected to 
attract passing birds—being but few and scanty ; yet, from our experi- 
ence, we found it a delightful county to reside in; its people, in 
every class, are most friendly and hospitable ; and the sport, in its 
bright and rapid trout-streams, on its furze-clad ‘ mountains,” and 
in its swampy covers, quite sufficient to give pleasure and content- 


Xxii. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


ment to any reasonable sportsman. We ascribe the paucity of its 
birds to the Precelly Mountains barring the entrance of some 
species, as we have already pointed out; and from studying the 
reports received by a Committee of the British Association from the 
lighthouses and light-ships around the coast of the various birds that 
strike against their lanterns at the great annual migration periods in 
the spring and autumn, we have concluded that there is evidence in 
them that numerous birds, in their movements from south to north, 
or from east to west and zce versd, as they go to and fro over the 
St. George’s and Bristol Channels, only skirt the shores of Pembroke- 
shire, and of South Wales in general, and seldom visit us. Mr. J. 
H. Salter, of University College, Aberystwyth, has informed us that 
he has experienced the same disappointment with respect to the 
birds of Cardiganshire. Coming into that county from Norfolk, 
which is famous for the abundance and variety of the ducks and 
waders upon its coasts and “broads,” he was struck by the absence 
of Sandpipers upon the shores, and by the general scarcity of bird 
life. 
II].—TueE IsLanps. 

Were it not for the islands off the coast there would be little to 
write about the Birds of Pembrokeshire, but these are, in the 
summer time, when the various cliff birds resort to them to nest, so 
thronged with countless birds, that they serve to redeem the county 
from the charge we have had elsewhere to bring against it of being, 
comparatively, uninteresting to the ornithologist, and also afford a 
justification for our book, which, without them, we should have felt 
no incentive to compile. Anyone who has ever visited these 
beautiful islands, especially in bright summer weather, cannot fail to 
have been impressed with the scenes presented to him, which will 
for ever live in his memory. The most important of them in size, 
and in extent of bird population, are Ramsey, Grasholm, Skomer, 
Skokholm, and Caldy. Besides these there are various others, 
satellites of the larger islands, or rocky islets and ‘“‘stacks,” more or 
less distant from the coast, such as the Bishops’ Rocks, where the 
Greater Black-backed Gull, the Sea-Pie, &c., nest ; Skokholm Stack, 
tenanted by acolony of the Common Tern ; the “ Eligoog Stacks,” off 


ROCKS AND ISLANDS AT THE SOUTH END OF RAMSEY ISLAND, 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire XXiil. 


the coast to the south of Pembroke; St. Margaret’s Isle, connected 
at low water with Caldy, &c., &c., and the Midland, a small island, 
yet sufficiently large to afford summer pasture to sheep, between 
Skomer and the coast. The Danish names of all the islands in- 
dicate their former occupation by the Danes, who had _ besides 
various settlements upon the sea board of the county. 


Ramsey— Danish, the “ Strong Island.” } 
Taking the islands in order from the north, we have first to i) 
describe the one that, in our opinion, is the most picturesque in its 
rocky scenery, and the brightest in its summer garb of flowers, if 2 Oe) 4 
beautiful Ramsey. To anyone approaching it by land, as he $2 


draws near to St. David’s, its lofty central peaks seem to be the 

boundary of the coast, but he will find that they are separated 

by a channel two miles in width, Ramsey Sound, which he will | 

. have to cross, embarking at the life-boat station, the little har- 
= bour of Portstinnan, Little would he imagine that this now quiet | 


ae and deserted spot was once thronged with numerous ships, and 

% MN ° was an important port in the time of the occupation of Britai 
aa < by the Romans, to whom Menzevia, as they called St. Davi 

§ &- and its adjacent peninsula, was one of their chief stations, ~ 


° whic two of their great military roads convered from the 
eastern side of the kingdom. The passage across to the island 
is usually more easily accomplished than the return, for on the 


suddenly to arise in the afternoon, and then, as the tide always 
runs with tremendous force in the Sound, and the numerous rocks 
below the water cause countless eddies and back currents with 
son’ broken water, locally termed ‘‘shots,” a choppy sea immediately 
esses up, and the row back will be long and arduous, and accom- 
panied by a good wetting. The island was formerly part of the 
great estates attached to the See of St. David’s, and is occupied 
partly as a farm, 200 acres being under cultivation. But the chief 
produce are rabbits that are sent to central markets. There is a 
remarkable absence of any reptiles or vermin, excepting rats, which 
abound, and have been known to make raids upon the eggs of the 


Xxiv. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


sea birds on the cliffs. Ramsey is about two miles long from north to 
south, by a mile wide, and there is a solitary farmhouse upon it. Its 
bright contrasted colours in the summer time make it a scene of 
great beauty, and these colours are due to the sea-weeds that girt the 
bases of the cliffs, to the varied tints of the rocks, and, not the least, 
to the ferns and flowers with which the cliffs are decked from their 
summits to the water’s edge. Nor must we omit to mention the 
flecks of white which are dotted about everywhere by the pure- 
plumaged birds. On the summits, and on the shelves of the cliffs, 
the sea-thrift (Statice) will have its cushions of pink flowers, to be 
replaced, later on, by the more brilliant tints of the heather blooms. 
Growing in tangles among the ferns and heath are the briars of 
a very sweet-scented pure white rose’ (Rosa spinosissima), whose 
flowers vie in purity with those of the sea campions (Sv/ene maritima), 
and give an appearance in many places as if the cliffs were sprinkled 
with snow. Great patches of fern (Asplentum marinum, and more 
rarely Asplentum lanceolatum) crop out from sheltered niches, and 
form, in many cases, the beautiful roofs of numerous caves, which are 
the home of the seal and its companions. Rows of freckled bells of 
the foxglove (Digitalis purpureus), whose spikes are particularly long 
and handsome, now purple, now white, here and there gracefully 
wave their drooping heads, while the Cambrian rocks are profusely 
splashed with the bright orange lichens that are so familiar in Mr. 
Brett’s charming landscapes of the Cornish coast. The cliffs them- 
selves are many coloured, here coal black, here dark grey, and where 
the waves lap their bases are rimmed with coral-red sea-weeds. The 
intense blue of the sky overhead, and the glinting green sea-water 
beneath, are an appropriate colour-setting to the brilliant picture. At 
the south-west end of the island the cliffs are more varied in form, 
and are more deeply honey-combed by the waves than they are at 
the north, and some fantastic rocky islets are close in shore. Two 
of these are known as Yuys-y-Cantwr and Ynys-bery, and are 
separated by a narrow gorge, called Zzw//-y-dillyn, just wide enough 
for a boat under oars to pass, through which the tide races with 


1 Also very common, as Dr. Propert informs us, on the Burrows, and in some 
of the valleys of the adjoining mainland. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. XXV. 


great velocity, so as to render the passage, except in the finest 
weather, somewhat dangerous. On getting through, the bay of 
Dillyn is reached, and is found to be nearly surrounded by towering 
precipices, presenting, on a bright day, a scene of beauty and 
grandeur rarely to be met with. Here the Guillemots and the 
Razorbills chiefly congregate, and are also numerous on the westward 
face of the island, where are some fine cliffs, particularly Al/t-/elyn- 
Jawr, and Alit-felyn-fach, towering sheer and perpendicular over the 
sea dashing against them beneath; and here are placed numerous 
nests of the pretty Kittiwakes, that seem to cling, like Martins’ nests, 
to the least attachment provided by any ledge or niche. Here, too, 
the Shags have their malodorous abodes, with Herring Gulls and 
countless Jackdaws, while the nests of the Peregrine and Raven 
have also been taken on their lofty crags. At the north end of the 
island is a colony of Puffins that on Ramsey seem anxious to keep 
themselves distinct from the great concourse of other birds, and 
here, too, in the cliffs are numerous caves, in which Choughs and 
Pigeons build, the latter, probably, a mixed company of Stock Doves, 
escaped farm-yard Pigeons, and Rock Doves. Mr. Mortimer 
Propert, of St. David’s, our friend and authority for the birds of 
Ramsey and the St. David’s Peninsula, assures us that he is pretty 
confident that he has identified Rock Doves among the Ramsey 
Pigeons. The visitor to Ramsey will not be long upon the island 
before he will recognise a pair of Ravens, and hear their hoarse 
croaking challenge. He will also probably see Buzzards, Peregrines, 
and Kestrels. When we were upon the island we remember that we 
knelt upon the top of the cliff to look over into a Buzzard’s nest that 
was only some twenty feet below. A few Sea-Pies nest upon the 
island, and there are various small birds, such as Rock and Meadow 
Pipits, Stone Chats, &c., tenanting it, and we started a Blackbird 
near the farm. Besides the birds we have already mentioned, the 
Lesser Black-backed Gull nests on the slopes of the cliffs, at their 
summits; a pair of Greater Black-backed Gulls have nested 
occasionally on the extreme top of Vuys-y-bery, and Cormorants breed 
in about equal numbers with Shags. We have seen little parties of 
Manx Shearwaters flying over Ramsey Sound, and it is possible that 
a few may nest upon the island. 
D 


XXVi. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


We have been very fortunate to obtain from Mr. H. B. Wimbush 
permission to take a photograph of one of his sketches of Ramsey 
for the frontispiece to our volume, which gives a very faithful ren- 
dering of the peculiar shapes of the rocks at the south-westend. We 
wished at first to have reproduced the sketch as a chromo-lithograph, 
being anxious to give some representation of the brilliant colouring 
that is so marked a feature of the island, but were deterred by the 
cost, as well as by the fear of disappointment and failure in the 
result, and must hope, therefore, that after the description we have 
attempted above of the varied hues that deck beautiful kaleidoscopic 
Ramsey, our readers may be capable of supplying them for them- 
selves. Mr. Wimbush paints the rocky coasts of the St. David’s 
headland, and of Ramsey, with a most loving and appreciative brush, 
as he was himself educated at St. David’s by Dr. Propert, and went 
egging oftentimes on Ramsey in company with the Doctor’s two 
sons, the Rev. Sydney and Mr. Mortimer Propert, when all three 
used often to risk their lives, when boys, in dangling by a rope 
over its dangerous cliffs while collecting the eggs of the Pere- 
grine, Buzzard, and Raven, and those of the Guillemot and other 
cliff-birds upon their ledges. We have been privileged to see some 
charming drawings of the St. David’s coast in Mr. Wimbush’s 
studio at Finchley, in which every detail in the cliffs, every rock and 
pebble on the beach below, the sandy shore with its rippling fringe 
of waves, are rendered with an exquisite fidelity, the result being a 
combined sea and landscape of great beauty and artistic power. The 
cliff-birds’ eggs from Ramsey are finely-marked specimens. Curious 
and handsome varieties of the eggs of the Guillemot, Razorbill, and 
Kittiwake may be obtained. Any visitor to St. David’s who is at all 
an oologist ought not to fail to request permission—sure to be 
courteously granted—to inspect the wonderful series of eggs in Dr. 
Propert’s cabinet, all of them taken by the Doctor and his sons on 
Ramsey, Grasholm, and the Bishop’s Rocks. We ourselves possess 
some beautiful eggs of the various Ramsey birds, including those of 
the Chough, Common Buzzard, Sea-Pie, and Greater Black-backed 
Gull, the last from the Bishop’s Rocks, and are, in particular, proud 
of our varieties of the eggs of the Kittiwake. We have also egg 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. XXVil. 


ascribed to the Rock Dove from Ramsey, but as we could not be 
certain as to their identification, have not ventured to place them in 
our cabinet. 

The rocky islets in the neighbourhood of Ramsey require to be 
briefly mentioned, as they are all tenanted by numerous sea-birds. 
About four miles to the westward of St. David’s Head lie the North 
Bishops, consisting of a good-sized grass-topped rock, and several 
smaller rocks, with passages between. On these may be found all 
the commoner sea-birds, and on the larger rock there is an abundance 
of Puffins, and some Greater Black-backed Gulls. To the south- 
ward of these rocks, at a distance of about two miles, is Careg- 
Rhosson, a cluster of rocks very like the North Bishops in character, 
consisting of one large rock covered with grass, and surrounded by 
smaller rocks with deep water channels between them, through which a 
strong tideway runs. These also are well patronized by sea-birds, 
and contain, perhaps, the largest colony of Greater Black-backed Gulls. 
These rocks are about three miles to the westward of the north 
end of Ramsey. Next to Careg-Rhosson comes the Daufraich, or 
Dyfich, about a mile to the south, a rocky islet inhabited by 
Guillemots, and a few Razorbills; and to the south-westward, 
again, about a mile distant, stands the South Bishop, upon which a 
fine lighthouse is erected. No birds breed on this rock, but many 
pass it on migration, numbers frequently dashing against the light. 
There are several smaller rocks between the Bishops and Ramsey 
that make the coast dangerous, and the strong tides very often 
occasion high seas. 


Grasholm, Danish “ Gresholm,” the “ Green sland.” 


On looking at amap of Pembrokeshire it will be observed that the 
most westerly part of the county, on the north, is occupied by 
Ramsey Island, and that on the south by Skomer Island; from a 
line joining these two islands, St. Bride’s Bay runs inward towards 
the east for about eight miles, the coast line forming about three- 
fourths of a complete circle, Newgale Sands lying at the north- 
eastern extremity of the bay. From the northern end of these sands, 
not far from Newgale Bridge, there is an extensive sea view, the 


XXViil. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


central part of which is occupied by several islands, varying in size 
and appearance, the most important of them being the one nearest 
to the observer, distant about fifteen miles, known as Grasholm, and 
the one farthest from him, distant about twenty-one miles, distin- 
guished, as may be observed in fine clear weather, by a slender, tall, 
pointed tower, known as the Smalls Lighthouse. 

The geographical position of these islands may perhaps be more 
accurately described by saying that they lie almost in a straight line 
bearing west-three-quarters-north from Skomer Island. The distance 
from Skomer to Grasholm is six miles; on the same course, three 
miles farther on is a cluster of half-tide rocks called the Barrels, 
and from the Barrels four miles still further westward is reached the 
Smalls Lighthouse. About half-way between the Barrels and the 
Smalls lie the Hats, a group of sunken rocks, with eight feet of 
water over them at low tide. Around these islands and rocks, as if 
to make some of them still more perilous, is deep water, and between 
them very strong currents set, in many places forming dangerous 
‘‘races.” Grasholm, however, being of sufficient size, divides these 
currents, so that a triangular space of dead water is formed on its 
northern and southern sides. 

From Porthclais, the seaport of St. David’s, Grasholm bears 
south-west-by-west-three-quarters-west, and is distant from it about 
twelve miles. On approaching the island it appears to be more or 
less conical in shape; the surface slopes down from north to south, 
and is fairly covered with green rank grass. Seen from the north 
the cliff is precipitous, its top being occupied by the chief Gannet 
colony ; on some of the ledges and in the clefts are many other nests. 
From the top of the cliff up to the grassy summit, all available and 
suitable spots are occupied by Kittiwakes and other birds. On the 
east side of the island, close to a half-tide rock, is a sort of cleft or 
cave, where, in fine weather, landing is practically easy, and on the 
southern side is a deep gully, forming a small natural harbour, with 
a shelf of rock on one side, upon which a boat can be easily hauled 
up. The outer, or western side, being exposed to the western 
ocean, is, as may be expected, the more weathered and eroded, and 
offers no facilities for landing. From the southern end the ascent is 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. XXix. 


easy, and on reaching the grassy part the attention is immediately 
arrested by the countless numbers of Puffins which come into view; 
these on rising and flying overhead, for the moment completely 
shade the sun. There are also Gulls, but not so numerous, such 
as the Herring Gull, the Lesser Black-backed Gull, and the Greater 
Black-backed Gull, and nearly all round the island the pretty and 
sociable Kittiwake is to be met with in large colonies, and may 
readily be got at; on one occasion, Mr. Mortimer D. Propert 
found four Kittiwake’s eggs in one nest, which is an unusual 
occurrence, for the Kittiwake mostly lays two eggs, sometimes three, 
and very rarely four. Razorbills and Guillemots likewise are found 
in very great numbers and in close proximity to the Gannets. 

The Gannets, of course, form the most attractive feature of 
Grasholm, which holds a conspicuous place in our account of the 
county Ornis, as it is the only spot off the coast of Pembrokeshire 
that furnishes a nesting station to these fine birds that are said to 
have been originally a settlement from Lundy, where they sustained 
such persecution from the hands of the channel pilots and other egg 
stealers, that many of them were driven to forsake that island in 
search of a more inaccessible, solitary, and peaceful residence. 
Here, on Grasholm, the Gannet is found at all ages and in every 
stage of its growth, and no sight can be more striking and 
impressive than the beautiful and brilliant plumage of these birds, 
as seen in the early morning sun, when some are sitting on their 
plateau and ledges, some on their nests, and others flying about 
fishing in pursuit of food. In addition to the main colony, where 
one can walk about among the nests, which are large structures, and 
not over savoury from the remains of decaying fish, there are on the 
north-west of the island two or three smaller colonies, and the total 
number of Gannets’ nests were, in the spring of 1886, estimated by 
Mr. Mortimer D. Propert at two hundred and fifty, so that at that 
time there were upon Grasholm about five hundred breeding 
Gannets. 

We have been fortunate in having been able to procure from 
Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, two very interesting photographs of 
Grasholm, one representing the Kittiwakes on their nests close to the 


KONG The Birds of Pembrokeshevre. 


landing-place, the other giving a picturesque view of some of the 
Gannets ; the island seen to the right is merely the small rock, 
mentioned above, that is submerged at high water. 


Skomer, Danish, ‘‘ The Rocky.” 


Although not so gaily decked with flowers as Ramsey, Skomer is, 
to the ornithologist, the most interesting of all the Pembrokeshire 
Islands, on account of the incredible number of birds resorting to it 
in the summer, probably exceeding those to be found on any other 
island of equal size off England, Scotland, or Ireland. These multi- 
tudes are mainly composed of countless Puffins and myriads of Manx 
Shearwaters, the last locally known as “ Cock/es,” from the grunting 
ery of the birds when in their holes. Skomer forms the southern 
horn of the crescent of St. Bride’s Bay and, like Ramsey, is parted 
from the mainland by a narrow sound, some two miles wide, of deep 
water, through which the tide also rushes with great force, where 
there are numerous sunken rocks, so that it is rather dangerous to 
navigate in a small boat when there Is anything like a sea, as is often 
the case. In area Skomer contains about 7oo acres. There is but 
one house upon the island, a substantial dwelling ; about 250 acres 
are in cultivation, and are excellently stocked with Partridges that, 
owing to the absence of rats, thrive well and afford good sport in the 
season. Like Ramsey, Skomer is also well supplied with numerous 
springs of beautiful water. Here and there large citadel-looking 
rocks of trap crop up, giving to the island its Danish name of 
Skomer, “The Rocky”; in their clefts numerous White Owls have 
their roosting places. Remains of an ancient occupation are visible 
in sepulchral barrows, and in the rough outlines of dwelling-places 
and enclosures. A conspicuous mark on the eastern side of the 
island is a lofty upright stone ; there are several similar ones on the 
mainland that are said to mark victories gained by Earl Harold over 
the Danes. The village of Haroldston has been supposed by some 
to take its name from such a memorial.t To reach Skomer, a boat- 


' However, the number of places in the county whose names end in the Saxon 
ton (¢own), make it probable that Haroldston is only one of them. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. KIS 


man has to be secured at the village of Marloes, distant some two 
miles from the little port of embarkation at Martin’s Haven. As 
one crosses the sound a small island, called the Midland, has to be 
rounded, and then the landing place of Skomer comes in view with 
the water near the shore (we are supposing the visit is paid in the 
summer), thickly covered with birds, Puffins exceeding all the other 
birds in number in a vast proportion; little parties of Guillemots 
and Razorbills will be seen diving and fishing; and there will be 
numerous Gulls, some resting on the water, others flying to and fro, 
while single Cormorants and Shags will be noticed passing with 
rapid flight low over the water, occasionally alighting above some 
school of fish, to dive and fly after them in the green depths. No 
visitor to Skomer can escape being astonished at the hosts of Puffins 
that are dispersed all over the island, and are so tame that they 
hardly trouble to move out of his way. In walking, one is sure, 
sooner or later to find one’s foot slipping through into some Puffin’s 
burrow, to the astonishment of the bird sitting placidly upon its egg. 
The whole demeanour of the Puffins may be said to be placid ; it 1s 
not easy either to hurry orto frighten them, Every now and then they 
may be seen scuttling out of their holes, making off in a ridiculous 
manner, with much rolling and tumbling head over heels before they 
can rise on wing; and unless they face the wind, or are on an 
eminence, Puffins are unable to fly; when these conditions are not 
present they can be easily captured. All along the edge of the cliff, 
see how thickly they are congregated ; their white breasts turned to- 
wards you have the appearance of monster snow flakes. As you 
approach the only notice the birds will take is to fall in, in a closer 
order, those outside drawing together with an absurd kind of military 
precision until the host is drawn up upon the very scarp four or five 
deep. And even then, unless one advances close up to them, they 
will remain stolidly motionless, regarding the stranger without fear, 
and with much indifference out of their queer little eyes. Throw a 
stone at them—but this only as an experiment, and without cruel 
intention—and the bird near which it passes will only duck its 
head. As we were watching a great body of Puffins wheeling back- 
wards and forwards over the water, we suddenly noticed one with 


XXXIl. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


pure white wings that was a very conspicuous object among its 
companions. After a while this bird flew close to where we were 
seated upon a cushion of Sea Pink, and might easily have been 
secured had we had a gun. In the dwelling-house we were shown a 
pure albino Puffin that was justly considered a great rarity. The 
Puffins arrive upon the island, as we were informed, with great 
punctuality on the rst of April, and leave it early in August. It was 
at the end of May when we paid our never-to-be-forgotten visit, and 
there were then numerous young Puffins hatched in the burrows, 
judging from the numbers of old birds that we saw flying in from the 
sea with bunches of small fish hanging like ribbands from their 
mandibles. In our account of the Manx Shearwater in the body of 
the book we have given our experiences of this interesting bird on 
Skomer, so need not repeat them here. All day long Herring Gulls 
may be observed quartering the island in their vigilant quest after 
young rabbits; they frequently dig them out of the stops; while the 
Puffins and Shearwaters are continually worrying the breeding rab- 
bits in their earths. Since the Sea Birds’ Preservation Act was 
passed the rabbits on Skomer have greatly fallen off in number ; the 
annual take, which used to be 9,000, is now reduced to barely 3,000 ; 
a very serious loss to the tenant. 

A grand cliff at Wick Haven, facing to the south-west, is the 
chief breeding station of the Guillemots, Razorbills, and Kittiwakes. 
Here, on the higher ledges, the two first sat row upon row, in places 
five and six deep, and every coign of vantage on the top of the 
cliff was tenanted by the inevitable Puffins. The lower ledges were 
occupied by countless Kittiwakes, either sitting upon, or standing 
close by, their nests, that, like the structures of the House Martin, 
seemed at a distance to be made of mud, and to be plastered against 
the face of the cliff. In reality they are built of sea-weed and 
grass, that become cemented together by the mutings of the birds. 
The cries of the various birds created a deafening concert ; while 
their frequent arrivals, departures, and transits across the field of 
vision, had almost a bewildering effect. A little further on a colony 
of Lesser Black-backed Gulls had a station on the summit, and we 
were able to walk among their nests, some containing eggs. Choughs 


The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. XXXIiii. 


and Ravens were noticed, but the absence of all Hawks occasioned 
surprise ; not even a Kestrel was visible. There are no Buzzards 
nesting any longer upon the island, but we were told that a pair of 
Peregrines had an eyrie there, and that Buzzards paid an occasional 
visit. 

Skomer resembles both Ramsey and Lundy in being without bush 
or tree, and is, in consequence, without any attraction for the soft- 
billed summer migrants, the /wrdide, or small birds that nest in 
leafy shelters. The short-eared Owl occasionally remains to breed; 
the Rev. C. M. Phelps possesses an egg taken from a nest upon 
the ground. A few Curlews, Peewits, and Sea-Pies nest upon the 
island ; we found the last with young just out of the egg among the 
sprouting bracken ; we also disturbed a single Whimbrel, that started 
up at our feet, and ran off slowly with trailing wings as if it had a nest. 
Other birds on the island are Wheatears, Rock and Meadow Pipits ; 
Storm Petrels that nest in the chinks of an old wall above the cliff ; 
Carrion Crows, Jackdaws, Cormorants, and Shags. 

The cliffs of Skomer present a great variety of colours, in this 
resembling those of Ramsey. At places they are coal black—this 
is at their base where they vividly contrast with the green sea-water 
and sea-weeds of coral and other hues; higher up are larger masses 
of deep orange, while patches of brown and grey, of different shades, 
are also intermingled. Seals frequent the caves in all the Pembroke- 
shire islands, and are often to be seen. 

About four miles to the south-west of Skomer is the smaller island 
of Skokholm, “the rocky islet,” of about 200 acres, which is held 
with Skomer, and affords summer pasturage for sheep; there is no 
house upon it. It rises to a considerable elevation above the sea, 
and, like Skomer, abounds in cliff birds; and is tenanted by 
numerous Manx Shearwaters, and by great numbers of rabbits. To 
the east is a small island called Skokholm Stack, where there is a 
little colony of Common Terns. At the time when the Roseate 
Tern used to breed in some numbers on the Scilly Islands it is just 
possible that a pair or two nested on Skokholm, as they used to be 
seen occasionally flying off the coast of the adjacent mainland at 
Dale ; this beautiful species has now, for many years, entirely aban- 

E 


XXXiv. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


doned all its breeding stations off the south-west parts of the king- 
dom, and is very rarely seen at the present day on any part of the 
south-west coasts. 


Caldy, Danish, perhaps from cald, the same as in Cauldron, and 
signifying the Boiling Island,’ from the swift and agitated 
waters off its rocky shores. 


Caldy, a somewhat tamer island, and of less elevation than either 
Ramsey or Skomer, faces Tenby to the south-west, and is parted 
from it by Caldy Sound, about 24 miles in width. Like Lundy, it 
had in old times a considerable population ; there were once up- 
wards of thirty houses uponit, and a Priory ; the ruins of the last 
are stillto be seen. At the present day there is only the mansion of 
the proprietor. Caldy, whose ancient British name was Ynys Pyrr, 
“the island of Pyrus,” is about a mile in length by half-a-mile in 
breadth, and contains an area of 611 acres. On the north side it is 
composed of mountain limestone ; the southern part is old red sand- 
stone. It is a well-cultivated and fertile farm, and there are some 
extensive limestone quarries. In 1828 the present fine light-house 
was erected, which contains a powerful dioptric fixed light, at a 
height of 211 feet above the sea, and in clear weather it is said to be 
visible at a distance of 26 miles. There are a good many cliff birds 
upon Caldy in the summer, that chiefly inhabit its channel, or south, 
side. These consist of Guillemots, Razorbills, Puffins, Herring 
Gulls, and a few pairs of Shags. Some Manx Shearwaters formerly 
nested upon the island, and Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, believes that 
a few still do so, in the fissures of the cliffs. On the Tenby side of 
Caldy is situated St. Margaret’s Island, perforated with vast caverns, 
and at low water connected with Caldy by a reef of rocks. Here 
some forty to fifty pairs of Herring Gulls nest, and a pair of greater 
Black-backed Gulls have also bred here of late years, and a few 
pairs of Shags, with numerous Guillemots and Razorbills, while a few 
Puffins inhabit the rabbit earths on the summit of the cliff. Mr. 
Jefferys informs us that, when he was on St. Margaret’s Island in May, 
1893, he frightened four or five Manx Shearwaters out of holes and 
fissures :—‘‘ They appeared to come from cracks about half-way down 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. XXXV. 


the cliffs, and may, or may not, have been nesting there ; it certainly 
looks as if they were.” He adds: “I believe the Chough still 
breeds at the back of Caldy, 7.2, on the Channel side; they did so 
some four or five years ago, and this spring (1893) I saw a pair 
flying about St. Margaret’s, having come from the direction of 
Caldy.” Mr. E. W. H. Blagg, who was visiting Tenby in the summer 
of 1887, tells us that he saw a large flock of Manx Shearwaters 
flying off Caldy on several evenings. 


II].—TuHE PEMBROKESHIRE LIGHT-HousES AND MIGRATION. 


Both in the St. George’s and Bristol Channels, and on either side 
of them, there are so many light-houses, some of them placed on 
rocks, or islands, miles out at sea, that they might well serve as 
points of direction to the passing flocks of migrating birds in the 
spring and autumn, helping them to their flight-lines ; while obser- 
vations made from them would be of the greatest service to ornitho- 
logists, as they would disclose what birds pass the county, the 
periods of their passage, and the duration of the movements of the 
respective species. For several years (from 1879-1887) a committee 
appointed by the British Association supplied the keepers of light- 
houses and light-ships around the British Isles with forms on which 
they might enter the various birds that were attracted by their lights, 
with the condition of the weather, and the directions of flight, fur- 
nishing those of the most important stations with copies of 
illustrated books on British birds, in order that they might identify 
the species that came under their notice. The annual reports that 
were compiled from the information forwarded from a large propor- 
tion out of the total number of light-houses contain most valuable and 
interesting matter, although they are necessarily somewhat fragmen- 
tary and incomplete; and have shed much light upon the wonderful 
seasonal movements of birds to and from our islands. We have 
carefully studied the reports from the Pembrokeshire light-houses, 
all of them well situated, the Smalls, in particular, from its position 
fifteen miles out at sea, in the centre of St. Bride’s Bay, where it 
is almost exactly opposite to the light-house on the Tuskar Rock, 


XXXVi. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


that stands seven miles off the Wexford coast, might well be expected 
to afford considerable information respecting the passage of birds 
between Pembrokeshire and Ireland. The light-house on the 
South Bishop’s Rock, off the St. David’s peninsula; the two light- 
houses at the entrance of Milford Haven; the tall light-house on 
Caldy, are all important stations, from which the returns are of great 
interest. Such light-houses as those in Cardigan Bay, on the Smalls, 
and on Lundy, are of special value, from their isolated position so 
many miles from land, where they must necessarily attract birds that 
make their aerial journeys well out at sea. In fine weather the birds 
fly wide of, or high above, the light-houses, but in stormy, or misty 
weather, they flutter about them during the night and the early hours 
of the morning in a bewildered manner, and hundreds perish from 
dashing themselves violently against the lanterns. We are quite 
unable to arrive at any beyond the most general conclusions, as the 
materials for forming any adequate theory are as yet far too scanty, 
from the returns supplied from the South Bishop’s, the Smalls, the 
Milford, and the Caldy light-houses. They serve, however, to reveal 
the fact that several species, commonly regarded as stay-at-homes 
are to be included among the birds that are impelled by the migra- 
tory instinct; and they lead the ornithologist to formulate the 
canon that all birds migrate, although he is well aware that one or 
two species, such as the Dipper,’ the Pheasant, and the Partridge, 
might be adduced as exceptions. Such familiar birds as the Robin, 
the Hedge Accentor, and the House Sparrow, are common migrants. 
Flocks of Rooks have been noted at the Smalls leaving the Pem- 
brokeshire coast for Ireland in the spring, and returning in the 
autumn. The Zwurdide are the most restless of the migratory birds, 
and appear to be on the move almost throughout the year. A great 
number of Blackbirds and Thrushes perish by dashing on autumn 
nights against the lanterns of the South Bishop’s and the Smalls 
Light-houses; a hundred, or more, have been picked up dead in the 
course of a few hours. The migrations of some species are con- 
tinuously extended over along period. ‘The first Wheatear appeared 


! The Dipper is, doubtless, an occasional migrant, as is proved by the appear- 
ance from time to time of the Scandinavian Black-bellied Dipper ( C7vclus »relano- 
gaster) in the Eastern Counties of England. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire, XXXVil. 


on the Tuskar Rock on March tst in 1883, and others were seen 
passing at intervals until May 26th. At the same station Swallows, all 
making towards the north-west, continued to be seen from April 2gth 
until June 21st inthat same year. Their return south in the autumn 
is extended over an equally long period ; on Caldy they were noted 
to be flying south from August 31st until November rrth. Swallows 
make their journeys by daylight, being always observed to pass during 
the forenoon. The southward migration of the Goldcrest was noted 
on the Tuskar Rock to begin as early as July 27th in 1883. 

We learn much from these interesting reports concerning the 
dates on which some of our winter visitors leave our coasts for 
their northern breeding stations ; they remain with us much later in 
the spring than they are commonly supposed to do. ‘ Hundreds 
of Skua Gulls” were seen passing the Tuskar Rock so late as May 
28th in 1883; others again on May 31st; others on June 7th or 
June 8th, and even as late as June 22nd. Some of these Skuas 
were observed to be heading south, We believe that, very often, 
the direction of the flight of birds as they are passing any particular 
station may furnish no correct guide as to the goal they are aiming 
at. The wind prevailing at the time may lead them to be flying 
quite contrary to their course until they meet with one suitable to 
their journey, and they may then have to retrace hundreds of miles 
that they have been driven from their desired flight-line. The Great 
Northern Diver leaves St. George’s Channel about May rst for the 
north, and returns again in October. At intervals during the winter, 
as has been observed at Lundy, flocks of Guillemots and Razorbills 
re-visit the islands that form their summer nesting stations, stay for 
the night, and disappear again in the morning. Such unlikely birds 
as Water Rails and Moor-hens are included among the birds noticed 
at night in the autumn at the South Bishop’s and Smalls. The 
small soft-billed birds that arrive in the spring do not find their 
return journey to the woods and copses, in which they nest, any 
more exempt from peril than their departure in the stormy autumn. 
Thirty-five Whitethroats were killed against the Tuskar Light during 
the misty night of May rath, 1884; while ‘‘ scores” of Chiffchaffs 
perished on the night of April 22nd that same year. We learn 
that Cuckoos arrive in small flocks; eleven were seen passing 


XXXViii. The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 


the Nash Light, heading north-west, on April r5th. Accurious fact is 
reported from one of the Milford Haven light-houses respecting the 
Puffins ; it is stated that they annually strike against the light at the 
beginning of September, and do not do so at any other season in 
the year. 

The great bulk of the migrants that arrive in this country in the 
autumn come from the northern parts of Europe, and land upon the 
eastern and north-eastern shores of England and Scotland. Those 
that reach the western and south-western counties, and South Wales, 
cross England by river valleys chiefly ; a very large number of birds 
make their passage over the narrowest part of the island, where we 
have the boundary between England and Scotland, and, striking the 
Solway Firth, travel down the north-west coasts. But eventually it 
is only a fraction, and that a fraction with its denominator ever 
increasing, that reaches the shores of South Wales and the south-west 
peninsula of England. The Knot, for example, still visits More- 
cambe Bay, on the coast of Lancashire, in thousands every autumn 
and winter, where the flocks are well known to the local shore- 
gunners by the pretty name of “ School-girls,” but it is a species that 
has, for some years, been extremely rare on our Pembrokeshire sands 
and oozes. We think that it may be regarded as a fact that the 
extreme south-west parts of the United Kingdom participate, in a 
comparatively small degree, in the great autumn rush of birds from 
the continent. Nor do they share, to any very much greater extent, 
in the spring migrants that reach us from the south and south-east. 
Our summer visitors come to us from very great distances, and 
there are few that wing their way only from the south of Europe 
and from Northern Africa. The Swallows, the Cuckoo, and many 
of the Warblers, have to return from their winter quarters about the 
Equator, or even from so far to the south as the Cape. They 
approach us by crossing France, by the Rhine valley to the east, or 
vid Spain, the west coast of France, and directly across the Bay of 
Biscay to the west. The greater number traverse the English 
Channel at its narrowest part at the Straits of Dover, and, landing 
on the Sussex coast, disperse inland to the north, east, and west ; 
but the main body, with respect to several species, becomes exhausted 
before the extreme western counties can receive their contingent, and 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. KON 


for this reason our Pembrokeshire Ornis is poor in respect to its 
summer migrants. Many also cross from projecting Capes on the 
coast of Normandy to the nearest headlands opposite; thus the 
neighbourhood of the Start Light-house in South Devon is a great 
landing-place ; but these birds chiefly stock the counties of Devon, 
Cornwall, and Dorset, and only a few, if any, pass on northwards 
across the Bristol Channel. A few occasional visitors from the South 
of Europe, of which the Rose Pastor and the Little Bittern may be 
cited as examples, that not unfrequently cross the English Channel 
become absorbed by the southern counties of England, and only a 
rare straggler out of the number passes over the Bristol Channel into 
South Wales. Thisis thereason why South European species, not very 
rare in some of the English counties, are either without any record in 
Pembrokeshire, or have been noted there only in single instances. 
We cannot resist the conclusion that Pembrokeshire is, when com- 
pared with counties that are more fortunate in their position, some- 
what of a bird-forsaken district. We have called attention elsewhere 
to the absence of American species, and have considered that others, 
besides the two which have been noted, may probably have occurred 
without recognition; for if we are correct in our opinion that 
American birds reach us mainly overland, across the north of Asia 
and Europe, and travel down our western coasts, it is reasonable to 
expect that so many would be met with in Pembrokeshire as have 
been recorded from the better-watched shores of Devon and Corn- 
wall. 

The spring and autumn migrants that fall to the share of Ireland 
do not appear to reach it, except to a very slight extent, by passing 
over our county. Birds arriving from the continent traverse the 
centre of England by river valleys, and, reaching the estuary of the 
Severn, an important highway, continue their flight over the Bristol 
Channel far to the south of the Welsh counties. Others come from 
the north-west, crossing England to the north and, passing the Isle of 
Man, land on the northern shores of Ireland; while the greater 
part of the summer visitors come up from North Africa, by the 
route of Spain and the Bay of Biscay, and fetch the south of Ireland 
after a long, but rapidly executed, passage high in the air, and 
directly over the water. Many also arrive v/a@ the English Channel, 


dE The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


and either round, or pass over the Land’s End district of Cornwall. 
But we think that Pembrokeshire takes but little part in the flux 
and reflux of Hibernian birds.! 


CENSUS OF THE BIRDS OF PEMBROKESHIRE. 


The list of the county birds supplied by Mr. H. Mathias, of 
Haverfordwest, to Mason’s “‘ Guide to ‘Tenby ”’ contains 191 species, 
but two ofthese, the Aivecrest, and Briinnich’s Guillemot, we are 
unable to accept. We have so often received brightly plumaged 
males of the Goldcrest, sent to us as Zirecrests, that we suspect a 
similar mistake in this instance, particularly as we have been unable 
to trace any Pembrokeshire /ivecres¢, and have never discovered one 
in any of the existing collections of county birds. In a list of birds 
nesting on Skomer Island that we received from a friend the 
Firecrest is actually included! With regard to Briinnich’s Guillemot 
there is no doubt that a confusion has been made between that 
species and the &Rinzged Guillemot (Uria lacrymans), for Mr. 
Mathias assured us that Sriinznich’s Guillemot (sic) nested on 
Skomer, whereas this northern form of Guillemot is not known to 
nest anywhere south of Greenland, and the few accidental specimens 
that have been reported as having been obtained upon our coasts 
are viewed by competent ornithologists with much suspicion. The 
Rey. C. M. Phelps, at the foot of Mr. Mathias’ list, adds two birds 
that are omitted in it, the Golden Oriole and the Rose Coloured 
Pastor, thus bringing the total to 191, as given above. In our 
account of the birds of Pembrokeshire, including three doubtful 
occurrences, we can only bring the gross total to 236. On the 
opposite side of the Bristol Channel we have been able to catalogue 
as many as 300 species for the much larger county of Devon, and 
264 species for the county of Somerset. Mr. Howard Saunders, in 
his “‘Manual of British Birds,” the most recent authority on the subject, 
gives the total number of birds for the British Isles as 368, so that 


From the reports from the South Bishop’s and Smalls Light-houses we find 
that Blackbirds, Thrushes, Sky-larks, Linnets, Chaffinches, House Sparrows, 
Starlings, and Rooks, pass over to Ireland w/@ the Pembrokeshire Coast. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. xli. 


Pembrokeshire is deficient by no less than 132 of this number. No 
doubt, the small number of birds we can record for Pembrokeshire 
is due, in great part, to the want of observers who might have noted 
occurrences that are not included in any of the existing lists ; and 
we think, also, that the county is left out in the cold, so to speak, by 
many birds that either pass its coasts in their migrations, or do not 
extend their flight so far towards the south-west as to reach it ; and 
we have pointed out that the Precelly Mountains act as a barrier to 
exclude from it several of the smaller summer visitants. But we think 
it very probable that an ornithologist posted at a good position, such 
as at Pembroke, for instance, might have it in his power to make 
additions to our list. It will be observed that we have been able to 
set down only ¢wo stragglers from America. In whatever way 
American birds reach the British Islands, whether by crossing the 
Atlantic far to the north, where it is narrowest, and then striking 
and following down the coasts either on the east or west, or by coming 
chiefly overland v@ the north of Asia and Europe, the extended 
littoral of Pembrokeshire might have been expected to have inter- 
cepted as many American species as the coasts of North Devon and 
Cornwall ; and as, for those two counties, at least a dozen American 
birds have been recorded, some additions to the Pembrokeshire list 
might be fairly anticipated in this direction. 


Our 235 species on the Pembrokeshire list are composed of : 


Ti: Residents... ane Re cae wes 81 
I Summer Visitors ee oe ot 27 
III. Winter Visitors se: ee BBY sas 43 
IV. Passing Migrants in Spring and Autumn 8 
Ve Occasional Visitors ... wats at dan 54 
VI. Waifs and Strays se oa B02 15 
VII. One former Resident (Black Guillemot) ... I 
VIII. Introduced Species ae ae ee 4 

233 
To which may be added three doubtful occurrences 3 

236 


xlii. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


After detailing these in order we shall proceed to describe : 
IX. Some Absentees, that might reasonably be expected in the 


county. 


X. Some Characteristic Birds ; and lastly, 
XI. The species that nest, and are known to have nested, within 


the county confines. 


(I.) The Residents are 81 in number, and are the following :— 


Mistle-thrush 
Song-thrush 
Blackbird 
Stonechat 
Redbreast 
Goldcrest 
Hedge-sparrow 
Dipper 
Long-tailed T 
Great Tit 
Coal Tit 
Marsh Tit 
Blue Tit 

Wren 

Pied Wagtail 
Grey Wagtai 
Meadow Pipit 
Rock Pipit 
Tree Creeper 
Goldfinch 
Greenfinch 
House-sparrow 
Chaffinch 
Linnet 
Redpoll 
Bullnnch 
Corn Bunting 


Yellow-hammer 
Reed Bunting 
Starling 
Chough 

Jay 

Magpie 
Jackdaw 
Carrion Crow 
Rook 

Raven 

Sky-lark 
Wood-lark 
Green Woodpecker 
Kingfisher 
Barn Owl 
Tawny Owl 
Hen Harrier 
Buzzard 
Sparrow-hawk 
Peregrine 
Merlin 

Kestrel 
Cormorant 
Shag 

Gannet 

Heron 
Common Sheldrake 


Wild Duck 

Ring Dove 

Stock Dove 

Rock Dove 
Partridge 

Red Grouse 

Water Rail 
Moor-hen 

Coot 

Golden Plover (?) 
Ringed Plover 
Lapwing 

Oyster Catcher 
Snipe 

Woodcock 

Dunlin (?) 

Curlew 

Kittiwake 

Herring Gull 
Lesser Black-backed Gull 
Greater Black-backed Gull 
Storm Petrel 
Manx Shearwater 
Little Grebe 
Razorbill 

Common Guillemot 
Puffin 


Although all the above are entitled to be classed as residents, 
yet their numbers vary according to the seasons, some of them, such 
as the Goldcrest, Redpoll, Merlin, Snipe, Woodcock, &c., being 
more numerous in the winter, when they are reinforced by arrivals 
from the north; while others, like the Mistle-thrush, Goldfinch, 
&c., are scarce, comparatively, in the winter, owing to the bulk of 


them having migrated to the south. 


The greater number of the 


clifi birds, too, have left us in the winter, to disperse themselves far 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. xliii. 


and wide over the adjacent seas, and many of them have wandered 
into far lower latitudes. Of the whole number very few indeed 
remain stationary ; our own home-bred birds have left us by the 
winter for the south, and have been replaced by strangers coming in 
from the north, until the spring calls these last back to their 
northern breeding grounds, and our own birds return to the familiar 
spots in which they have been reared. Out of all the residents, 
perhaps, the Dipper, the Pheasant, and the Partridge may be cited 
as the only stay-at-homes. 

Since the commencement of the present century the county has 
lost the Marsh Harrier, the Kite, and the Black Guillemot from its 
list of Resident Birds, and has acquired the Starling, previously 
only a winter visitor, and the Ring-necked Pheasant (Phasianus 
torquatus), that appears to have been introduced about seventy 
yearsago. The Mistle-thrush is rare in the winter, most of the birds 
leaving us in the early autumn. Some of the Conirostres, or seed- 
eating small birds, are fewer in number than they are in general in 
England ; the House-sparrow is scarce in most parts of the county, 
and in some places in the north is seldom seem. The Linnet, 
Goldfinch, and Yellow-hammer are numerous, as are also the 
Chaffinch and Greenfinch. The Sky-lark is not abundant any- 
where, and the Wood-lark is rare and local, and seems to be 
disappearing. The Hen Harrier, we think, annually decreases in 
numbers ; so, too, does the Chough, which used to be an abundant 
species on the coast, and the diminution in its numbers is not to be 
entirely explained by persecution. Although not so common as it 
was in bye-gone years, the Buzzard still fairly holds its own ; a corres- 
pondent has informed us that as recently as in the month of April in 
the present year (1894), in a walk from Solva to St. David’s Head, 
along some seven or eight miles of the cliff, he encountered five pairs 
of this fine bird. A pair or two of Merlins nest in the wilder parts of 
the county, and the bird is not uncommon as a winter visitor. The 
Red Grouse may still exist on the Precelly Mountains, but in very 
reduced numbers, and for want of preservation is in danger of 
becoming lost; on the same mountains it is probable that a few 
Golden Plovers and Dunlins breed, as there are places very suitable 
for them, and they are known to nest at no great distance in the 


xliv. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


adjoining county of Cardigan. The Common Snipe nests throughout 
the county, but at the present time there is not a tithe of its ancient 
numbers. The multitudes of cliff birds that resort to the islands off 
the coast in the summer to nest is the most important feature in the 
Ornis of the county ; the island of Skomer is, probably, the largest 
nesting station of the Manx Shearwater in the British Isles, and 
Grasholm is one of the few breeding places of the Gannet. 


(II.) The summer visitors are 27 :— 


Ring-Ouzel Wood Warbler Swift 

Wheatear Sedge Warbler Nightjar 

Whinchat Grasshopper Warbler Wryneck 

Redstart Tree Pipit Cuckoo 
Whitethroat Red-backed Shrike Turtle Dove 
Blackcap Spotted Flycatcher Quail 

Garden Warbler Swallow Corn Crake 
Chiffchaff Martin Common Sandpiper 
Willow Warbler Sand Martin Common Tern 


The Redstart is extremely rare, and the only instance we know of 
its having bred in the county is the one reported by Mr. Dix on the 
Gardigan side of the Precelly Mountains. We have seen statements 
in the local papers that the Nightingale has been heard singing in the 
summer time near Clarbeston, in the centre of the county. But the 
bird is unknown in south-west Wales, and the song of some other bird 
must have been taken for its notes. The Garden Warbler occurs 
rarely only in the north-eastern part of the county; the Precelly 
Mountains shut it off from visiting the central and southern districts, 
where it is never seen. The Blackcap is scarce. The Chiffchaff is 
the most abundant of all the small summer visitors; the Willow 
Wren is far from numerous, and the Wood Wren is very local, and is 
only found at all commonly on the eastern side of the Precelly 
Mountains ; it is never seen in the centre of the county, and appears 
to be rare inthe south. The Sedge Warbler is abundant by streams 
that are fringed with cover; the Grasshopper Warbler is rare and is 
very local. The Red-backed Shrike is rare, and seems to confine 
itself to the south of the county. The Spotted Flycatcher is 
abundant. The Turtle Dove is rare, and the only record of its 
nesting comes from the neighbourhood of Pembroke. The 
Wryneck is rare and local. The Quail is an irregular summer 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. xlv. 


migrant; in some years it is common, especially in the St. David’s 
district, and in the north of the county. 


(III.) The autumn and winter visitors are 43 :— 


Redwing Pintail Curlew Sandpiper 
Fieldfare Teal, B. Purple Sandpiper 
Black Redstart Shoveller Green Sandpiper 
Siskin Tufted Duck Redshank 
Brambling Scaup Greenshank 

Snow Bunting Pochard Common Gull 
Long-eared Owl Goldeneye Brown-headed Gull 
Short-eared Owl, B. Long-tailed Duck Great Skua 

Bittern Common Scoter Pomatorhine Skua 
Spoonbill Goosander Richardson’s Skua 
White-fronted Goose -Red-breasted Merganser Buffon’s Skua 
Brent Goose Smew Great Northern Diver 
Barnacle Goose Grey Plover Red-throated Diver 
Bewick’s Swan Grey Phalarope 

Wigeon Jack Snipe 


The Siskin is rare, and is not noted every winter. The Short- 
eared Owl occasionally remains to nest. The Wigeon and Teal are 
the only ducks that arrive in any numbers; a few Teal may breed with 
us on quiet pools. The Oceanic Diving Ducks, such as the Tufted 
Duck, Scaup, and Common Scoter, are sometimes numerous in the 
bays in the winter. Bewick’s Swan is seen almost every winter; many 
flocks are sometimes noticed passing overhead in severe weather. 
All the Wild Geese appear to be rare in Pembrokeshire, with the 
exception of the coast frequenting species, the Brent and the 
Barnacle. And this is a little singular, because enormous flocks 
arrive regularly every autumn and winter in Glamorganshire, and 
some detachments might be expected to continue their flight a little 
farther towards the west. We have been informed that small flocks 
are occasionally seen on the Laugharne marshes just over the 
Pembrokeshire border in Carmarthenshire,—also on the marshes 
near Tenby. On Miss Talbot’s estate of Margam, in Glamorgan- 
shire, over a thousand Greylag Geese make their appearance every 
autumn, and one winter an enormous flock was seen there, chiefly of 
White-fronted Geese, that was computed to number at least 6,000 
birds. The Greylag Goose is almost unknown on the opposite 
coasts of Somerset, and we are without a single record of its 


xlvi. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


occurrence in Pembrokeshire. The highly-preserved estate of 
Margam may have been found by the birds to offer them undis- 
turbed feeding-grounds, and they would naturally avoid marshes 
and flats that were almost daily shot over. This is, doubtless, one 
of the reasons that the large flats in south Pembrokeshire, which 
appear to be very suited to them, remain unvisited. The Goosander 
is more often seen than the Red-breasted Merganser, and the Smew 
is rare. The Sandpipers are generally scarce on the Pembrokeshire 
coast at the present day ; Goodwick Sands, in former times, were 
visited by numerous waders, but they are now greatly disturbed, and 
are chiefly the exercise ground for training horses, and the birds are 
scared away. On the many occasions, at different times of the 
year, when we have passed the creeks and oozes connected with 
Milford Haven, we have been struck by the absence on them of 
Sandpipers of any species. They are probably constantly watched, 
and every bird that appears shot at, and frightened off. The Skua 
Gulls pass down St. George’s Channel in the autumn, and in fine 
weather keep far out at sea; it is only in severe gales that they are 
driven to approach the shore, and their appearance is therefore 
irregular. The Great Northern and Red-throated Divers are 
frequently common in Milford Haven. 


(IV.) Passing migrants, that are usually seen both in spring and 


autumn, are only 8 :— 


Yellow Wagtail Sanderling Arctic Tern 
Turnstone Bar-tailed Godwit Black Tern 
Knot Whimbrel 


Of these the Yellow Wagtail is more commonly seen in August 
on its way south. The Knot may sometimes be found on the coast 
during the winter. The Bar-tailed Godwit used to be numerous on 
the oozes in the autumn ; it is now a rare bird. 


(V.) The occasional visitors supply a longer list, and are 54 in 


number :— 

Lesser Whitethroat Golden Oriole Cirl Bunting 

Bearded Tit Great Grey Shrike Rose-coloured Pastor 
Nuthatch Waxwing Hooded Crow 

White Wagtail Pied Flycatcher Great Spotted Woodpecker 
Blue-headed Yellow Hawfinch Lesser Spotted Woodpecker 


W agtail Crossbill Hoopoe 


The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. xl vii. 


Marsh Harrier Eider Duck Little Tern 
Montagu’s Harrier, B. Velvet Scoter Glaucous Gull 
Rough-legged Buzzard Spotted Crake Little Gull 
White-tailed Eagle Crane Sabine’s Gull 

Kite Stone Curlew Leach’s Petrel 
Honey-Buzzard Dotterel Black-throated Diver 
Hobby Avocet Great-crested Grebe 
Little Bittern Great Snipe Red-necked Grebe 
Night Heron Little Stint Sclavonian Grebe 
Bean Goose Ruff Eared Grebe 
Whooper Wood Sandpiper Little Auk 

Gadwall Spotted Redshank 

Garganey Black-tailed Godwit 


One or two of these, such as the White Wagtail and the Great- 
crested Grebe, may be regular visitors, the former in the summer, 
the latter in the winter. There is at least one breeding-station of 
the Great-crested Grebe in Wales, on Llangorse Lake, in 
Breconshire, and we think it must regularly appear on the fine sheet 
of water at Stackpole every season. The Lesser Whitethroat is 
almost unknown in the county. We have heard of Bearded Tits 
from Breconshire, and from both the eastern and western sides of 
Carmarthenshire, and think it probable a few pairs may nest in 
South Wales. It is singular that we should know of but one 
instance of the Nuthatch having occurred in Pembrokeshire ; it 
appears to be a scarce bird throughout the south of the Principality. 
The Pied Flycatcher is fairly common in most parts of Wales, and 
is known to breed in Carmarthenshire, preferring woods at some 
elevation where there is old timber, but it does not extend so far as 
Pembrokeshire, in which it is very rarely seen, and where we have 
no instance of its nest. With the exception of the Green 
Woodpecker, and the Tree Creeper, scansorial birds are rare in 
such a comparatively treeless county as Pembrokeshire. The 
Hoopoe is not rare. We have no recent instance of the Marsh 
Harrier having nested in the county; it was once a common 
resident. Montagu’s Harrier is very rare, and we only know of a 
single nest. The Kite is only a rare occasional visitor, and it is 
long since it has nested in the county. From evidence we have 
accumulated we think it probable that in the adjoining counties of 
Cardigan, Carmarthen, and Brecon there may be at the present day 


xIviii. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


at least six or seven pairs of Kites annually nesting, in great danger, 
we fear, of destruction ; we wish such interesting birds could obtain 
protection. In the report of the Scientific Society of the University 
College of Wales, Aberystwyth, for 1892-93, it is stated that the 
Kite “ still exists in small and decreasing numbers at no great 
distance from us. Two pairs, with their nests, were seen, May 23rd, 
1893.” Of many of the occasional visitors we possess but a single 
instance, but some of them must have occurred oftener, without 
having been reported ; and we feel confident that observation may 
yet extend the list. 


(VI.) The accidental visitors, or waifs and strays are 15 :— 


Melodious Warbler Red-footed Falcon Pallas’s Sand-grouse 
Bee Eater American Bittern Baillon’s Crake 
Yellow-billed Cuckoo Glossy Ibis Roseate Tern 
Scops Owl Ruddy Sheldrake Greater Shearwater 
Greenland Falcon Red-crested Pochard Fulmar 


Two of these, the Yellow-billed Cuckoo, and the American 
Bittern, are wanderers from America. Another Yellow-billed Cuckoo 
has occurred at Lundy Island, no very great distance from Stackpole, 
where the Pembrokeshire specimen was obtained, and the American 
Bittern has appeared in North Devon, and also in Cornwall. 

(VII.) Former resident. 

At the beginning of the present century Colonel Montagu de- 
tected the Black Guillemot on the cliffs near Tenby, and also at St. 
David’s. It seems to have disappeared very soon after his visit to 
the county, as we can discover no mention of it in any subsequent 
references to the cliff birds, nor have we met with anyone who has 
ever seen a Pembrokeshire specimen of this northern species. 


(VIIL.) The introduced species are 4 :— 


Egyptian Goose Pheasant Red-legged Partridge 
Mute Swan Ring-necked Pheasant 
We are not aware that any Egyptian Geese are now kept on any 
ornamental waters in the county. The Mute Swan exists on the lake 
at Stackpole in what may be considered as virtually a wild state ; as 
it is free to depart and return at will, and leaves every autumn when 
the food supply fails, coming back again in the spring to nest and 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. Sclixx, 


to remain throughout the summer. The Pheasant thrives in Pem- 
brokeshire remarkably well; the Red-legged Partridge refuses to 
become a resident, doubtless finding the climate too humid. 


(IX.) Some noticeable absentees. 

Directly we began to study the Birds of Pembrokeshire we were 
struck by the number of absentees. Many birds were wanting that 
we felt confident ought toappear. We were, at first, led to attach 
our chief interest to scheduling these non-appearances, although 
this might seem rather a negative way to work the County Ornis. 
The character of the county doubtless accounts for several birds 
being non-resident that are not uncommon in many other parts of 
the kingdom; in such a treeless district scansorial birds would not 
be expected. The following is a list of species that are common 
in most of the English counties, as also in Central and Eastern 
Wales, that are either never seen, or are extremely rare, in Pem- 
brokeshire ; of those marked with an asterisk we are without a single 


instance :— 
Redstart Great Grey Shrike Great Spotted Woodpecker 
*Nightingale Red-backed Shrike Lesser Spotted Woodpecker 
Lesser Whitethroat Pied Flycatcher Wryneck 
Garden Warbler Hawfinch *Osprey 
*Dartford Warbler *Tree Sparrow *Greylag Goose 
Wood Wren *Mealy Redpoll *Black Grouse 
*Reed Warbler *Twite Spotted Crake 
Nuthatch Cirl Bunting Stone-Curlew 
Ray’s Wagtail Woodlark Dotterel 


Of these, the Reed Warbler, the Garden Warbler, and the Lesser 
Whitethroat, appear to be very rare throughout Wales, as they arealso 
in the south-west counties of England. The Reed Warbler is stated 
to nest in Breconshire, at Llangorse Lake. In a county so mild in 
temperature and so abounding in furze-brakes on sheltered hill-sides, 
the Dartford Warbler might well be expected, but we have not suc- 
ceeded in detecting it. Ray’s Wagtail, in Pembrokeshire, is only 
seen as it passes in spring and autumn, and there is no instance of its 
having remained to nest. The Red-backed Shrike is rare ; and the 
Great Grey Shrike does not seem to reach often so far to the west 
after arriving in the autumn on the eastern coasts of the kingdom. 
The Pied Flycatcher is almost unknown in Pembrokeshire, although 

G 


IL The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


it is not uncommon as a visitor to other parts of Wales in the 
summer, and it is known to nest as near to Pembrokeshire as in 
the adjacent county of Carmarthen. It is fond of woods containing 
old trees on hill-sides at some elevation above the sea; Mr. Cam- 
bridge Phillips reports it as quite a common bird in Breconshire. 
The Tree Sparrow is rare and local in South Wales ; it occurs in 
Breconshire. We know of no South Wales example of the Mealy 
Redpoll. Mr. J. H. Salter, of Aberystwyth, has searched the moors 
in Cardiganshire in vain for the Twite, of which we have no record 
in Pembrokeshire ; in Breconshire it would seem to be not uncom- 
mon. We know of only one occurrence of the Nuthatch; the 
Greater and Lesser Spotted Woodpeckers are rare visitors, while the 
Wryneck is scarce and local. We have no Pembrokeshire Osprey, 
although the bird in former years very probably occasionally put in 
an appearance on Milford Haven. Wild Geese, in these days, are 
but seldom seen; there is not a single instance of a county specimen 
of the Greylag Goose. The Black Grouse is now extinct; in old times 
it was a resident, as its bones may be found to-day in the Bone 
Caves near Tenby. The Norfolk Plover occurs only very rarely in 
winter. ‘The Dotterel is also rare; as is also the Spotted Crake, in 
spite of the shelter offered to it by the numerous moors and marshes 
throughout the county. 


(IX.) Some characteristic birds. 

After thus detailing the absentees, and others that are very scarce, 
although not rare in other parts of the kingdom, we turn with more 
satisfaction to enumerate those that may be considered as the 
characteristic birds of the county, that are rarely absent from lending 
life and charm to its varied scenery. On its cliffs along the coast the 
Buzzard, the Peregrine, the Raven, and the Chough, with the Wheat- 
ear and the Rock Pipit, may be still encountered ; and it would be 
a rare event, indeed, to visit any part of the shores, and to find them 
all absent. In the north of the county the Hen Harrier still quarters 
the wilder moors. The Water Ouzel and the Grey Wagtail are com- 
mon by every stream, and on the mountains have for their summer 
companions the Ring Ouzel and the common Sandpiper. The pretty 
Stonechat can be seen on every common, and is one of the charac- 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. li. 


teristic small birds. The Cuckoo and the Nightjar rejoice in the 
wilder parts of the county, where they are exceptionally plentiful. 
The Red Linnet, the Yellow-hammer, and the Chaffinch are very 
abundant. The Chiffchaff and the Sedge Warbler are by far the 
best represented among the soft-billed summer migrants ; the former 
occasionally passes the winter with us, and we have ourselves seen it 
in January at Stone Hall. The Common Snipe breeds throughout 
the county ; a walk in the spring across any common will be en- 
livened by its strange “drumming” in the air. In the summer, 
some of the cliffs along the coast, and most of the islands, are 
thronged with innumerable birds ; among them the Gannet and Manx 
Shearwater are remarkable, as they have nesting stations in but few 
other places in the kingdom, 


(XI.) Species nesting in the county. 


Dr. Propert, of St. David’s, has supplied us with a list of the 
birds that, according to his experience as an oologist, nest within 
the county, comprising a total of 81 species. Several are absent 
that could not be expected to breed in his treeless district which, 
nevertheless, have their nesting stations in the woods and copses 
inland, or in the south of the county ; while others can be added 
that are to be met with on the Precelly Mountains. According to 
our census we atrive at a total of 113 nesting birds ; that is made up 
of :— 


Residents soe 409 ane abe an ong Yi) 
Summer Visitors a ae ins Aas seo) 
Winter Visitor (Short-eared Owl) tue ae od 
Occasional Visitor (Montagu’s Harrier) as eee AL 
Introduced Species (Mute Swan and Pheasant) ie G2 

110 


To these we believe that we may add three others that 
are probably residents in small numbers, Teal, 
Golden Plover, and Dunlin is an sf = 


lii. The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


Since the commencement of the century we have lost three species 
that formerly nested in the county ; viz., the Marsh Harrier, the Kite, 
and the Black Guillemot. 

The number of our breeding birds, 113, may be compared with 
those that have been ascertained to nest in the district surrounding 
Aberystwyth, in the neighbouring county of Cardigan. These are 
stated to be 94, comprising 68 resident species, and 26 summer 
migrants. This list, however, is considered to be incomplete, and 
additional nesting birds may yet be detected. 

We can only regret that materials are not at hand to enable us to 
present a brief sketch of the Ornis of South Wales in general, as we 
feel persuaded it is far from being so scanty as anyone who examines 
our account of the Birds of Pembrokeshire, its extreme western 
county, might suppose it to be. The Great Western Railway runs 
along the coast in many places as it traverses South Wales, and the 
traveller who looks out from the carriage windows of the train will 
see many a stretch of sand and ooze that look as if they were 
acceptable to the class of waders. We have seen the mouth of the 
Carmarthen river, at Ferryside, and some of the oozes we have 
mentioned occasionally covered with birds, as we have journeyed to 
and fro ; and have often thought that the fine counties of Carmarthen 
and Glamorgan, especially the latter, with its beautiful peninsula of 
Gower, its extended coast, numerous bays, and muddy inlets, would 
yield an interesting and much fuller list of birds. We can but pray— 
exoriare aliguts/ who will take the work in hand to record in either 
of these counties some particulars of their Fauna. 

In our account of the Birds of Pembrokeshire we have given no 
description of the various birds, nor have we entered into the subject 
of classification ; as these matters are fully treated of in the standard 
works on British Birds. We have followed the arrangement of the 
Ibis List ; and to anyone who may be tempted by our book to seek 
for more information respecting the birds mentioned in it we can 
heartily commend Mr. Howard Saunders’ very useful ‘ Manual of 
British Birds.” 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


MISTLE THRUSH, Zurdus viscivorus.—Although not so numerous 
as it has become of late years in some English counties, this fine 
Thrush is fairly common as a resident throughout Pembroke- 
shire. There were always several nests in our grounds at Stone 
Hall, the birds frequently selecting some tree close to one of 
the paths, from which they would angrily scold the passer by. 
About the middle of July these Thrushes flock, and soon after the 
majority disappear, having migrated south. We have seen the 
broods of young birds in our kitchen garden, helping the Black- 
birds in their raids upon the fruit. The beautiful eggs of the 
Mistle Thrush occur in two varieties, one in which the red 
markings are on an apple green ground, the other having a 
ground of creamy white. 


SONG THRUSH, Zwrdus musicus——A common resident. After the 
severe winter of 1880 there was scarcely a Thrush left in North 
Pembrokeshire. We neither heard the delightful song, nor saw 
an example of the bird in the following spring and summer. 
We were told of one that had been shot in the summer (this 
seemed a sacrilege !) in a garden at Fishguard ; and it took two 
seasons before the woods and copses became again replenished 
by immigrants. Mr. Dix considered the Song Thrush to be 
rather a scarce bird in the north-east corner of the county. 


REDWING, Turdus iliacus—A common winter visitor. The little 
flock that arrives at some favourite locality in the autumn does 
not stray far from it unless exceptionally severe weather sets in, 


I 


2 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


and on the approach of spring the birds assemble in the nearest 
tall trees, and sing in concert a low sweet song, the notes of 
which are very pleasing to anyone standing below. The Red- 
wings vary greatly in their numbers, some seasons being abun- 
dant, at others few are seen. 


FIELDFARE, Zurdus pilaris—A common winter visitor. In 
severe weather great numbers of Fieldfares used to appear in our 
neighbourhood. They seemed to be quite as susceptible to the 
cold as the Redwings. One very long-protracted frost, when 
the ground was deeply covered with snow, we caught and 
brought numbers of the starving birds into our kitchen; but it 
was all in vain we offered them various kinds of food; none of 
them ever survived longer than a fortnight. Flocks of Field- 
fares have remained with us until the end of April, when they 
were much tamer than they were during the winter, and, collect- 
ing on the tops of the trees, would keep up a not unpleasing 
chattering. We consider that in the north of the county Field- 
fares were every winter more plentiful than Redwings, the 
mountain character of the district being unsuited to the latter 
birds. 


BLACKBIRD, Zwrdus merula.—A common resident. Its numbers 
rapidly increase when there has been a succession of mild 
winters, but like all the members of the Thrush family, it suffers 
much in a severe frost. The Blackbird is exceedingly pug- 
nacious. One hard winter, when the snow lay for weeks upon 
the ground, and the temperature day after day was considerably 
below the freezing- point, our Blackbirds were nearly starved, and 
several times a day we put plates of barley-meal, bread, and 
scraps of meat at our dining-room window for their relief. 
Hungry as they were, the assembled birds, at least a score, never 
began to feed without a desperate combat, and the surface of the 
snow would be black with the feathers of the belligerents. One 
summer’s evening a fox was seen to jump up into the air and 
capture a Blackbird as it flew out of one of our small covers. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 3 


Clever fox! Blackbirds are among the most restless of birds, 
and seem to be always on the move, as we learn from the 
reports of the movements of birds received from the lighthouses 
round the coast. There is hardly a day in the year when some 
do not strike against the lights. Many of these birds may be 
only making short local journeys, and taking their flight across 
the water from point to point. 


RING OUZEL, Zurdus forquatus.—A summer visitor. A few some- 
times remain in this country for the winter. The station of the 
Ring Ouzel is to be sought for on the moors and hills. When 
we have been fishing in the summer months in the small 
streams which run down from the bogs on the Precelly Moun- 
tains, we have frequently encountered pairs of Ring Ouzels, 
whose angry chatterings and impatience of our intrusion 
plainly revealed that we were near their nests. Mr. Dix writes : 
“Although I have not seen this bird, I have every reason to 
believe it breeds (occasionally at least) in this district. My 
young friend, Arthur Phillips, of Newcastle Emlyn, took some 
eggs in 1867, when he distinctly saw the bird leave the nest.” 


WHEATEAR, Saxicola enanthe.—A summer visitor. Common all 
round the coast, and very numerous on the Precelly Hills. On 
their arrival in the spring we used to see Wheatears for a few 
days about our fields at Stone Hall, but they soon moved on 
towards the hills. Mr. Dix writes: “I was agreeably surprised 
to find this bird breeding about the north-eastern portion of the 
Precelly Mountains.” Indeed, in our experience, the Wheatear 
is the most numerous of all the small birds to be found on those 
lofty hills during the summer months, 


WHINCHAT, Pratincola rubetya.—A summer visitor. Although 
Mr. Dix wrote that the Whinchat was decidedly rare in his 
district, which was the north-eastern corner of the county 
immediately adjoining Cardiganshire, we have found that it is 


4 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


pretty generally distributed, and have seen it on the Precelly 
Hlils at Rosebush, on Cuffern Mountain, at St. David’s, at Stone 
Hall, where we have seen the nest, &c, &c. 


STONECHAT, Saxicola rubicola.—A common resident. This pretty 
little species is so numerous, to be seen everywhere, by the road- 
side, perched on the furze on every common, on the coast as 
well as far inland, that it is well entitled to be considered one of 
our characteristic county birds. Mr. Dix states that it is to be 
found “particularly on the hillsides which are covered with 
furze: they are generally to be seen in pairs, and, like the 
Hedge-Sparrow, in close company. During the severe weather 
last February three pairs were in constant attendance upon 
some men who were moving earth from an old bank: they 
perched upon some bushes near by, watching for anything that 
might turn up in the shape of food, when down they came 
within a foot of the tools; they kept close watch, for several 
times I saw three or four fly down at the same moment, and so 
intent were they in their search that one was caught by a hat 
being placed over it, the man thinking I wished to have 
it.’ We have found the nest frequently in our fields round 
Stone Hall,a commonly chosen site being a small furze-bush in 
which it would be placed close to the ground. However severe 
the weather we do not believe that these little birds go very far 
away from the spot where they were bred. 


REDSTART, Ruticilla phoenicurus.—A summer visitor. Reported 
to be abundant in the neighbouring county of Cardiganshire ; it 
is, however, extremely rare with us in Pembrokeshire, where we 
have never once seen it. Mr. Dix mentions a pair that nested in 
an old bee-house at Kilwendeage, in the north-east of the 
county, in the summer of 1866, and returned to the same spot 
the following year. He adds: “This species is not at all 
numerous, I have only seen three birds besides those that bred 
at Kilwendeage ; the men working in the gardens had never seen 
any before.” A few Redstarts are occasionally seen in the south 
of the county, as we learn from friends and correspondents. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 5 


BLACK REDSTART, Auxicil/a titys—A winter visitor, not com- 
mon. From its extent of coast Pembrokeshire appears to be 
peculiarly suited to this species, and it has occurred both on the 
northern and the southern shores of the county. In the north 
it has been seen several times and shot by Sir Hugh Owen at 
Goodwick : ‘‘ Single specimens on the moors in hard weather.” 
In the south, the Rev. Clennell Wilkinson has seen it in his 
garden at Castle Martin. Mr. Tracy mentions two examples 
that occurred in the autumn of 1847; one killed by Mr. George 
Hughes, of the Coburg Hotel, Tenby, on the eaves of the hotel ; 
the other by himself, with an air cane, loaded with small shot 
on the water trough of his neighbour’s house in Pembroke ; and 
Mr. Dix was informed by him that he considered the species a 
regular winter visitor to Pembroke, where it might be seen 
frequenting the walls of the old castle. There is an example of 
the Black Redstart in the Mathias Collection in the Tenby 
Museum. Mr. Charles Jefferys informs us that he used to see 
one or two Black Redstarts every autumn at Tenby, but for 
several years has failed to see or hear of any. 


REDBREAST, Zrithacus rubecula—A common resident. During 
the extreme cold in the winter of 1880 Robins and many other 
small birds, such as Hedge-sparrows, Wrens, Chaffinches, Blue 
and Great Tits, flocked into our house for warmth and shelter. 
We had at least half-a-dozen Robins distributed between the 
hall, kitchen, and dining-room. The little visitors became quite 
tame, hopping fearlessly about on the carpet, and picking up 
the crumbs thrown to them. In this way they were all 
preserved until the arrival of the welcome thaw, when they 
returned to the outside world. One summer a Robin used 
to come in at our dining-room window, and alighting on the 
table would amuse himself by pecking at the pen with which 
one of us might be writing, and by playing with the writing 
implements in general. He would spend hours with us, flying 
to the top of somebody’s head, and remaining there whenever 
the cat came into the room. Sometimes he would make his 


6 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


appearance at, and enter, the bedroom windows. After several 
months of this familiarity, which was altogether uninvited, he 
suddenly disappeared, having fallen a victim, we feared, to some 
cat or hawk. One summer a Thrush feeding on our lawn was 
watched by a Robin that flew down and seized a worm from it 
directly it caught one. This would be done again and again 
until the Robin’s appetite was satisfied. The Thrush made no 
resistance, seeming to take the theft as a matter of course, and 
suffered itself to be treated in this manner day after day. We 
fancied it had in some way been hypnotized by the Robin. 
Every year among the Robins’ nests that we detected in our 
grounds at Stone Hall there would be one containing pure white 
eggs, by no means a common variety. 


WHITETHROAT, Sylvia cinerea —A common summer visitor. 
Next to the Chiffchaff and the Spotted Flycatcher, the common 
Whitethroat is the most abundant of the small summer visitors, 
being generally dispersed and numerous throughout the county. 


LESSER WHITETHROAT, Sylvia curruca.—This species is not 
included in their lists either by Mr. Dix or by Mr. Tracy. It 
does not appear to visit the adjoining county of Cardiganshire, 
which is far richer in the smaller summer birds than Pembroke- 
shire. We have, ourselves, never met with it, and it is a little 
bird that cannot easily escape detection. We have seen no 
specimens of it in any collection of stuffed birds in the county. 
We only admit it doubtfully on account of information supplied 
us by Mr. Mathias, of Haverfordwest, who tells us that when he 
was a boy of 14 or 15 he found a nest of this species at 
Lamphey, being at that time well acquainted with both the 
Common and Lesser Whitethroats through having taken the 
nests of both of them on many occasions in Gloucestershire. 
He adds that in the summer of 1882, a pair of these little 
birds frequented Hayguard Hay bottom in the parish of Dale, 
where he watched them closely on several days hoping to find 
the nest, ‘but they were too much for me, nettles and thorns 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. yy 


making more impression on my hands than they did fifty 
years before.” 


BLACKCAP, Sylvia atricapilla—A summer visitor, far from com- 
mon. We could never detect this beautiful songster at Stone 
Hall until the small fruit began to ripen in the kitchen-garden. 
Writing of it in his neighbourhood Mr. Dix says, “ First heard on 
12th April ; three or four pairs bred in the plantations near, but 
it is not numerous.” In Mr. Tracy’s list, which refers chiefly to 
the birds observed in the south of the county, the Blackcap is 
stated to be common. 


GARDEN WARBLER, Sylvia hortensis.—This is another of the 
small summer visitors, which is common in Cardiganshire, and 
seems to avoid our county. We have never seen it, although 
from where he wrote, on the borders of Cardiganshire, Mr. Dix 
was able to report of it ‘about as numerous as, and seen about a 
week after, the Blackcap.” In the south of the county Mr. 
Tracy obtained a Garden Warbler in September, 1849, and 
states that it was the only one he ever saw. It passed into the 
collection of Lord Cawdor, at Stackpole. 


GOLDCREST, Regulus cristatus.—A common resident, receiving 
accessions to its numbers in the winter from northern countries. 
Mr. Dix saw a flock of about fifty in a plantation on 6th Novem- 
ber. Goldcrests were always numerous in the larch plantations 
at Stone Hall, where we came across numbers of their beautiful 
nests. One we found close to the house was entirely lined with 
the feathers of the Green Woodpecker. ‘There was a nest of 
these birds in an adjoining sycamore tree. We have had several 
bright plumaged male Goldcrests sent to us by friends for Fire- 
crests. Although the Firecrest is extremely likely to occur zz 
the winter-time in Pembrokeshire, we have not yet either seen or 
heard of a county specimen. It may be useful to remark that 
the Firecrest is always to be easily distinguished from the Gold- 
crest by the white line above the eye. 


8 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 
CHIFFCHAFF, Phylloscopus rufus.—This tiny bird is by far the 


most numerous of our summer visitors, and is greatly in excess 
of the Willow Warbler. In the shrubberies at Stone Hall, in 
the spring of 1885, we noticed eleven nests of the Chiffchaff, 
and only one of the Willow Warbler, and this, we think, is 
an approximation to the relative numbers in which these birds 
occur. From our experience in various parts of England, we 
have come to regard the Chiffchaff as more a bird of the hills, 
and the Willow Warbler as belonging to the plains. In North 
Devon, where we once resided, it was moderately hilly, and 
there the two birds were met with in about equal numbers. 
Where we are living now, on the Radstock coal measures some 
500 feet above the sea-level, the Chiffchaff is very numerous, 
and the Willow Warbler is seldom seen, just as is the case 
in North Pembrokeshire. In his north-eastern corner of the 
county, when he was at the other side of the Precelly Mountains 
which greatly influence the distribution of the Warblers with us, 
cutting many species entirely off from our northern and central 
districts, Mr. Dix had failed to notice this preponderance of the 
Chiffchaff we have pointed out. He observes of the Willow 
Warbler: “ Much less numerous than in the east of England ;” and 
of the Chiffchaff, “‘ This is about equal in number to the Willow 
Warbler,” and he considered that the Chiffchaff was more 
numerous in his neighbourhood in the autumn than it was in the 
spring. A few Chiffchaffs remain with us for the winter; we 
have seen one at Stone Hall in the beginning of January. 


WILLOW WARBLER, P2yWoscopus trochilus.s— A not very 
numerous summer visitor. A nest found at Stone Hall, near a 
pond much frequented by Herons, was entirely lined with the 
small grey feathers of those birds. 


WOOD WARBLER, PiyWoscopus sibilatrix.—A scarce and very 
local summer visitor. We greatly doubt if it occurs to the west 
of the Precelly Mountains. We could never meet with itin the 
woods at Stone Hall, or in the large covers of Trecwn, which we 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 9 


have visited in the summer on purpose to search for it, In the 
south of the county Mr. Tracy considered it scarce: “Although 
I can mostly procure a few specimens the latter end of April or 
the first week in May, I think they do not stay here to breed, 
for I have never found them later; and being so well acquainted 
with the voices of the other Warblers, the peculiar twitter of the 
Wood Warbler could not have escaped me.” Mr. Dix has a 
very different account to give from his post on the Cardiganshire 
borders. Writing of this species, he says : ‘‘ More generally dis- 
tributed, and I think also more numerous, than in most parts of 
England. One is almost sure to meet with this bird in a planta- 
tion of beech and oak. It certainly prefers the beech to any 
other tree; I have invariably found them upon or near this tree 
when there are any in the plantation.” 


MELODIOUS WARBLER, Ayfolais polyglotta.—Such, as we are 
informed by Mr. Howard Saunders, is the correct name of a 
delightful little songster that visited us at Stone Hall in the 
summer of 1886. It is the Western form of the Icterine 
Warbler, and is something like a Chiff-Chaff, differing, however, 
from that bird in having the under parts of a bright sulphur 
yellow. For so smalla bird it possesses a very powerful and 
exquisite song, rich in clear, thrush-like notes. It took up its 
station day after day in an ash tree by the side of a lane adjoin- 
ing our house, and there warbled so sweetly that people who had 
once heard it used to return again and again to listen. We 
watched it one day as it was dancing up and down the branch it 
was upon, fluttering its wings as we have also seen the Wood 
Warbler do while pouring forth its song, and singing as if ina 
very transport of joy. We have been asked ‘‘ Why did you not 
shoot this bird so as to be sure as to your identification?” but who 
could have had the heart to butcher so sweet a minstrel ? On 
the other side of the tree which the bird frequented was a dense 
woodcock cover, through which a small stream runs among a 
thicket of willows and furze. Here we searched repeatedly for 
the nest, feeling sure our little friend must have had a com- 
panion, but so thick was the cover we failed to find it, and we 

2 


ie) The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


were also disappointed in not detecting our charming songster 
the following spring, although there were many, besides our- 
selves, keeping a watch for his appearance. 


SEDGE WARBLER, 4crocephalus phragmitis.—A common summer 
visitor. Next to the Chiff-chaff, perhaps, the most numerous of 
the soft-billed summer visitors in Pembrokeshire. When we 
were fishing in the Cleddy below our house in the spring and 
summer, we were always provided with entertainment by the 
Sedge Warblers that were very abundant in the tangled cover by 
the side of the stream through which we had to force our way. 
Their restless plunging into the bushes and out again, sometimes 
scolding at us, sometimes trilling a few notes of their babbling 
song, was most amusing. And every now and then we would 
start one from its nest. After this experience of the abundance 
of the bird in our locality it is curious to read that Mr. Tracy 
considered it scarce, and that Mr. Dix had only heard it in one 
place, “in some willow bushes near Cardigan.” We do not 
consider that this is any proof of any inequality in the bird’s 
distribution, but only that it points to these two excellent 
observers and naturalists not having had at hand the country 
that the Sedge Warbler alone frequents ; swampy, bushy places, 
and the banks of brooks that are fringed with thick growth 
of brambles, furze, and other suitable cover for the bird to nest 
and harbour in. 


GRASSHOPPER WARBLER, Zocustella nevia—A summer 
visitor, scarce and very local. We never detected the singular 
and not-to-be-mistaken song of this species at Stone Hall. The 
Rey. Clennell Wilkinson pointed out to us a field near his 
rectory at Castle Martin in a corner of which he had found a 
Grasshopper Warbler’s nest several summers in succession, an 
instance of the attachment of the bird to a certain locality. Sir 
Hugh Owen has informed us that he has seen this species at 
Goodwick. Mr. Dix writes: “the first time I heard this bird in 
Wales was one afternoon in July, 1866—it was just within 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. II 


Carmarthenshire, in a boggy place overgrown with alders and 
rushes—since then I have heard the bird near Whitechurch, in 
a similar locality. Last year two males came for a few even- 
ings in July close to this house ; * they were in two small clumps 
of blackthorn about forty yards from each other; they began 
their peculiar whirring note about dark, when I have stood 
within a few feet of them without their being the least dis- 
turbed.” The Grasshopper Warbler has been noted by the 
Rev. C. M. Phelps, near Tenby, and Mr. E. W. H. Blagg has 
informed us that he detected some there in June, 1887. 


HEDGE SPARROW, Accentor modularis——A common resident. In 
a hard winter when we were feeding numerous small birds at 
our dining-room window, a Hedge Sparrow asserted himself as 
king of the company, not allowing any of the Chaffinches, Tits, 
Green Linnets, &c., to touch the food until he had satisfied 
himself. This conduct in a bird usually so unassuming and 
gentle not a little astonished us, and it was also remarkable that 
the other birds submitted to his dominion. Mr. Tracy states: 
“ This species is very subject to warts on the beak and legs ; 
how can this be accounted for?’’ We have never met with one 
thus afflicted. 


WATER OUZEL, or DIPPER, Cinclus aguaticus.—A common 
resident, to be met by every stream. The Dipper is one of the 
few birds that do not migrate, remaining faithful to his familiar 
stream throughout the year. Nor does he appear to be put out 
by the weather, however severe it may be. In one of the 
coldest days of the very hard frost in the winter of 1880 we were 
watching for wild duck by the Cleddy below Stone Hall, with our 
beard and moustache a mass of icicles, when we heard a soft and 
pleasing bird’s song evidently coming near to us, and looking in 
the direction from whence it proceeded were astonished to see 
a Dipper perched on a block of ice that was floating down mid- 
stream singing away as if he were in the height of enjoyment ! 


* Llwynbedw, Kenarth, Llandyssil. 


12 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


Indeed, we must say that it has been under such surroundings 
that we have most often heard this Mark Tapley of a bird 
indulging in song. We often had the pleasure of being visited 
by Water Ouzels at Stone Hall, a little brook running through 
our grounds to feed our various ponds being the attraction. 


BEARDED TITMOUSE, Panurus biarmicus.—A very rare occa- 
sional visitor. Although this very handsome species is more 
correctly a Reed Bunting than a Tit, we will not depart from the 
old custom of including it among the lively and beautiful Tits. 
We have authority for but one occurrence of it in the county. 
We are informed by Sir Hugh Owen that he saw some Bearded 
Tits “in reeds above Sealyham upper quarry bridge, about 
1860.” Since then we have had news ofa more recent visit of 
these rare little birds, if not actually to Pembrokeshire, yet to 
Carmarthenshire, and but a mile or so over the border. Col. 
Mathew tells us that when he was residing at Castellgorfod, a 
little to the north of St. Clear’s, he sawa pair of Bearded Tits 
there in November, 1891, among some alders that fringed a large 
wood. ‘There was high rough grass and trash growing among 
the alders, and a little stream close at hand. In the following 
spring he saw a pair close to the house. One of them came 
suddenly, it was a beautiful male, and settled on a tall rush at 
the edge of a pond in the grounds, remaining there for some 
minutes and permitting itself to be closely approached. This 
almost countenances the supposition that the birds may have 
nested, and may still nest in that locality. If they do we trust 
that they will owe their safety to no one in the neighbourhood 
being aware of their rarity. 


LONG-TAILED TIT, Acvedula rosea—A common resident. This 
minute species was very plentiful around Stone Hall, where the 
larch and spruce covers afforded the members of the Tit family 
both shelter and an abundance of the insect food they love. We 
frequently came across its beautiful nest in the woods, and 
noticed that the materials employed by the tiny architects varied 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 13 


with the situation. In an oak the nest would be constructed 
of dead oak leaves and the grey lichens from the trunk of the 
tree ; in a willow overhanging the stream the nest was made of 
moss and Pheasant’s feathers; the bright feathers of a Cock 
Pheasant’s neck were stuck around the tiny aperture as if for 
decoration. 


GREAT TIT, Parus major.—A common resident. In cold weather 
in the winter, by hanging large lumps of suet by a string in front 
of our dining-room window, we used to provide food for the 
Tits, and great entertainment to ourselves in watching their 
lively gestures. There would be often three or four of them on 
the string at once, either sliding down towards the food, or 
waiting their turn to feast on it, and the restless little birds 
would be constantly coming and going throughout the day. 
Directly the suet was finished they would tap at the window to 
inform us that more was required ; and, at the beginning of the 
winter they would even come and peck and flutter against the 
glass to let us know that, in their opinion, the time was come for 
us to hang out the expected food as usual. The Great Tit, the 
Blue Tit, and the Coal Tit, were all daily visitors as long as our 
relief was extended to them. The Marsh Tits never once came 
to the suet, although there were plenty of them in the shrub- 
beries close at hand. We used to find numerous nests of all 
the common English Tits in our garden; the Great Tit, the 
Blue Tit, and the Coal Tit always building in holes in walls, 
while the Marsh Tit preferred a hole in a tree. 


COAL TIT, Parus britannicus—A common resident. Mr. Dix 
considered it more common than he had ever met with it in 
England, and in our locality it was certainly an abundant 
species. The nests we found were always lined with a thick welt 
of rabbit’s fur. 


MARSH TIT, Parus palustris—A common resident, very numerous 
around Stone Hall. Curiously enough, Mr. Dix was never able 
to detect it in his remote corner of the county. We have 


2 


14 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


noticed that all the species of Tit are greedily fond of the oily 
seeds of the sun-flower. One beautiful summer when we had 
quite a plantation of these gaudy blooms we observed numerous 
Tits apparently searching them, as we thought, for insects all 
day long, and, as we knew them to be full of earwigs, we con- 
sidered that they were hunting for these insects, and, like the 
Robins, regarded them as special dainties, but on looking 
closely at the flowers, we found that the seeds were what the little 
birds were coming for, nor did they cease to visit the plants 
as long as there was a single seed remaining. A pair of Marsh 
Tits once had their nest in a hole in a willow tree a few yards 
from our house. Standing close by the tree and keeping per- 
fectly still, we kept watch upon the Tits when they were feeding 
their young. Although we had our shoulder within a few inches 
of the entrance to their nest they passed in and out quite fear- 
lessly, one or other of the parent birds arriving about once a 
minute with food. The number of the young within, and the 
minuteness of each meal, some tiny spider or caterpillar, were 
the occasions of this frequency, and it also bore witness to the 
abundant supply of insect life close at hand. 


BLUE TIT, Parus ceruleus.—A common resident, to be seen in our 
shrubberies every day in the year. In severe weather these 
little birds seek shelter, coming boldly into our house or into the 
greenhouses. In the latter they did good service in hunting out 
spiders and aphides. 


NUTHATCH, Citta cesia.—Very rare in Pembrokeshire, where we 
never once saw it, and are doubtful if it can be classed among 
the resident birds. In his many years’ experience Mr. H. 
Mathias has never met with it. Mr. Dix omits it in his list. We 
think, therefore, Mr. Tracy was mistaken when he wrote that it 
was “tolerably common.” The only Pembrokeshire specimen 
of which we have knowledge is one that was shot by Baron de 
Riitzen’s gardener at Slebech, Sept. 7th, 1893 ; for this informa- 
tion we are indebted to Mr. F. Jeffreys, the Haverfordwest bird- 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 15 


stuffer. In the adjoining county of Carmarthenshire the Nut- 
hatch is notuncommon. We saw a brood of young Nuthatches 
in the grounds of Abergwili Palace in the summer of 1885. 


WREN, 7Z7oglodytes parvulus.—A common resident, very abundant 
in our grounds, where we used to detect numerous nests. One 
we found was lined with the feathers of a Sparrow Hawk’s 
breast, so the birds had evidently availed themselves of one that 
had been shot in an adjoining plantation. A pair of Wrens 
passed the whole of one severe winter in one of our green- 
houses where they seem to have found plenty of food. 


WHITE WAGTAIL, Motacilla alba—A summer visitor, no doubt 
often overlooked and confounded with the next species. Writ- 
ing as long ago as 1850, Mr. Tracy says: ‘I am convinced that 
a few young birds of the Continental White Wagtail appear on 
our coasts in the months of September and October.” But the 
birds pass south again before either of those dates. Wesawa 
flock of from 20 to 30 White Wagtails sitting on the telegraph 
wires by Treffgarne Bridge towards the end of August, 1884, and 
the birds were then evidently migrating. On 24th June, 1886, 
we saw a pair of adult White Wagtails close to Clarbeston 


Railway Station. 


PIED WAGTAIL, Jtacilla lugubyis—A common resident. Mr 
Dix writes : ‘‘I believe we have more during the winter than in 
the summer. In September I noticed two or three parties of 
from fifteen to twenty, which, I believe, were migrating; they 
appeared to consist of two or three families. I have, invariably, 
during the winter, seen this bird in pairs, male and female, so 
there is some reason to think they pair for life. They seem 
particularly fond of being in a sheep-fold, seldom entirely 


leaving it.” 


GREY WAGTAIL, Motacilla melanofe-—A common resident; 
equally abundant throughout the year. We agree with Mr. 


16 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


Dix in considering this beautiful species, ‘ the Common Wag- 
tail” of Pembrokeshire, breeding by every little stream. We 
have found the nest within a few feet of our hall door at Stone 
Hall. 


BLUE-HEADED YELLOW WAGTAIL, J/aclla flava.—A rare 
summer visitor from the south. Writing to us from Dale on 18th 
October, 1886, Mr. H. Mathias informs us: ‘‘I am now able to 
say for certain that the Greyheaded Wagtail is to be found in 
Pembrokeshire. My friend, the Rev. Lyte Stradling, an orni- 
thologist, told me one day, when we were shooting together, 
and talking over Pembrokeshire birds, that he had seen a pair 
of Greyheaded Wagtails on the flat, between the lime kilns and 
the small bridge, dividing the parishes of Marloes and Dale, on 
more than one occasion, and yesterday afternoon there was 
one running about the road in front of my abode at this place. 
I had a good opportunity of watching it, for it was not five 
yards from my window to the stream of water by the side of the 
road, along which it was seeking for food. From the brightness 
of its colour, I am disposed to think it was an adult male.” 


YELLOW WAGTAIL, Mofacilla raii.—A passing visitor in spring 
and autumn ; rare in Pembrokeshire, and occurring only in the 
southern parts of the county; we have never ourselves seen it. 
Mr. Dix writes: “I have only once been able to identify this 
bird in this district, when five were seen on 24th August, 1867. 
Mr. Tracy, of Pembroke, says: “ Tolerably common in small 
flocks, at the latter end of August and September, frequenting 
pasture fields where cattle are grazing. I have oftentimes 
wondered how they avoided being trodden on by the cattle. 
Good old specimens are very scarce.” It is very doubtful if 
this species nests within the confines of the county. 


MEADOW PIPIT, Axthus pratensis—A common resident. Mr. 
Dix says: ‘‘ Breeds on the mountains and bogs. I have seen 
this bird on the tops of the mountains, where, excepting the 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. Y/ 


Skylark, it is the only bird to be seen; in such places I have 
often heard it singing, as it stood upon a stone or a bunch of 
heath. About September, or the beginning of October, it 
comes down into the more sheltered parts, following the plough 
in small flocks.” He adds: ‘“‘ They are constantly to be found 
in the sheep-fold, running fearlessly about.” 


TREE PIPIT, 4xz¢hus trivialis—A common summer visitor. Mr. 
Dix writes: “Generally distributed, but is by no means 
numerous.” We used to see it every summer at Stone Hall, 
and noted it at St. David’s, &c., &c. 


ROCK PIPIT, Anthus obscurus—A common resident, only on the 
coast. Watching some Rock Pipits one day as they were run- 
ning about at the foot of some sandhills we were amused by 
their gestures, which not a little imitated those of the common 
Ring Plover. They would run rapidly a few paces, and then, 
like that bird, bring themselves up with a sudden jerk, stand 
still, and then run on again for a short distance, again to stop, 
and run on. Mr. Mortimer Propert, of St. David’s, one sum- 
mer took a nest of the Rock Pipit on the Bishop’s Rock. It 
was extremely compact, and constructed of bents thickly lined 
inside with horse-hairs. To procure the horse-hairs the Pipits 
must have flown to and fro over three miles of water to Ramsey 
Island, the nearest point where they would find a horse. We 
have never seen any of the vinous-breasted, greyer-backed Rock 
Pipits, in Pembrokeshire, that are summer visitors to this king- 
dom from the north of Europe, and go by the name of the 
Scandinavian Rock Pipit, and are not very rare. 


GOLDEN ORIOLE, Oviolus galbula.—A very rare summer visitor 
from the south. We are informed by Sir Hugh Owen that he 
saw a Golden Oriole at Goodwick in May, 1870; and the Rev. 
C. M. Phelps, in the “ Tenby Guide,” is an authority for this 
beautiful bird having been seen elsewhere in the county. 

3 


18 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


GREAT GREY SHRIKE, Zanius excubitor—aA very rare winter 
visitor. This species is far from rare in the winter on the 
northern and eastern coasts of England, and, like many other 
birds visiting this kingdom from the east, very rarely penetrates 
so far to the west as to reach the south-western corner of Wales. 
Indeed, the only county example we know of is one we have 
been informed of by Mr. H. Mathias, that was killed some 
years ago by the late Rev. W. Webb-Bowen, of Camrose, at 
Wolfsdale in that parish. This is the specimen that was in the 
collection of Mr. R. J. Ackland, at Boulston. 


RED-BACKED SHRIKE, Zaxius collurio.—A summer visitor, 
very rarely seen in the north of the county. Mr. Dix states that 
he had only once seen it in his district. When we used to 
drive into Haverfordwest from Stone Hall we frequently saw a 
pair of these birds on the telegraph wires by the roadside, as we 
drew near to the town. But some seasons would pass without 
our seeing any. Mr. Tracy thought the Red-backed Shrike 
was “common, and pretty equally distributed in pairs over 
the county,” but we must join issue with him, as we have never 
once seen a Red-backed Shrike in the Fishguard or St. David’s 
district, nor, indeed, at any place in the north of the county. 
Mr. Jeffereys informs us that a pair nest annually in some low 
bushes on the Black Rock, a mile or two out of Tenby, and that 
he has never heard of any others in the Tenby district. And 
Mr. E. W. H. Blagg tells us that he found a nest, with four 
fresh eggs, June 21st, 1887, at Tenby. 


WAXWING, Ampelis garrulus.—A rare, irregular, winter visitor. 
This beautiful bird, at irregular intervals, makes its appearance 
in flocks on the eastern coasts of England, but very rarely 
wanders so far as to our western counties. In those years when 
they arrive in unusual numbers (as they did in the winter of 
1849-50), a few are generally recorded from all parts of the 
kingdom, so that we consider it highly probable that Pembroke- 
shire may have shared in one or other of these exceptional 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 19 


visitations ; but the species is not included in any lists we have 
received, nor do we know of a specimen in any collection. 
Mr. Dix mentions one that was obtained just over our borders 
in Carmarthenshire: “I am informed by my friend, Mr. J. 
Phillips, of Newcastle-Emlyn, that a single bird of this species 
was shot a few years since near Llandyssil, in Carmarthen- 
shire.” 


SPOTTED FLYCATCHER, Muscicapa grisola—A common sum- 
mer visitor. This little bird was very numerous around us at 
Stone Hall, where one summer we detected six or seven of its 
nests close to our house. 


PIED FLYCATCHER, Muscicapa atricapilla—A rare summer 
visitor, only occasionally noticed. We have never met with it 
in the county. Of late years the Pied Flycatcher has been 
ascertained to be far from an uncommon bird in many districts 
in northern and central Wales, generally frequenting woods at 
some elevation above the sea-level on mountain sides, where it 
nests in holes in oak trees. But we have no record of its nest 
ever having been obtained in Pembrokeshire, where it appears to 
be only a rare passing visitor. There are specimens in Lord 
Cawdor’s collection at Stackpole Court that were obtained in 
the neighbourhood, and Mr. Dix was informed by Mr. Tracy 
that the bird was occasionally seen in spring andautumn. It Is 
not included in the lists of county birds supplied us by Mr. H. 
Mathias and Sir Hugh Owen. 


SWALLOW, Airundo rustica—A common summer visitor. We 
used to greet the Swallows on roth April, as an average date, at 
Stone Hall, where they were always numerous, and nested in all 
our outbuildings, bringing off two broods of young in the course 
of the summer. When the May Fly was “up” on the Cleddy 
below our house it was a grand time for the Avrundines. In 
company with numerous Sparrows and Chaffinches they gathered 
to the feast, and most eagerly pursued the chase of the dancing 


20 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


ephemere. The tiny Sand Martins appeared to have no difficulty 
in bolting them, and we could hear the snap of their mandibles 
as one disappeared inside. One day a Swift in headlong pursuit 
collided against our head and fluttered stunned to the ground, 
but soon recovered and rose again on wing. The greater 
number of our Swallows left us in North Pembrokeshire about 
the middle of September ; some had gone before in August, 
and very few remained in the early days of October. 


MARTIN, Chelidon urbica—A common summer visitor. As Mr. 


Dix also observed in his district, the Martins were not so 
numerous with us as the Swallows, but we generally had a few 
pairs nesting about the house. They arrived about a fortnight 
after the Swallows, and departed again in detachments in Sep- 
tember and October. 


SAND MARTIN, Cottle riparia.A common summer visitor. The 


Sand Martins were generally first seen some day in the last week 
of March, flying about Welshhook Bridge, below our house. They 
were always abundant, perhaps more so even than the Swallows, 
nesting in banks and in the sides of gravel pits and old quar- 
ries. Owing to the want of suitable nesting places Mr. Dix 
failed to observe this species in his district, writing: “I have 
only once seen this bird, where four or five were skimming over 
the river by Cardigan Bridge.” 


TREE CREEPER, Certhia familiaris—A common resident. ‘To 


be seen in our grounds at Stone Hall every day in the year. 
Although numerous, we but seldom detected the nest, which 
was usually placed behind the ivy creeping over some old tree, 
where the moss of which it was constructed exactly imitated the 
colour of its surroundings and aided in its concealment. 


GOLDFINCH, Cardwelis elegans. — A common resident. Still 


abundant, in spite of the persecution sustained from bird- 
catchers, who take great numbers in the autumn when the birds 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 21 


collect upon the coast. We have been informed that thirty- 
three dozen were caught at one time at Fishguard. Mr. Dix 
says: “I have seen as many as sixty or eighty in a flock in the 
autumn and winter, feeding upon the seeds of the grasses in the 
meadows.” One summer we detected six nests in our grounds ; 
the raspberry canes and some old plum trees covered with 
lichens, in the kitchen garden, providing the favourite sites. 


SISKIN, Cirypsomitris spinus.—A winter visitor ; rare. Mr. Tracy 
says: ‘Taken occasionally in the autumn feeding on the seeds 
of the birch and alder.” Not included by Mr. Dix, but in 
the list supplied us by Mr. H. Mathias. The bird-catchers 
catch a few, but not every winter, and inform us that it is never 
numerous. A flock of about twenty appeared in an alder-bed 
at Stone Hall at the beginning of December, 1866. 


GREENFINCH, Zigurinus chloris—A common resident. Only 
too numerous in our grounds, where in the old ivy-covered 
walls there were always plenty of nests. We were no admirers 
of this bright-plumaged bird, because of his ceaseless attacks 
upon our garden seeds in the spring. All had to be netted 
over, or nothing would have escaped him. One pair of Green- 
finches had the audacity to build their nest immediately above 
our seed bed, but they did not meet with the success they had, 
doubtless, anticipated. 


HAWFINCH, Coccothraustes vulgaris—A very rare winter visitor. 
In Mr. H. Mathias’ list. We saw a pair in the collection of the 
late Mr. Fortune, at Leweston, that he had shot near his resi- 
dence. Sir Hugh Owen obtained one at Llanstinan in the 
spring of 1854. A Sparrow-hawk, shot by the late Baron de 
Riitzen, at Slebech, September 13th, 1889, was in the act of 
carrying off a Hawfinch, which was secured with it. Not 
included by Mr. Dix. 


HOUSE SPARROW, Passer domesticus—A common resident. 


but rather scarce in the “ mountain ” districts. Mr. Dix writes: 


22 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


“Comparatively a scarce bird; during the severe weather last 
February, I did not notice more than three or four together at 
any time in the yards. Nothing has struck me more than the 
scarcity of this bird.” When we first went to reside at Stone 
Hall we had no Sparrows there. At length one or two appeared, 
and their increase was rapid. It was not until we one day 
visited Llanrian, on the north coast, that we saw Sparrows in 
anything like the numbers to which we have been accustomed 
in England. The old church tower there is thickly covered 
with ivy in which hundreds of Sparrows were harbouring and 
nesting. The absence of cornlands, and the sparsely inhabited 
country, in which isolated mountain farms are far apart, would 
account for the comparative scarcity of the House Sparrow, in 
most places a far too abundant pest. Mr. Jefferys informs us 
that the House Sparrow is by no means common at Tenby. 


CHAFFINCH, /vingi/la celebs—A common resident, by far the 
most numerous, after the Common Linnet, of the whole finch 
tribe in the county. Mr. Dix thought it ‘by far the most 
numerous of the Conirostres, exceeding in numbers all the others 
combined.” He adds that he had never noticed any separation 
of the sexes, or addition to its numbers during the winter. He 
thought the Chaffinch the only small bird that, in his district, 
was as numerously represented as it is in the south and east of 
England. Wedo not agree with him in this opinion. The 
Common Linnet and the Yellow Hammer, not to mention several 
other small birds, are quite as abundant in Pembrokeshire as we 
ever met them in the English counties we were familiar 
with. At Stone Hall our Chaffinches were remarkably tame, very 
often coming into the house to pay us visits, and they would 
build their nests as close to us as they could in the creepers 
trained around our windows. One pair that did so came in 
daily at the dining-room window to feed on any seeds that fell 
on the floor from our various cages, and finding the eggs in 
the nest to be unusually large and brightly coloured, the effect, 
we considered, of the hen bird’s good feeding, we appropri- 


The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 23 


ated one or two of them for our collection. ‘During the 
severe winter in January, 1867,” writes Mr. Dix, “ several Chaf- 
finches were frozen to death. On the night of the r4th the 
thermometer fell to five degrees below zero; the next morning 
four of these birds were brought to me quite dead and stiff,— 
all of them had their heads under their wings as though they 
died asleep, —doubtless starvation had something to do with it, 
but I am persuaded the cold killed them. The 3oth October 
following, I saw the largest flock I ever noticed. There must 
have been five or six hundred birds ; they were in a small field 
close to the mountains ; I watched them for some time without 
seeing a single bird of any other species.” 


BRAMBLING, /ingilla montifringilla.—A winter visitor ; rare and 
irregular. We had so many beech trees in our grounds, the 
mast of which is a favourite food with this species, that every 
winter we were on the watch for it, confidently expecting its 
appearance. But we never once saw it, and it seems to be a 
rare bird in Pembrokeshire—at least, in the north of the county. 
It is not included by Mr. Dix. Mr. Tracy says that it is “ very 
common some winters, feeding in flocks with Chaffinches in 
farmyards, and in woods on the beech mast.” Sir Hugh Owen 
has obtained specimens at Goodwick, and the Rev. Clennell 
Wilkinson at Castle Martin; and Mr. H. Mathias has also met 
with it. We have also a note of its occurrence near Tenby. 


LINNET, Zixota cannabina.—A common resident. This, one of 
our favourites among the smaller birds, because of its general 
cheerfulness and bright little song, is very numerous with us, as 
might well be expected in a county so abounding in furze. 
We used to detect a number of nests in all our brakes, and in 
the autumn and winter never failed to observe large flocks in the 
stubbles and turnip fields of “ Brown” Linnets, as they are then 
aptly called, because of their uniform grey brown winter 


plumage. 


24 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


LESSER REDPOLL, Zinofa rufescens—A resident in small num- 
bers, and acommon winter visitor. A pair were seen, evidently 
nesting, by the late Mr. Stokes, of Cuffern, in the spring of 
1887, at Ferny Glen, near Roch, in a larch tree. Small flocks 
regularly appear in the autumn, and one of about a dozen birds 
generally visited our gardens every winter, remaining with us 
until the spring had well advanced. Mr. Dix states: ‘‘I have 
seen one flock of about twenty this winter, on 3rd January ; 
they were feeding on some alders near Cardigan.” Mr. Tracy 
considered this small species “rare,” adding, “a few frequent 
the mountainous part of the county.” Mr. Jefferys, of Tenby, 
has informed us that among some eggs sent to him from Boncath 
to be named, was one marked: ‘Found here in May, nest like 
Goldfinch,” which proved to be an egg of the Lesser Redpoll. 


BULLFINCH, 2yrrhula europea—A common resident. In the 
spring and summer the birds are, for the most part, concealed in 
the leafy copses where they are nesting, and, as Mr. Dix well 
remarks, they appear to be more numerous during the winter, 
because they then leave the woods. We had always nests in 
our grounds at Stone Hall, and never interfered with these 
delightful little birds, in spite of the bad character they bear 
with gardeners for their destruction of fruit and other buds. One 
winter our paths were littered with the husks of our lilac buds ; a 
flock of Bullfinches had been frequenting the bushes for days, 
and we thought sorrowfully that our garden in the following 
spring would miss the sweet perfume of the flowers; but, to our 
surprise, we had as good a show of bloom as we had ever had, 
so we then concluded the birds had only done us good by a 
judicious thinning of superabundant buds. We are never 
without several Bullfinches in our aviary, the larger Russian 
variety and our homely ‘‘ Hoop,” because there are no other 
little birds that are so easily tamed and become so affectionate. 
Mr. Tracy remarks: ‘‘ Bullfinches, in confinement, if fed on 
hempseed, soon change colour, and in two or three years 
become black. One kept for several years at an inn in Pem- 


The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 25 


broke was quite black, and afterwards changed again to his 


original colour, which was considered an ill omen, as the land- 
lord died the same year.” 


[PINE GROSBEAK, Pinicola enucleator—Although we believe that 
this north European species has no claim to a place on the list 
of Pembrokeshire birds, yet we are obliged to admit it because 
of a piece of ancient history of which it would not do to evince 
our ignorance. In Mr. Harting’s useful ‘ Handbook of British 
Birds,” at p. 113, it is stated that “several” of these birds 
appeared in Pembrokeshire “date not mentioned, Fox, Synops. 
Newcastle Mus., p. 65.” And the following appears as a note in 
Professor Newton’s edition of Yarrell’s ‘British Birds,” vol. i, 
p. 178: “A flock of about a hundred unknown birds came to a 
hempyard in Pembrokeshire in Sept., 1694, as reported by a Mr. 
Roberts to Léhwyd Phil. Trans., xxvil., pp. 464, 466, who sus- 
pected they were ‘ Virginia Nightingales’ (Cavdénalis virginianus), 
but later writers suggested they were Pine Grosbeaks.” They 
may have been anything ; if we might venture a guess, we should 
say “ Common Crossbills.’’] 


CROSSBILL, Zoxia curvirostra—An irregular visitor, at all seasons 
of the year. The absence of apple orchards in Pembrokeshire 
may partly account for the infrequency of the appearance of 
the Common Crossbill in the county. We know of only two 
records of its occurrence. Mr. Tracy met with a single speci- 
men, one sent to him about 1858 from Angle, a village on the 
coast to the south-west of Pembroke, and Mr. Dix states that 
during the autumn of 1868, a year when Crossbills were 
observed at several localities in the West of England, a few 
were seen in the lower part of the county, and that he heard of 
three having been killed near Stackpole Court. 


CORN BUNTING, Zmberiza miliaria.—Resident, but local, and 
never seen far from the coast. Is, perhaps, more plentiful 
immediately around St. David’s than anywhere else in the 
county. We have never met with it more than five miles 

4 


26 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


inland. Mr. James Tracy states that it is plentiful at 
Pembroke all the year round. Mr. Dix writes: “As I was 
driving over the mountains to Narberth last February, I 
counted five on one bush, and saw at least a dozen others.” 
Mr. E. W. H. Blagg tells us that he found the Corn Bunting 
very abundant in the neighbourhood of Tenby. 


YELLOW HAMMER, Zyeriza citrinellan—Resident. One of 
our most abundant small birds. They are believed by the 
Welsh people to encourage snakes to enter their nests to devour 
the young birds, and are on this account held by them in great 
aversion. In other parts of the world this species has evil 
things reported of it in the folk-lore, and is much persecuted. 


CIRL BUNTING, Z£yberiza cirlus—A rare occasional visitor. No 
record of its having nested in the county. There are speci- 
mens in the Stackpole Court collection. Is stated to have 
been seen near Tenby, and is included in Mr. Mathias’ list. 
One shot, according to Rev. C. M. Phelps, near Solva. Mr. 
Howard Saunders, who spent the summer of 1893 at Dinas, in 
the north of the county, has informed us that while he was there 
he one day “had a perfect view” of a male Cirl Bunting. We 
never ourselves detected one, nor could Mr. Dix include this 
species among the birds noted by him in his district. In their 
long experience, as keen oologists, Dr. Propert and his sons 
never met with the Cirl Bunting in the neighbourhood of St. 
David's. 


REED BUNTING, Zideriza scheniclus —Resident, scarce. A few 
on the Cleddy, beneath Stone Hall, where we have found the 
nest. Also to be met with on the furze on bogs. We one day 
shot a very pretty fawn-coloured variety on Brimaston Moun- 
tain. Mr. Dix thought this species “by no means common,” 
adding, ‘a few are seen by the rivers in suitable localities.” 
This is rather a solitary bird, one we never remember to have 
seen in flocks. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 27 


SNOW BUNTING, Plectrophenax nivalis.—A winter visitor, rather 
rare. Never seen by us, Sir Hugh Owen has met with it near 
Fishguard. Mr. Tracy says, ‘‘often obtained in a severe 
winter.” In Mr. Mathias’ list, but does not appear to have 
occurred to Mr. Dix. “White Buntings” are reported to have 
been seen about the rocks at the Smalls Lighthouse on October 
17th, 1884. These were doubtless Snow Buntings migrating. 


STARLING, Sturnus vulearis.—Common resident ; vast arrivals in 
the autumn. When we took up our residence in the county in 
1880, the Starling was only then a nesting species in a few 
localities. We heard of one or two instances of its breeding at 
St. David’s, but there were no nests in our immediate neigh- 
bourhood. Before we left Stone Hall we had numerous nests 
in hollow trees in our grounds, and the bird appeared to be 
rapidly establishing itself throughout the county. Its numbers 
in the autumn and throughout the winter are almost beyond 
belief. A large plantation of laurels at Stone Hall close to the 
house was occupied as a roosting place, and had to be destroyed 
on account of the offensive smell caused by the birds. Another 
great roosting-place in our neighbourhood was in a small fir 
plantation at the back of the singular Treftgarne Rocks. Here, 
as the trees failed to supply sufficient perches to the birds, the 
heather on the mountain adjoining was occupied by them for 
several acres, and the ground was whitened over by their 
mutings. The flocks of an afternoon, as the birds collected to 
fly to their roosting places, were a sight to behold. The air 
was almost darkened as the immense concourse passed, and the 
sound of the wings could be heard at a considerable distance. 
On its way through the sky the vast assemblage indulged in 
wonderful evolutions, at one time suddenly contracting into 
the form of an enormous balloon ; at another time, as suddenly 
expanding, it shot out into a gigantic black ribband drawn 
across the heavens. Numbers roosted in the rhododendrons 
in our grounds, and as flock after flock arrived, we beheld them 
darting suddenly vertically downwards on to their perches, 
where there would be some confusion and chattering before 


28 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


peace and quiet prevailed. The flocks feeding on our 
lawn were never without some few cripples, either one-legged 
birds, or birds deficient in a toe or two; and we used to wonder 
whether they were liable to foot disease, or whether the lame 
birds had been injured by some cruel shot fired (perhaps 
hundreds of miles away) “into the brown” of the flocks. 
Writing as long ago as 1866, Mr. Dix says of the Starling: “It 
arrives about the middle of October in large flocks, leaving 
again in February. One pair stayed and bred about a mile 
from here last season ; it was the only instance I heard of. It 
seems strange that they should leave during the breeding season ; 
it cannot be from the want of food, as in a damp climate like 
this worms are plentiful, and stone walls, thatched cottages, and 
ruinous buildings are common enough to accommodate them.” 
Mr. Tracy, giving his experience of the Starling in the south of 
the county about 1850, speaks of it as a winter visitor, arriving 
in October in immense flocks, and adds: “A few pairs remain 
and breed here, and during the last four or five years [the 
nesting birds] have increased very considerably.” Mr. Jefferys, 
however, informs us that the Starling is decidedly rare during 
the breeding season in the neighbourhood of Tenby. We are 
very fond of the Starling. He is not only a cheerful and lively 
bird, with a most amusing song that imitates very many other 
birds, and very domestic in his habits, loving to approach and 
haunt our dwellings, but he is at all times harmless, and useful 
in devouring countless injurious grubs, and his occasional thefts 
of fruit we are most willing to condone; and then we have, 
from long observation, formed a very high opinion of his peace- 
able disposition. Watching the large flocks feeding on the 
pastures, how rarely any of the birds appear to quarrel. As 
they search for food those in the rear fly over to the front, and 
are then superseded by those behind flying over them in turn, 
and so the flock advances, eagerly examining and probing the 
grass with their beaks on the hunt for beetles and worms, and 
when one bird makes a capture those nearest immediately run 
up to search more diligently the lucky spot, while all the time 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 29 


their operations are conducted with perfect friendliness and 
amiability. One hard winter, when day after day we fed 
numerous starving birds at our dining-room window, we had 
among them a little flock of about a dozen Starlings, and we 
never observed any pushing or crowding or contention among 
them. However hungry they might be, each bird seemed to 
give way to the other, and we thought their conduct was a per- 
fect pattern of gentlemanly behaviour, and the good opinion we 
had always held of the Starlings was greatly confirmed. 


ROSE-COLOURED PASTOR, fastor voseus.—A rare occasional 
visitor inthe spring and autumn. In the Tenby Guide the Rev. 
C. M. Phelps states that the Rose Pastor has been seen in Pem- 
brokeshire without specifying either locality or date, but we 
believe it was in the neighhourhood of St. Florence. The Rev. 
Clennell Wilkinson has informed us that he is pretty certain that 
he has seen a Rose Pastor at Castle Martin. 


CHOUGH, Pyrrhocorax graculus—Resident. There can be no doubt 
that 50 years ago the Chough was a common bird on the coast 
allthe way round from Tenby to St. David’s Head, and on towards 
Cardiganshire about Dinas, &c, It is now rapidly becoming 
scarce, and if it were not for its sagacity in building in holes and 
crannies of inaccessible cliffs, it would long ago have been ex- 
terminated, as all its eggs would have been taken to meet the 
demands of collectors. In describing his birds-nesting expe- 
riences, our friend the Rev. C. M. Phelps well says: “If the 
Raven’s nest be difficult to get at, much more is that of the 
Chough. Like the Raven he chooses the highest cliffs ; but he 
does more. He finds out all the deepest holes, and there he 
places his nest out of sight and out of reach. And should there 
be a dark chasm or cauldron anywhere in the neighbourhood, in 
the darkest depths of that chasm the nest and eggs will be 
securely hidden. In one instance, at St. David’s, the nest was 
built in the roof of a cave. At low tide only could the cave be 
approached, and then, to get into it a brother oologist had to strip 
and swim across a deep, cold pool, only to find the nest far 


30 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


beyondhisreach inadeep hole in the roof of the cavern. Inanother 
case, also at St. David’s, the nest was placed under an extremely 
over-hanging cliff of purple silurian, in a hole six or eight feet 
deep. This hole was some 4o feet from the rocks below, and 
was impregnable, as it could neither be reached from the summit 
nor fromthe shore. I have known a third placed in a narrow 
chasm, 150 feet in depth, and with walls of rock as sheer as the 
sides of a house.” In former days, Mr. Phelps says, according 
to tradition, the Choughs nested in the ruins of the Bishop’s 
Palace at St. David’s, until they were driven out by Jackdaws, 
but as the nests could there have been easily robbed, he sus- 
pects they were “human Jackdaws.” The nest, he states, is 
large, and lined with wool. He one day saw a large flock of 
Choughs wheeling about the lofty rocky promontory known as 
Dinas Head. We have seen the Chough on Ramsey Island. 
His longer wings and more buoyant flight serve easily to dis- 
tinguish him from the Jackdaw, and his cry is also unmistakable. 
Our friend, Mr. Mortimer Propert, of St. David’s, possesses 
some beautiful clutches of Chough’s eggs, all taken by himself 
on his romantic coast. Some of his eggs are the largest we 
have ever seen, and are slightly pyriform, like varieties we have 
seen of other species of Corvéde. Young Choughs are very 
easily tamed, and are very familiar and impudent. One kept by 
Mr. Tracy was omnivorous in its diet, and liked to have its 
head scratched by children. ‘ When alone he is constantly 
chattering, squalling, and making a variety of noises, but I have 
not heard him distinctly articulate any word yet, although he 
appears equally capable with the Parrot.” Mr. Samuel Gurney, 
writing to the Zoologist for 1857, describes the ruins of Manor- 
beer Castle, near Tenby, as being at that date frequented by 
Choughs ‘‘which bred there in great abundance.” He was 
told by the village schoolmaster that in the breeding season 
and in the winter the Choughs were very tame, collecting 
in numbers around the school-room door at the time the 
school broke up in order to pick up pieces of bread thrown to 
them by the children. An anecdote was told him of one 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 31 


of the Choughs that had been brought up by some children 
who lived about two miles from the village. Whenever they 
left home to go to school the bird would precede them, and 
arrive there a few minutes after they had started, and some 
twenty minutes before them. This it did so regularly that the 
master knew when the children might be expected.” Mr. 
Charles Jefferys, of Tenby, informs us that he believes the 
Chough still breeds at the back of Caldy, ze, on the channel 
side of the island. They certainly did some four or five years 
ago, and in the spring of 1893 he saw a pair flying about the 
adjacent island of St. Margaret’s that had come from the direc- 
tion of Caldy.' During the ten years he has resided in Tenby 
he has never known any eggs of the Chough, or young, to be 
taken in the immediate neighbourhood, and, as far as he is 
aware, no birds have been killed on Caldy ; still, they each year 
become rarer. Six or seven years ago he used to see them pretty 
often about the cliffs between Tenby and Lydstep, but very 
rarely sees one now. A friend of ours who was paying a 
summer visit to Tenby recently tells us that he shot a Chough 
on the beach there that was flying at a considerable distance 
from him in the midst of a flock of Jackdaws. Apart from the 
persecution they meet with, the Choughs appear to be dying out 
in Pembrokeshire just as they are in Cornwall and Devonshire, 
where in former years they were equally numerous. When he 
was staying at Tenby in June, 1887, Mr. E. W. H. Blagg tells 
us that he saw several old Choughs on the coast by Giltar. 


JAY, Garrulus glandarius.—Resident ; not common. Ina county 
with so few woods as Pembrokeshire this bird of the coppice 
would naturally be somewhat scarce, and in the woods where he 
occurs he is, unfortunately, the object of constant persecution 
at the hand of keepers. We had plenty of Jays around us at 
Stone Hall, and derived constant amusement from their clever 


"In the Report of the Migration of Birds, as observed at Lighthouses, for 1881, 
Mr. Ebben writes from Caldy Lighthouse: ‘* The Chough breeds upon the island, 
and never goes away.” 


32 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


mimicry of other birds. So cleverly did they copy the mating 
notes of our friends the Brown Owls, that we have frequently 
gone out on our lawn to look up into a tree expecting to see an 
Owl upon one of its branches, when an impudent Jay has 
fluttered out. We took a young one out of a nest in the 
shrubbery one year, and brought it up in a cage, side by side 
with an accomplished Ring-necked Parrakeet (Paleornts torqua- 
tus). The Jay soon learned all the Polly’s words, and would 
repeat them in the Polly’s ridiculous voice, to the great indigna- 
tion of that bird, who for a long time sulked in silence in 
consequence. One summer we had quite a plague of rats and 
field mice in our kitchen garden, and all our peas were being 
fast devoured. To destroy these pests we put poisoned pieces 
of bread about the garden, and, unfortunately, these were seen 
and carried off by the Jays, the result being that we found their 
dead bodies lying all over our grounds. After this we saw no 
Jays for several years. The survivors not only left us, but must 
have represented to their fellows that our covers were danger- 
ous, and it was only after a long interval that confidence was 
restored, and any Jays returned to us. 


MAGPIE, Pica rustica.—A common resident. Very numerous 
about all the wild and unpreserved districts of the county. 
Such numbers used to resort to our covers to roost that one 
winter we shot many of them, and the rest, taking the hint that 
we did not desire their presence, left us for a time. When we 
first waged war against them we were astonished at their 
indifference to our gun. We shot two or three out of a tree, 
and the others perched on it only craned their necks towards 
us, keeping up a great chattering, and never thought of flying 
away. We had many lying dead upon the ground before there 
was any attempt to escape. It was not until after several nights 
of slaughter that the birds judged it to be advisable to give our 
woods a wide berth. Magpies are great devourers of eggs, 
young birds, &c., and it was on account of our Pheasants that 
we wished to frighten them away. In severe winters they are 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 33 


almost the only birds that keep sleek and fat, as they then feast 
upon the starving smaller birds. Mr. Dix writes of the Mag- 
pie: “Very common, but so readily destroyed that I fear it will 
soon be a rarity; still, as there are large tracts of country 
without a gamekeeper, it has a chance for the present. It is a 
very destructive bird, and in many places is quite a pest. I 
have heard of a place, in the extreme south of the principality, 
where they used to congregate at night like Rooks: it took all 
the keeper’s time to watch them till some poison was laid, and 
the following morning he picked up two or three barrows full of 
the dead birds. The country people are very superstitious, 
finding omens in numberless occurrences, and this bird is most 
carefully watched, as upon the number seen together, the 
direction of their flight, &c., depends a great deal of good or 
bad luck.” 


JACKDAW, Corvus monedula—A common resident. Very abun- 
dant on the cliffs, about all old buildings, such as the ruins of the 
Bishop’s Palace at St. David’s, Pembroke Castle, &c., about 
isolated dwellings in the wilder part of the county, where the 
birds fill up all the chimneys with their nests, and in doing this 
were a great plague to us at Stone Hall, and nesting also in 
hollow trees. To be seen with Rooks robbing the grain in the 
autumn from the stooks in the corn-fields. It is the custom in 
Pembrokeshire for the stooks to be left out a month or six weeks 
before “ leading in,” and the birds have thus an Opportunity to 
take their full tithe. Nor do they neglect to attack the ricks in 
the farm-yard, and we were often compelled to drive them away 
by shooting at them. In spite of all their mischief the Jackdaws 
are great favourites of ours, and we always enjoyed seeing them 
and watching their lively gestures on the coast, where their noisy 
chatter would be greatly missed. At St. David’s gardening 
operations, especially in the Deanery garden, are carried on 
under great difficulties, owing to the impudent thefts of the 
Jackdaws that swarm there at all times of the year; and little 
can be had in the way of fruit or vegetables without careful pro- 


5 


34 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


tection by nets, &c. Fishing tackle and hooks, and a great 
variety of curious things, have been found in the Jackdaws’ nests 
in the ruins of the Bishop’s Palace at St. David’s. 


CARRION CROW, Corvus corone.—A common resident. In the 
‘*mountain ” parts of the county this destructive and mischievous 
bird is so numerous as to be quite a pest. He is always thieving, 
and on the watch for newly dropped lambs, young rabbits, 
wounded game, eggs of all kinds, chickens, &c. Great used to 
be our indignation at finding throughout the spring freshly sucked 
Pheasants’ eggs lying everywhere about our covers. From the 
bare district around us the Crows would gather in our plantations 
at the nesting season, vexing our ears all day long with their 
discordant croaks. We never left them alone, and it was only 
when the nest was so successfully concealed as to escape our 
search that the black marauders were able to bring out a brood. 
When the young are first out of the nest they keep together for 
some weeks, and are then to be easily approached and shot. 
One spring we took over twenty nests in our small plantations, 
and had a grand series of seventy Crows’ eggs as the result. 
One nest, cleverly hidden in an ivy-covered tree, was detected 
owing to the shells of Pheasants’ and Moorhens’ eggs, more than 
a dozen lying on the ground beneath. Most of these eggs still 
contained the whites, showing that it is the yelk only that the 
old birds carry in their beaks to their precious young. A Crow’s 
nest is a veritable fortress, constructed of such a mass of sticks 
and twigs as to be quite impenetrable to shot if it is fired up at 
from below. It is closely and thickly lined with sheep’s wool, 
and is such a perfect nest as to be gladly adopted by various 
other birds when they have the chance, such as Brown Owls, 
Kestrels, Sparrow Hawks, &c. Carrion Crows are devoted parents. 
Cunning as they are in keeping out of danger at other times, we 
have frequently had them fly boldly up to our gun when we 
have been near the nest containing their fledgelings. In dry 
weather in the middle of the summer we used to see the Crows 
searching the shallows of the Cleddy for fresh water mussels and 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire, 35 


small trout. In a long continued drought they suffered severely, 
and numbers would be found lying about dead. In his district, 
Mr. Dix states that they went by the name of the “ Farmers’ 
Crow,” and were terribly destructive, particularly to the young 
lambs of the mountain sheep, and adds: “It is surprising how 
quickly they kill them; stealing upon them when asleep they 
effect their object by first tearing the eye out, and by repeated 
blows through the socket. They generally attack the young and 
weakly lambs.” When we were on Skomer we were informed by 
Mr. Vaughan Davies that the eggs were taken from a Carrion 
Crow’s nest on the island, and were replaced by the eggs of one 
of the farm-yard Pullets, and that in due time these substituted 
eggs were all hatched out by the Crow, and the Chickens then 
taken fromthe nest were all ddack. As there were no black Fowls 
upon the island at the time this was regarded as a prodigy, due 
to the agency of the Crows ! 


HOODED CROW, Corvus cornix.—A winter visitor. Has become 
rare in the county, and in the West of England generally, in 
the last thirty years. At the time Mr. Tracy published his 
notes, nearly fifty years ago, a few used to visit the coast in 
the autumn, but did not stay long. One was shot at Pembroke, 
in December, 1889, and sent to Jeffrys, at Haverfordwest, for 
preservation, and one frequented the cliffs at Tenby, in the 
winter of 1892; these are the only examples we have heard 
of in recent years. 


ROOK, Corvus frugilegus—Resident, and abundant. The county 
appears to suit the requirements of the Rook, as it is numerous 
in all districts, and is evidently increasing in numbers. In the 
severe winter of 1880 thousands perished. ‘Their dead bodies 
were to be seen high up in the trees suspended frozen among the 
branches, and when the deep snow disappeared hundreds were 
discovered to have been buried beneath it, especially in the 
vicinity of small splashets, where the birds had sought in vain for 
food. The Rooks from Sealyham, where there is a vast rookery, 
used to pass over Stone Hall regularly twice every day, in the 


36 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


morning shortly after sunrise, when they would be on their way 
to disperse in search of food over the mountain country beyond, 
and in the evening at sunset, on their return to their rookery. 
Whatever the weather they never seemed to deviate more thana 
foot or two from their aerial path, and we have often watched 
them in stormy winds doing their utmost to keep to it. The 
“mountains” evidently afforded them an abundant supply of 
varied food, and we ascribe to this their numbers throughout 
the county, in many parts of which there are very extensive 
and densely populated rookeries. Although the Rook is a 
great thief, stealing grain, potatoes, eggs, and murdering young 
rabbits and small birds whenever he gets the chance almost 
as persistently as the Carrion Crow himself, yet we have always 
considered that the evil he does is outbalanced by the good, 
in his devouring such countless hosts of injurious worms and 
grubs that, if they were not thus kept in check, would soon 
reduce the whole country to a state of desolation and sterility. 


RAVEN, Corvus corax.—Resident. The Raven is still in sufficient 


numbers to justify our considering it as one of the characteristic 
birds of the county. We scarcely ever visited any part of the 
coast without beholding a Raven, or a pair of Ravens, and often 
have we seen them flying overhead far inland. The Rey. C. M. 
Phelps thought that there were about twelve nests of the Raven 
on the cliffs, following the coast round from south to north, and 
there is also a nest or two in each of the islands of Ramsey and 
Skomer, and on a few places inland, in some of the old castle 
walls, and they are said to have bred (and possibly may still do 
so) on the Treffgarne Rocks. ‘Their nests are often placed 
on sites which are beyond the reach of any who might wish 
to rob them. We visited a nest in his parish of Castle Martin, 
in company with the Rey. Clennell Wilkinson, the Rector, 
that was placed on a shelf on the cliff beneath a great over- 
hanging crag, the waves dashing against pointed rocks far below. 
This nest, which was an enormous stack of sticks thickly lined 
with sheep’s wool, had evidently been added to by the pair of 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 37 


birds year after year, and had probably been occupied by genera- 
tion after generation of Ravens. While we were watching it, the 
Ravens, in their anger and excitement, kept on performing ex- 
traordinary evolutions in the air, at one instant shooting vertically 
upwards, the next instant, swooping down and disappearing 
behind a neighbouring cliff, they would again dart upwards, and 
sometimes suddenly swoop so close to our heads that we could 
feel the vibration of the air as they darted by. All the time they 
barked and croaked their wrath at our intrusion. It would 
have been perfectly easy to have shot them both, and we have 
heard with regret that a nest of Ravens, that had been long 
established on the coast, a little to the east of Tenby, was des- 
troyed through the keepers shooting the old birds when they 
offered themselves as easy victims at the breeding season. 
Ravens nest very early in the year; Mr. Tracy saw eggs in a nest 
on 14th February in 1842, and took six from another nest 
on 4th April in that year. In Dr. Propert’s splendid collection 
of eggs, there is a very fine and remarkable clutch of Ravens’ 
eggs that were taken by Mr. Mortimer Propert, on Ramsey 
Island, in the spring of 1885 : the eggs are large in size, and are 
pyriform in shape, like the eggs of the Guillemot. We have 
in our cabinet an exactly similar clutch of six eggs, taken a year 
or two since at romantic Tintagel, in Cornwall. The Rev. C. 
M. Phelps writes : “ Just beyond Pendine (in the neighbourhood 
of Tenby) rises Gilman Point, a lofty headland of limestone. 
Gilman introduces us to an important personage, Corvus corax 
—the Raven. How persecuted this bird is! I verily believe 
he has been driven from other parts of South Wales to find 
4 more secure home on the wild coast of Pembrokeshire. 
Here he nests in the most inaccessible cliffs. It is no easy matter 
to take a Raven’s nest. The cliff is often 200 feet high and 
more. A nest taken last week was placed in such a cliff, and 
some go feet from the top. The summit of this cliff considerably 
overhung its base, so that the man dangled in mid-air during his 
descent. In another case, at St. David’s, the nest was located 
in the roof of a cavern, and the collector, suspended over the 


38 iy he Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


entrance, had to be pulled in, while yet swinging, by another 
rope. Precious are the eggs taken at sucha risk! The Raven 
is probably our earliest breeder. All the nests I have seen were 
robbed somewhere between 28th February and the 12th March. 
How the bird manages to brave the piercing north-easterly gales, 
accompanied by sleet and hail, which dash with the utmost force 
against the nest on the exposed face of the cliffs in our neigh- 
bourhood (Tenby) I cannot imagine.” 


SKYLARK, 4Zauda arvensis—A common resident ; reinforced by 
migrantsin the autumn. Fairly common and distributed through- 
out the county. Mr. Dix says: ‘“ More numerous in the moun- 
tains than in the more enclosed parts; certainly not so common 
as in England, but I think there can be no doubt that we have 
an increase of numbers in the autumn, at which time they come 
more into the valleys.” We never saw in Pembrokeshire such 
large flocks of Skylarks as we have noted in England flying 
before approaching severe weather in the winter. 


WOODLARK, AZauda arborea.—Resident, but scarce and local, 
Has been much persecuted by birdcatchers. The Rev. C. M. 
Phelps only once saw a Woodlark in the neighbourhood of 
Tenby. Mr. Tracy says it was common in his day around 
Pembroke. We had none nesting in our fields at Stone Hall, 
where we only saw it in small flocks in the winter months. We 
once saw a flock consisting of about thirty in a small furze brake. 
A few pairs were reported as nesting between Letterstone and 
Fishguard, but the whole time we were in the county we never 
once heard the song of this bird, and as we were constantly 
driving about during the summer we must have done so had any 
been in the district. We believe that it has become much more 
scarce since Mr. Tracy and Mr. Dix penned their notes upon the 
birds of the county. Writing in 1866, Mr. Dix could then say 
of the Woodlark that it was ‘‘ very generally distributed, and a 
constant resident. It is an early breeder. I saw a young one 
that could fly in the beginning of May, and I have every reason 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 39 


to believe there was a second brood, for in July four more young 
ones appeared, and they are now generally in the same locality 
with the old birds. They are now in small flocks of eight or 
ten apparently family parties. During the severe weather last 
February a flock of five came into the yard, feeding by the 
stable-doors and in the cattle yards; they were very tame, often 
allowing me to get within four or five yards of them. I have 
heard this bird singing every month throughout the year.” The 
local birdcatchers used to obtain 36s. a dozen for fresh caught 
Woodlarks, hens and cocks taken together, so it is no wonder 
that they sought after them persistently, and have nearly 
obliterated this sweet songster from our county list. 


SWIFT, Cyfse/us apus——A summer visitor ; local; numerous in 
places. To be seen about the old castles, such as Kilgerran and 
Pembroke, about the cathedral at St. David’s, &c., &c. Also 
evidently nesting in places in the cliffs on the coasts, in crags 
inland, in old cottage and farm-house roofs and chimneys, &c., 
&c. We always had plenty of Swifts about us at Stone Hall, 
and imagined that many bred in some rocks by the banks of the 
Cleddy. They generally arrived with us on 4th May, and left 
us again in the first week of August, but we have seen oneas late 
as 30th September. 


NIGHTJAR, Caprimulgus europeus.—A summer visitor ; common. 
The “mountain” country, especially where furze and bracken 
abound, is much affected by this singular looking bird, and in 
such places we have often flushed it in the day-time from its 
perch on an old furze stump, or from the ground where it has 
been sheltering beneath a furze bush. It is not uncommon in 
September in turnip fields, where we have met with it when after 
the partridges. On summer evenings we generally noticed one 
or two wheeling about our grounds. To quote our friend, the 
Rey. C. M. Phelps, ‘ all over Pembrokeshire, wherever there is 
waste or fern-covered land—whether it be on the boulder-strewn 
mountain-side of the north, or on the heath-clad rocks near St. 
David’s, and in the treeless wind-swept districts of Castle Maitin 


40 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


and St. Bride’s, there you will be likely to hear of an evening 
the peculiar whirr of the Night-jar, and on the bare ground you 
may find its lovely marbled eggs. NearSt. David’s there lies an 
old encampment, probably Danish, called Penllan. ‘Two years 
in succession a nest was taken here. The eggs lay on the bare 
dry, rough ground, surrounded by withered furze and green 
bracken; but, oh! such beauties they were, like two large 
grapes, only marbled and mottled with stone colour and cream, 
and purplish brown and grey. They are the finest Night-jars’ 
eggs I have ever seen, and are now in Dr. Propert’s collection.” 
One day when we were driving in a lane a Night-jar rose from 
the side of the hedge, and flying in front for a few yards settled 
lengthwise on a rail, and so closely did the colour of its plumage 
match the wood that we had difficulty in distinguishing the bird 
as we passed within a few feet of it. When there are young 
birds, the Night-jars tumble about in front of anyone approaching 
the spot, feigning to be crippled, and attempt to decoy the 
stranger away, as we have often witnessed. 


GREAT SPOTTED WOODPECKER, Dendrocopus major.—A rare 
occasional visitor. In a county so sparsely timbered as Pem- 
brokeshire the tree frequenting birds would be naturally rare. 
We have never once seen the handsome Pied Woodpecker, but 
have been informed that it has been seen at Picton; also at 
Castle Martin; and Sir Hugh Owen has met with it at Land- 
shipping, and knew of one killed many years ago at Williamston. 
One that had been killed close to the border of the county 
towards Carmarthenshire was brought to Jeffreys, the birdstuffer 
in Haverfordwest, about Easter, 1886. Mr. Jefferys, of Tenby, 
informs us that he has received a fair number of Great Spotted 
Woodpeckers from Carmarthenshire, in which county, with its 
finer timber, Woodpeckers would be naturally more numerous 
than they are in such a bare county as Pembrokeshire. Mr. 
Tracy mentions an example of the Great Spotted Woodpecker 
that was shot at Lawrenny. Both species of the Spotted Wood- 
pecker are fond of fruit, and in our county there is not much in 
the way of fruit to attract them. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 4I 
LESSER SPOTTED WOODPECKER, Dendrocopus minor.—A 


rare occasional visitor. Appears to be even scarcer in the 
county than the preceding species. Sir Hugh Owen has seen it 
at Goodwick. It is included by Mr. H. Mathias in his list, but 
neither this species nor the Great Spotted Woodpecker occurred 
to Mr. Dix. We have never seen it, although we were always 
on the look-out for it in our woods. 


GREEN WOODPECKER, Gecinus viridis—A common resident. 
This is the only common Woodpecker in the county, and has 
been seen by us in all parts of it where there are trees. It is 
very common at Stone Hall, where we always had a nest close 
to the house, and where the cry of the bird was so incessantly 
heard throughout the spring and summer that we ceased to 
regard it as being in any degree a weather sign. Mr. Dix states 
that in his district it was common in the wooded dingles, and 
more so where there are old trees, particularly ash. With us the 
bird generally placed its nest in a decayed sycamore, and we 
were astonished one day at the heat communicated by the 
young birds to the wood when we put our hand on the tree just 
beneath the entrance hole to the nest. Many trees are worked 
upon by the birds before they finally select the site for the nest ; 
they doubtless find some of them harder than they expected, and, 
after boring them to some depth, leave them for a softer and 
more decayed tree. 


WRYNECK, Jjx sorquil/a.—A summer visitor ; rare ; it is very doubt- 
fulif it nests in the county. Only once seen by us at Stone Hall 
in April, when it was evidently only on passage. We have never 
heard the not-to-be-mistaken cry of the Wryneck anywhere in 
the county. We were informed by Mr. Moore, the head-keeper 
at Picton Castle, that he saw the birds there on the fine trees in 
the park during the summer months. If he is correct the birds 
probably nest there. Mr. Dix writes: “I heard this bird for the 
first time on 6th April ; it was not numerous at any time during 
the summer.” The Wryneck is included in Mr. Mathias’ list, 
but Mr. Jefferys has no record of it from the neighbourhood of 
Tenby. 

6 


42 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


KINGFISHER, Adcedo ispida.—A common resident. We used to 
note many of these beautiful birds by the banks of the Gleddy, 
and generally had one in our grounds, where its favourite perch 
would be on the branch of a larch that projected over a fish- 
pond. Here it would sit for hours together on the watch for any 
perch or tench fry that might venture into the shallows, and was 
a beautiful object when its brilliant plumage was lit up by the 
sunshine. Mr. Dix considered the Kingfisher rare in his dis- 
trict, but had been informed that it was common in the south of 
the county. In very severe frosts we have occasionally come 
upon a frozen out Kingfisher, sitting disconsolately, with all its 
bright feathers ruffled, upon a twig by the side of a frozen pool ; 
but, as we have never picked up a dead Kingfisher, we believe 
these birds do not succumb to the weather, but manage to pull 
through somehow or other. 


BEE-EATER, Aerops apiaster—A very rare accidental visitor from 
the south. There is a specimen in the collection of Mr. H. 
Mathias, now with his other birds at the Tenby Museum. This 
was killed near the village of Johnston, about 1854. Mr. Tracy 
picked up a Bee-eater, he does not state in what year, on some 
high ground near the sea coast. It had not been long dead, 
and he succeeded in skinning and mounting it. It passed into 
the collection of the late Mr. John Stokes, of Cuffern, in whose 
hospitable house we have often seen it. 


HOOPOE, Upupa epops.—An occasional visitor, both in the spring 
and autumn. Not very rare. There are many Pembrokeshire 
Hoopoes on record, and if the bird is not noted every year, 
only a short interval passes before one is seen. Mr. Tracy 
knew of seven examples. The one in Mr. Mathias’ collection 
was shot in March, 1850, at St. David’s. One was captured, 
after having been seen about for several days, inside a cottage, 
at St. Twynell’s. This was on March 17, 1847. Another, 
about the same time, was taken on board the Waterford 
steamer, at the mouth of Milford Haven. The Hoopoe has 
also occurred near Pembroke. Sir Hugh Owen has told us of 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 43 


one at Williamston. In more recent times we have notes of 
one shot at Solva, in the autumn of 1886, and of another at 
Broadmoor, Littlehaven, April 16, 1888. 


CUCKOO, Cuculus canorus.—A common summer visitor. The 
Cuckoo appears to delight in the mountain parts of the county. 
We used to look out for its first appearance at Stone Hall, in 
the last week of April, and the zoth of that month is the earliest 
date on which we first welcomed its familiar cry. We heard a 
Cuckoo one year calling as late as at the end of the first week in 
July ; it is unusual to hear the voice of the Cuckoo after mid- 
summer. By the banks of the Cleddy Cuckoos were specially 
numerous. While we have been fishing we have heard six or 
seven calling at once, and the birds were constantly flying back- 
wards and forwards about the stream. Mr. Tracy observes that 
he never found a Cuckoo’s egg, except in the nests of the 
Meadow Pipit and the Tree Pipit, but the birds avail themselves, 
doubtless, of a larger selection than this of small birds to take 
charge of their introduced young. Mr. Mortimer Propert met 
with its egg in the nests of the Meadow Pipit, Sky-lark, Hedge- 
sparrow, and Robin. The nest of the common Pied Wagtail is 
very often chosen, 


THE AMERICAN YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO, Coccyzus ameri- 
canus.—A very rare waif from America. Only one in the 
county, and this is the specimen that is in the Gallery of British 
Birds at the South Kensington Natural History Museum, 
labelled “ The Carolina Cuckoo,” having been presented by 
Lord Cawdor, on whose estate at Stackpole it was obtained in 
1832 or 1833. Mr. Tracy gives the following particulars of its 
capture in the Zoologist for 1850: ‘* The specimen from which 
Mr, Yarrell figured his bird was killed by my brother near 
Stackpole Court. I first noticed it on the top of an ash tree in 
the act of feeding on some small insects on the wing very 
similar to the Golden-crests. Seeing it appeared a nonde- 
script, it was shot immediately, and nothing more observed 
as to its habits.” This species of Cuckoo rears its own young, 
a brood of six or eight in number. 


44 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


BARN OWL, S¢rix flammea.—A resident far from common. In 
driving about the county we have very seldom seen any of these 
Owls beating the fields for mice in the dusk of a summer’s eve. 
We had one or two inhabiting some old ivy-covered ash trees 
in the covers at Stone Hall, and occasionally saw one flushed 
when we were shooting through woods in the north of the 
county, but we believe in Pembrokeshire the majority of the 
Barn Owls find their abodes in nooks and crannies in cliffs, 
both inland and on the coast. We were informed that Barn 
Owls are numerous on Skomer Island, there inhabiting such 
places as we have described. The Rev. C. M. Phelps knew of 
a colony of Barn Owls in the Coygan, a huge mass of lime- 
stone rock, close to Laugharne Marsh. ‘The old castles, such 
as Carew, Pembroke, &c., also afford, in their ivy-clad ruins, 
suitable nesting places. Although the Barn Owl is generally a 
solitary recluse, we have, in our experience, met with two in- 
stances of its living in society in such numbers that the associa- 
tion might fairly be termed an “ Owlery.” One of these had its 
location in some old cottages, just below a beautiful Henry 
VII. church tower. The roofs of the cottages all communi- 
cated, and were tenanted by such a number of Barn Owls that 
at last the cottagers rose up against them, being annoyed by 
the smell and the noises proceeding from the birds, and we 
were informed that between forty and fifty were either driven 
out or destroyed. The other instance of an “ Owlery” oc- 
curred in the roof of a country house, where the venerable birds 
might have been undisturbed had they kept themselves from 
the young Pheasants, whose coops were at no distance from the 
house. But one season when every ove of the young Pheasants 
had been carried off war was proclaimed, and the roof entered, 
and about a dozen adult Owls were found and killed, besides 
Owlets in various stages of growth. The floor was discovered to 
be littered over with the remains of the Pheasants. Tell it not 
in Gath! Mr. Dix writes that in his district the Barn Owl was 
“ not common ; I have only seen two specimens during the past 
year.” 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 45 


LONG-EARED OWL, 4svo ofus.—A winter visitor; scarce. We 
believe we have heard the cry of this Owl in the winter time in 
the fir plantations at Stone Hall. The bird-stuffers receive a 
few occasionally. The Long-eared Owl is included in all the 
lists we have examined, with the exception of that of Mr. Dix, 
who evidently never met with it. 


SHORT-EARED OWL, Asio brachyotus.—A common winter visitor ; 
also, perhaps, a resident in limited numbers. When Snipe- 
shooting in the autumn and winter, we never failed to flush 
some Short-eared Owls out of long grass and rushes. They 
would fly a little distance and then settle again, sometimes 
alighting on a stump of furze or on a small hillock, and keeping 
watch upon us until we walked on, The Rev. C. M. Phelps 
believes that a pair or two nest on Skomer Island, and has re- 
ceived the eggs taken from a nest found there upon the ground. 


TAWNY OWL, Sérix aluco—A common resident. This is the 
common Owl of the county, and is abundant in all woods and 
plantations. We had numbers at Stone Hall, where it was no 
infrequent sight to see one or two roosting during the day on 
the roof of the house among the chimney pots. ‘They nested 
in old Crows’ nests ; quarrelled with the Jackdaws for possession 
of unoccupied Pigeons’ boxes, sometimes, by eating the young 
Jackdaws, giving a very strong hint of their desire to occupy 
them, and we have also known them to nest in chimneys. In 
the spring they would hoot throughout the day as well as at 
night, and on warm mornings in the summer we have seen them 
sitting out on bare branches sunning themselves. So numerous 
were they around us that a gentleman visiting at St. Lawrence 
Rectory, just beneath us, who went out into the Rectory garden 
one fine night and imitated their hoots, declared that he soon 
counted twenty-six or twenty-seven Owls replying to him from 
either side of the valley. Very often at night an Owl would 
perch on the ledge of our bedroom window and hoot to us, but 
such visits as these would sometimes disturb and alarm our 
guests. Although we had so many Tawny Owls in our planta- 


46 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


tion, we never missed any of our young Pheasants, and are 
certain that the Owls never molested them, confining them- 
selves almost exclusively to the rats and mice. One summer 
a regrettable incident occurred.. Passing one morning through 
one of the covers we detected an old Crows’ nest in an oak tree 
we had not before noticed, and in order to ascertain if it was 
occupied or not, we fired a shot at it, when immediately great 
was the commotion in the nest, and a Brown Owl fluttered to 
our feet with one of her wings slightly injured. We got our 
man to climb the tree, when he found that we had slain the five 
Owlets that were in the nest by our unlucky shot. After in- 
terring these victims at the foot of the tree, we carried the Owl 
carefully home, and placing her in an empty stable at once set 
some traps and supplied her with plenty of mice. As soon as 
night arrived she was speedily discovered by her disconsolate 
spouse, and so great was the hooting kept up by the two birds 
that no one who slept on that side of the house could get any 
rest. Inthe morning it was found that the injured Owl had 
contrived to escape by dragging herself through a wonderfully 
small hole at the bottom of the stable door, and we saw no more 
of her for a day or two, until we discovered that she had found 
a retreat in a corner of the shrubbery, where she was fed re- 
gularly all through the summer by the male bird, who not only 
showed his devotion in this way to his injured partner, but also 
took to himself a second wife, and successfully brought off a 
family of Owlets in an old Crows’ nest in a Scotch fir, not far 
removed from the sanctuary of wife No. 1. 


SCOP’S OWL, Scofs giu.—Accidental visitor; very rare. Only 


one instance of its occurrence. A beautiful specimen was 
caught by a labouring man near Pembroke in the spring of 
1868. He was trimming a hedge at the time when it fluttered 
out from the bottom. Mr. Dix saw it in Mr, Tracy’s shop. 


MARSH HARRIER, Circus ceruginosus—Formerly a common 


resident, but now only a rare accidental visitor. When we were 
shooting Snipe near Stone Hall, in the winter of 1880, a fine 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 47 


old male Marsh Harrier flew within a few feet of us, and we 
might easily have shot it. Sir Hugh Owen has informed us of 
one shot some years ago on Jordanston Moor, not far from 
Fishguard, and of another that he saw hovering over the legions 
of wild fowl on the decoy at Orielton. There is one in the 
plumage of the first year in Lord Cawdor’s collection that was 
shot near Stackpole Court. Writing about the birds to be 
found in the neighbourhood of Laugharne, the Rev. C. M. 
Phelps says: “People speak of a bird they call the ‘ Duck 
Hawk.’ He is represented as a big fellow, and given to attack 
the various kinds of sea and freshwater Duck that come sailing 
up the Laugharne river with the flowing tide. One sunny 
morning, some four years ago, I, myself, saw some such Hawk 
of considerable size on a sandbank near the mouth of the Tave. 
He flew across the estuary to the Warley Point before I could 
make him out. What can this ‘Duck Hawk’ be?” To this 
question of Mr. Phelps we are able to reply that the ‘* Duck 
Hawk” is one of the old names of the Marsh Harrier, the bird 
being very fond of attacking and feeding upon wild fowl, and 
the bird frequenting the Laugharne river may, with all proba- 
bility, be referred to this species. 


HEN HARRIER, Circus cyaneus.—Resident, but becoming scarce. 
Fifty years ago the Hen Harrier was, no doubt, as Mr. Tracy 
describes, “‘ common, breeds on heaths and furzy moors, pretty 
generally distributed over the county.” But this bird is, at the 
present day, but sparingly represented, and that only in the 
wilder parts of the county. The larger raptorial birds soon fell 
victims to improved sporting fire-arms, and to more general 
game preserving, and the Harriers in particular being quite 
defenceless at the breeding season, from their habit of laying 
their eggs upon the ground, were easily found and either trapped 
or shot. It is a wonder there are any remaining. When Snipe 
shooting over the remoter and wilder districts in the north of 
the county, we have frequently come across the Hen Harrier, 
and have had the opportunity of shooting many in all stages of 


48 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


plumage had we cared to do so, but we had no desire to lend 
a hand in the extermination of this interesting and harmless 
bird. One day in the winter we saw three old males beating 
a part of Rhinderston Common in line, and we have known 
and regretted the capture of several old birds in the spring 
time on Cuffern Mountain. At Cuffern there is a case contain- 
ing a pair of old Hen Harriers, with their young in down, from 
a nest found on the Cuffern estate. 


MONTAGU’S HARRIER, Circus cineraceus——A summer visitor ; 


rare. The late Mr. Fortune found a nest of this Harrier close 
to his residence at Leweston, July 2, 1854, containing an egg 
and three young birds in down. He succeeded in obtaining 
the two old birds and mounted them with the young, and the 
case is now to be seen in the Museum at Tenby, and is a beau- 
tiful example of his skill in taxidermy. The egg was presented 
to the collection of the Rev. C. M. Phelps. ‘This is the only 
instance of the occurrence of Montagu’s Harrier in the county 
of which we can find a record, but it must doubtless have been 
both shot and trapped occasionally without recognition. 


BUZZARD, Zuteo vulgaris.—There are so many Boncaths in the 


county, either hamlets or inns, that we have in this fact a sure 
witness to the former abundance of the Common Buzzard in 
Pembrokeshire, ‘‘ Boncath ” being the Welsh name of the bird. 
At the present day we are only able to state that there are a 
few Buzzards left in the county, and that there may be possibly 
still some half dozen nesting stations of the bird on the islands, 
and on the cliffs along the coast. We have seen the Buzzard 
at Stone Hall, and have several times spared it when we have 
been Woodcock shooting in warm bottoms not far from the sea. 
The bird has flown foolishly up to us, or has crossed low over 
head, presenting an easy shot. We have seen a Buzzard’s 
nest on a cliff on Ramsey Island, and possess an egg from it, 
one of a clutch taken by Mr. Mortimer Propert. All the 
Pembrokeshire Buzzards’ eggs that we have seen are large in 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 49 


size, the one we have is larger than any in a long series of con- 
tinental eggs in our cabinet, but, as the Rev. C. M. Phelps 
remarks, ‘they are not as a rule richly marked.” The Rey. 
C. M. Phelps agrees with us in estimating the present breeding 
stations of the Buzzard to be about six, and he adds that they 
are all on high cliffs. Mr. Dix writes: “In May, 1866, I had 
the unexpected pleasure of seeing a pair of Buzzards at Llan- 
granog, on the Cardiganshire coast, where I have no doubt 
they had a nest. I was first struck by their peculiar, plaintive 
note, greatly resembling the mewing of a kitten. Never having 
seen this bird on the wing before, and they being some 300 ft. 
above me, I was some time before I could be sure of the 
species. They were mobbed by several Crows and Jackdaws ; 
as they wheeled and doubled about their rounded wings gave 
them a very unhawk-like appearance. I was glad to find they 
had selected so safe a nesting place, it being a shelving rock 
overgrown with ferns and grass.” 


ROUGH-LEGGED BUZZARD, Archibuteo lagopus.—A rare visitor 
in the autumn. This is one of the species that crosses over 
into the Eastern counties of England from the continent at 
irregular intervals, and very rarely penetrates to the south-west 
of the kingdom. When shot or trapped it might very well be 
confounded by people who were not well up in birds with the 
Common Buzzard, from which it is always to be easily separated 
by its feathered tarsi; Mr. Mathias has informed us that ex- 
amples of the Rough-legged Buzzard have been obtained in the 
county, but is unable to supply dates and localities. The only 
one we ourselves knew of is one that was shot near St. Bride’s, 
in October, 1889. 


WHITE-TAILED EAGLE, Haliaétus albiciila.—A rare occasional 
winter visitor. Although one of the highest points of the 
Precelly Mountains is known by the name of Foel-Eryr “the 
Eagle’s Peak,” we cannot ascertain that any species of Eagle has 
nested within recent years in Pembrokeshire, or has been 


7 


50 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


observed as a frequent visitor to the county. Sir Hugh Owen 
has informed us that in the winter of 1851 an Eagle was seen 
almost daily in the neighbourhood of Haverfordwest, more par- 
ticularly frequenting the covers of Picton Castle and Slebech, 
and that it escaped being shot. This bird was supposed to have 
been a Golden Eagle, but with more probability may be con- 
sidered to have been an immature White-tailed Eagle, a species 
not unseldom observed as a straggler along the western coasts of 
the kingdom. Then, another Eagle, of whose occurrence we do 
not possess the date, that was seen on Skomer, and was thought 
to have been a Spotted Eagle, and was not obtained, was more 
likely a young White-tailed Eagle on passage. In Lord 
Cawdor’s collection, at Stackpole Court, we have seen a young 
White-tailed Eagle that had been shot near Carmarthen, and 
with this bird we exhaust our meagre record of the Eagles 
seen or obtained in the south-west corner of the Principality. 


SPARROW -HAWK, Accipiter nisus.— A common resident ; 


numerous in the wilder unpreserved parts of the county. This 
dangerous and recklessly courageous bird was very plentiful at 
Stone Hall, where we suffered much from his attacks upon the 
game. Scores of times we used to see a male Sparrow-hawk 
fluttering against our windows endeavouring to reach our cage 
birds inside, or watching them from the porch; and in the 
summer, when some of the cages would be brought out of 
doors, we repeatedly had to mourn over the death of some of 
our pets that had been killed by the marauder striking 
them through the wires. The Snipe that dropped into the 
marshy meadow below our house were regularly worked by 
Sparrow-hawks, anda stile in one of the covers was the favourite 
place to which they were carried and eaten, so that the ground 
beneath was littered with Snipe feathers. For some time we 
attributed this destruction to Merlins, until one day we came 
upon a male Sparrow-hawk with a freshly-killed Snipe in his 
feet, which we picked up as the bird flew off. Any bunch of 
Teai that appeared upon the river used to be persecuted by 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. SI 


Sparrow-hawks, until we have known them all to be killed one 
after the other. The Ring-doves in the plantations were also 
frequent victims, being knocked off their perches on the trees, 
then eaten on the ground below. The appearance of two or 
three Sparrow-hawks about the places where the young 
Pheasants were fed was also regarded as ominous of mischief, 
but they succeeded in carrying off very few, as there was plenty 
of cover for the Pheasants to hide themselves in from the 
destroyer. Needless to say that we waged war against the 
Sparrow-hawks, taking their nests and shooting all we could, but 
we never seemed to make any impression upon their numbers. 
The young Hawks, while they are still in the nest, keep up a 
wailing cry, which generally betrays its position, although it 
might otherwise have remained undetected in the thick upper 
branches of some old spruce. 


KITE, AMlvus ictinus—Once a common resident, now only a rare 
occasional visitor. The Rev. C. M. Phelps states that when he 
was a boy he often heard of, and saw the Kite glide over the 
farm yards, and threaten the unhappy hens with the loss of their 
chickens. This was on the mountains, ‘‘ some seven miles from 
Fishguard.” But it is now long since there were any resident 
Pembrokeshire Kites. Indeed, sixty years ago, the Kite had 
become a scarce bird in South Wales. Mr. T. C. Heysham, 
the well-known naturalist, of Carlisle, was anxious to obtain a 
specimen from Monmouthshire, but had to wait for three years 
before his correspondent in that county was able to secure one. 
At last he had a male Kite forwarded to him in April, 1837, 
that had been caught in a trap, and was informed that the game- 
keepers had by that time rendered the Kite a very rare bird. 
For this interesting note we are indebted to the courtesy of the 
Rev. H. A. Macpherson, of Carlisle. We have ourselves heard 
from old people that they can remember the Kite as quite a 
common bird when they were young. We have been informed 
by Mr. Mathias that a Kite was killed about 1835, upon the 
Moat Estate, by a keeper of the late W. H. Scourfield Esq., 


52 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


and passed into the collection of Mr. Ackland, of Boulston. 
In February, 1854, Mr. Mathias himself saw a Kite on two 
occasions, and believes it to be the same bird that was shot 
shortly after in Carmarthenshire. There is a Kite in Lord 
Cawdor’s collection at Stackpole. As recently as the summer 
of 1893 Mr. Howard Saunders had a fine view of a Kite at 
Dinas. This bird may have belonged to a little colony of Kites 
that still exists in Central Wales. Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, 
informs us that he has seen a Kite passing over at Pendine, and 
that at the present time Kites still nest in Carmarthenshire, at a 
locality that had better not be disclosed, where there was a nest 
in the summer of 1893. 


HONEY-BUZZARD, Pernis apivorus.—A rare occasional visitor, 
both in spring and autumn. This is a tree-frequenting species, 
particularly fond of the beech, not likely to be often met with in 
Pembrokeshire, where we have only one record of its occurrence. 
We have been informed by Sir Hugh Owen that he saw a 
Honey-Buzzard at Creselly, in the year 1851. 


GREENLAND FALCON, Hierofalco candicans.—A rare accidental 
visitor from the far north. A fine specimen of this beautiful 
Falcon shot many years ago on Lord Cawdor’s estate may still be 
seen in the Gallery of British Birds, at the South Kensington 
Natural History Museum. In the Zoologist, for 1850, Mr. 
James Tracy, of Pembroke, gives the following particulars of its 
capture: ‘Thespecimen from which Mr. Yarrell made the drawing 
in his excellent work on British Birds was killed on a warren on 
the estate of the Earl of Cawdor, was set up by me, and after- 
wards given by the Earl to the Zoological Society. It had been 
observed by my father, his lordship’s keeper, for eight or ten 
days, and had, almost on each day, killed and partly devoured a 
cock Pheasant. It was very shy, always perched on the highest 
rocky eminences, and, therefore, difficult to get at; but was 
accidentally come on and shot in the act of rising from a cock 
Pheasant it had recently killed.” 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 53 


PEREGRINE FALCON, falco peregrinus—Resident. The cliffs 
along the Pembrokeshire coast were once famous for their 
Falcons. In his description of Milford Haven, old Drayton says, 
in his ‘f Polyolbion ” :— 

‘* By Nature, with proud cliffs environed about, 
To crown the goodly road ; where builds the falcon stout, 
Which use the gentil call ; whose fleet and active wings 
It seems that Nature made when most she thought of Kings ; 
Which manag’d to the lure her high and gallant flight, 
The vacant, sportful man so greatly doth delight. 
That with her nimble quills his soul doth seem to hover, 
And by the very pitch that lusty bird doth cover, 
That those proud eyries bred whereas the scorching sky 
Doth singe the sandy wilds of spiceful Barbary ; 
Or underneath our pole, where Norway’s forest wide, 
Their high cloud-touching heads in winter snow do hide, 
Out-brave not this our kind in mettal, nor exceed 
The falcon which sometimes the British cliffs so breed.” 


An old map of the county, published many years ago by T. 
Kitchen, and dedicated to Sir William Owen, Bart., has printed 
on its margins sundry information respecting the local antiquities 
and natural history. In those days the Peregrine Falcon was 
probably far more numerous than it is now, and the map 
quaintly states that “in the rocks about the promontory called 
St. David’s Head, excellent Falcons have their aires and breed.” 
About the year 1850 Mr. Tracy considered that from Caldy 
Island round to St. David’s as many as twelve pairs of Peregrine 
Falcons might be counted during the months of May and June. 
There would be many more pairs on the rocky coast between 
St. David’s and Dinas Head. Writing to us in the summer of 
1893, Mr. Howard Saunders states: ‘* There are a pair of 
Peregrines on Dinas Island on the N.W. side, and of Buzzards, 
which have had their nest on the N. side, I think. The 
Peregrines are certainly on the S.W. aspect.” The Rev. C. M. 
Phelps was himself acquainted with some half dozen breeding 
stations of the Peregrine. He says: “One of the Falcon 
strongholds is on a grand range of cliffs in St. Bride’s Bay, some 
250 feet in perpendicular height. In August these cliffs are 
quite purple and golden with heather and gorse; at their base 


54 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


the lace-like waves of blue St. Bride’s roll in one after the other, 
and there, soaring round and round with shrill cries and screams 
are the two Peregrines. At another breeding place, some miles 
farther on, I assisted at the taking of a nest in 1876. It was 
curiously placed under two large stones on a grassy platform 
half way down the cliff. There were four handsome eggs, 
rather under-sized and hard set.” We have never been to any 
spot upon the coast without seeing a Peregrine, or a pair of 
Peregrines, and were often visited by them at Stone Hall, which 
is only six miles from the sea-coast. We almost trod upon a 
Peregrine one day in one of the covers, that rose at our feet off 
a freshly-killed rabbit. We consider it rare for a Peregrine to 
attack ground game. On another occasion a party of four 
Herons was noticed flying most uneasily down the valley 
of the Cleddy, uttering harsh cries of alarm, with a fine 
Falcon (i.e., the female Peregrine) following in pursuit. The 
Falcon did not strike at the Herons, and seemed to be only 
amusing herself with the fear she had inspired. One fine 
summer’s day we watched an attempt by a pair of Peregrines to 
secure a tame Pigeon at Druidston, on the coast of St. Bride’s 
Bay. The birds made alternate sweeps at the Pigeon without 
success, and the quarry at last saved itself by taking to ground 
in some crevice in the cliff, when the disappointed Falcons flew 
out to sea, after one or two angry barks. Mr. Tracy gives the 
following interesting notes on the nests of the Peregrine, which 
he says are placed in the most inaccessible parts of the cliff. 
The birds lay four eggs, sometimes five, and, in one instance, 
he observed six young. ‘They make no nest, but lay their 
eggs in a cavity of the rock, where a little loose clayey earth has 
been deposited ; sometimes in the old nest of the Raven, or 
Carrion Crow, but I never saw a nest without a little earth in it. 
They fix upon the situation early in March, and lay about the 
first week in April. Both male and female sit in turn on the 
eggs. I have known an instance where the male hatched and 
reared the young ones, when the female had been killed; and 
also, when the male had been shot, the female has continued 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 55 


the work of incubation. When they have young ones they are 
not to be deterred from their nests, nor will they—even if fired 
upon—desert their offspring. On one occasion, I remember my 
father and myself firing at a pair of these birds, and the female 
returned to the nest almost immediately. We repeated this 
three times before we succeeded in getting her. In almost 
every instance where I observed a nest of this fine bird the 
following birds have had nests in the immediate vicinity, that is 
within roo or 150 yards:—The Guillemot and Razorbill, in 
immense numbers, within a few feet, Puffins, the Kestrel, Raven, 
Carrion Crow, Jackdaw, Red-legged Crow, Great Black- 
backed Gull, one nest; Lesser Black-backed Gull, several 
nests; Herring-Gull, common; Kittiwakes, in thousands ; 
Common and Green Cormorants, Swifts and Sand-Martins. 
And yet none of them showed any signs of alarm at the 
approach of so formidable a foe. I do not recollect a nest 
where the Herring-Gulls, Guillemots, Razorbills, and Puffins 
were not abundant. The old birds ‘give you plenty of notice, 
by their harsh cry, when you are in the immediate vicinity of 
their nest, and it is not difficult to find the spot selected, the 
same old arched cavity being occupied every year. In one in- 
stance eleven pairs of Herons were breeding on the ledges of 
the rocks, within 150 yards of the nest of the Peregrine 
Falcon.” Mr. Charles Jefferys, of ‘Tenby, informs us that the 
Peregrine still nests yearly below Lydstep, and also in the 
neighbourhood of the Stacks. 


HOBBY, Fuxlco subbuteo.—A summer visitor; rare; also seen in 
autumn when on passage. There are but few records of the 
Hobby, but it has probably sometimes occurred undetected. 
Sir Hugh Owen saw one at Goodwick in 1871, and writes to 
us: ‘Can’t mistake a Hobby with his black-brown back, 
cream-coloured breast, and great length of wing, like a gigantic 
Swift.” One shot at Dale, October 3rd, 1888, was brought to 
Jeffreys, the bird-stuffer, in Haverfordwest ; another, at about 
the same date, was obtained at the Rhysgwyllt, Letterston. 


56 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


The Hobby, being quite a bird of the woods, would not often 
be expected in such a bare and generally treeless county as 
Pembrokeshire. 


MERLIN, aio esalon—Resident; also a winter visitor. A few 
Merlins are resident, and the nest has been taken at various 
places in the county. We have heard of young birds having 
been taken from a nest near St. David’s, and one of them was 
kept for some time there, at Bryn-y-garn. In the summer of 
1886 Sir Hugh Owen saw a brood of young Merlins at Good- 
wick, in a patch of heather on the top of the cliff, at a spot where 
he has known the nest to have been placed for several years. 
We have also heard of a nest near Maenchlogog, on the Precelly 
Mountains. And the Rev. C. M. Phelps evidently met with a 
nest on the coast in the south of the county. He found a nest 
on the top of one of the high sand-hills, not far from Tenby, 
which contained four eggs, and surmised that they might be 
those of the Merlin. In the winter the Merlin is far from un- 
common, and we have seen it at Stone Hall on numerous 
occasions. One day, when we were waiting quietly in a small 
larch plantation for a shot at a Woodcock, we suddenly detected 
a male Merlin sitting on a branch level with our head, and only 
a few feet from us. The bird remained motionless on its perch 
so long as we stood still, and only flew off when we moved on. 
Mr. Tracy reports that during a period of fifteen or eighteen 
years he received as many as eight or nine Merlins to set 
up for different gentlemen in the county. In his district Mr. 
Dix considered the Merlin not uncommon as an autumn and 
winter visitor, and that immature birds were the most 
numerous. Sir Hugh Owen once caught a Merlin near Good- 
wick in a rat trap. The bird was little injured, and the second 
day after its capture was tame enough to feed from his hand. 


RED-FOOTED FALOON, Zinnunculus vespertinus.—A very rare 
accidental straggler from the south. Writing to us from 
Cuffern, on May sth, 1887, our friend, the late Mr. John 
Stokes, informed us: ‘‘ Two days ago I saw at Ferny Glen two 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 57 


small Hawks, one nearly black, and the other a brownish black ; 
very pointed wings, like a common Swift, and about eight to 
ten inches in length. I have never seen them before, and I put 
them down to be the Red-legged Falcon.” Mr. John Stokes 
was an excellent ornithologist, and we have little doubt that he 
was correct in the name he gave to these rare visitors. Ferny 
Glen is only distant about a mile from the coast of St. Bride’s 
Bay. Sir Hugh Owen has informed us that an example of the 
Red-footed Falcon was obtained at ‘Tregwynt, a well-wooded 
spot on the northern coast of the county, and a noted Wood- 
cock cover, at the time when it was the residence of Mr. 
Llewellin, now many years ago, but could give us no particulars 
as to the season, sex, &c., of this rarity. 


KESTREL, Zinnunculus alaudarius.—A common resident. The 
most numerous of all our Hawks, to be met with all over the 
county, nesting in woods, in old ruins, and in many places on the 
cliffs all round the coast. The Kestrel was common in our 
plantations at Stone Hall, and an old Crow’s nest was generally 
occupied by it, and we have taken some very pretty varieties of 
its handsome eggs. One summer we witnessed a conflict that 
was maintained for several days between a pair of Crows and a 
pair of Kestrels for the possession of an old nest in a hedge-row 
elm: it ended in favour of the Kestrels, and a brood was suc- 
cessfully brought off. One bitter day we started a Kestrel off 
the snow-covered ground, and seeing it drop something as it flew 
off, went up to the spot and found a partly devoured Starling. 
We do not believe that Kestrels attack small birds unless they are 
unable to procure mice or insects, or are driven hard to find food 
for their young, when we have known them to carry off young 
Pheasants. One very foggy day, we shot a Kestrel by mistake, 
as it was fluttering low through the bushes, when we took it for a 
Woodcock. On picking it up, we found it had a diseased 
mandible, and was little more than a skeleton, having evidently 
been unable to feed. We have found a pair of Kestrels at every 
station of cliff birds we have visited, whether on the mainland or 


on the islands. 
8 


58 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


CORMORANT, Phalacrocorax carbo.—A common resident. There 
are nesting stations at various places on the coast, on Ramsey 
and Skomer Islands, &c. There are some twenty to thirty pair 
of Cormorants about Lydstep Head, near Tenby, as Mr. C. 
Jefferys informs us; a colony nests on trees at Slebech ; and 
some Herons that nested at Poyntz Castle on St. Bride’s Bay, 
were driven from their nests upon the cliffs by Cormorants, who 
took possession of them for themselves. The nesting places of 
the Cormorants emit an abominable stench from putrid fish 
remains, and are not delightful to linger near. In the summer- 
time, when the streams are low and clear, numerous Cormorants 
come inland, and work great havoc among the trout; and we 
always regarded it as an evil omen when we saw one or two of 
them heading up our valley. It is almost impossible to 
approach these poachers, as there is generally a sentinel perched 
on some tree by the river-side, while one or two others are 
working the adjoining pools. When fishing we would occasionally 
come upon a Cormorant so gorged with trout as to be unable to 
fly. One day we ran back for a gun to do execution on the 
caitiff, but just as we were approaching within range he uttered 
an unearthly cry, and vomiting his spoils, made off heavily 
on wing. Cormorants are often entangled and caught in fishing 
nets, and the birds of the year, with their white breasts, are con- 
sidered by the fishermen to belong to another species, and have 
been sent to us as great rarities. A Cormorant, a short time 
since, was picked up dead, near Tenby, with an oyster clinging 
to and closing its mandibles. The bird was stuffed with the 
oyster, and is now at Bath. 

We have received the following particulars of this strange 
occurrence from Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby :— 


CoRMORANT CAUGHT BY AN OYSTER. 


“On August 22nd, 1892, the sea being somewhat rough for 
that time of year, the man in charge of the bathing-machines on 
the North Sands, Tenby, saw some 300 to 4oo yards from shore, 
something dark which kept appearing and disappearing between 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 59 


the waves. Being unable to make out what it really was, and at 
first thinking it might be one of the bathers in danger, he took a 
boat and went out. Before reaching the object he saw it was a 
large bird, that appeared to be using every effort to rise from the 
water, and yet was unable to do so, its head being held down by 
some unseen weight. With a little trouble he secured the bird, 
and brought it to shore alive. It proved to be an adult Cor- 
morant, weighing between 71% and 734 lbs., and attached to its 
lower mandible was a large oyster ; which was afterwards found to 
weigh between 9 and 10 oz. When the bird was brought me it 
was dead, but the oyster was still attached. It held to about an 
inch of the lower mandible, which in the bird’s fearful struggles to 
get free had broken off short, the only attachment between it and 
the bird being the skin of the throat, which had twisted up like 
a piece of catgut. The Cormorant, when diving for food, must 
have seized the open oyster, which closed on the bill. The bird 
was buoyant enough to bring the oyster to the surface, but was 
unable to rise from the water, and must eventually have been 
drowned, as it could with difficulty keep its head above the 
surface. Mr. A. K. Cunninghame, of Bath, who was on the 
shore at the time, purchased the bird from the man who obtained 
it, and brought it to me to set up.” 


SHAG, Pialacrocorax graculus—A common resident; perhaps, 
even more numerous than the Cormorant. There are small 
colonies on St. Margaret’s Island, and on the Channel side of 
Caldy Island, near Tenby; on Skomer and Ramsey Islands, and 
at various places on the coast. Mr. Dix, who paid a visit to the 
Stack Rocks to see the enormous numbers of Guillemots that 
frequent them in the summer, states that on the west side of the 
Great Stack is a cave, in which Shags breed in safety, as it is 
perfectly inaccessible. 


GANNET, Sw/a bassana.— Resident; only on Grasholm. The 
Pembrokeshire Gannets are supposed to be a colony from 
Lundy Island, whence the birds were driven by the continued 
persecution they sustained at the hands of the channel pilots, 


60 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


and other robbers of their nests. Mr. Mortimer Propert, of St. 
David’s, who has repeatedly visited Grasholm, reports them to 
be rapidly increasing in numbers. In the spring of 1886 Mr. 
Propert estimated that there were at least 250 nests on the 
island, in four separate colonies. So remote is Grasholm, 
some seventeen miles from the shore in the centre of St. Bride’s 
Bay, and is both difficult to reach and not easy to get away 
from, that the Gannets might be expected to have at last found 
a place of security. However, a year or two since they were 
the victims of a raid, the particulars of which were made 
public, and excited at the time no little indignation. Since 
then, we believe, they have enjoyed peace. Accident, or stress 
of weather, occasionally drives the Gannet, inhabitant as it is of 
the wide ocean, far inland, and we have heard of a young one 
in the spotted plumage having been picked up by our friend and 
neighbour, the Jate Capt. O. T. Edwardes, of Tyrhos, on such an 
unlikely spot as Tyrhos Common. In November, 1887, Sir 
Hugh Owen reported to us that there were several immature 
Gannets in Goodwick Bay, that were fairly tame, and two of 
them seemed more pleased to be caught than to be turned 
adrift again. They were probably injured by the repeated gales. 


HERON, Ardea cinerea.—A common resident. Although there are 


no large Heronries in the county, there are numerous small 
breeding stations, and the bird is generally distributed and 
fairly common, Our fishponds at Stone Hall were constantly 
visited by Herons that came from Sealyham, where there are a 
few nests in one of the covers. We have counted seven 
together of a summer’s evening by one of our ponds, and we 
never went down to the Cleddy at any day in the year without 
seeing one or two, and after a long-continued drought in the 
summer, the birds would be especially numerous, as they then 
had better opportunities for capturing the eels, small trout, 
&c., that form their prey. Herons suffer severely after a long- 
continued spell of frost, when we have come across them 
perfectly starving. We captured one once, and brought him 


GANNETS ON THEIR NESTS, GRASHOLM, 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 61 


home, and put him in our carriage house, where he preferred to 
perch upon a high dog-cart. Here we fed him for about a 
fortnight, until we thought he had almost become strong 
enough to be restored to liberty, but one morning were vexed 
to find him lying dead upon the ground. We have often seen 
Herons perched upon the oak trees bordering one of our 
ponds. Here they would sit for some time before they 
descended to the shallow end of the pond in search of frogs 
and small fish or water-rats, and we believe they are expert 
catchers and devourers of these rodents. Some Herons nest 
upon the cliffs of the coast; we have already related how those 
at Poyntz Castle were dispossessed by Cormorants. The ejected 
Herons are stated to have migrated to Slebech, where they have 
formed a heronry. ‘There is a heronry at Llanmilo, near 
Pendine, just over the borders of the county in Carmarthen- 
shire, which, we are informed, consists of about thirty nests. 
Mr. Tracy mentions another at Linney Head, where the Herons 
nest in company with Cormorants and Guillemots. The nests, 
from six to twelve in number, are arranged side by side on the 
ledges of the rocks, and are quite inaccessible. 


LITTLE BITTERN, 4rdetta minuta.—A rare, occasional visitor ; 
only two or three instances. One in the collection of Mr. 
H. Mathias, and given by him with his other birds to Tenby 
Museum, was captured beneath the wheel of the mill, near 
Merlin’s Bridge, Haverfordwest. This was an adult. At the 
sale at Camrose House, in the summer of 1881, we noticed an 
immature Little Bittern in a case in one of the bedrooms. It 
was indifferently stuffed, and we could learn no particulars about 
it, but it had, probably, been obtained on the estate. There is 
also a specimen in Lord Cawdor’s collection, at Stackpole, that 
is said to have been procured in the county. 


NIGHT HERON, Wyeticorax griseus.—An occasional visitor. Mr. 
Dix writes that an immature specimen, in the Stackpole Court 
collection, was shot near Pembroke mill-pond by Mr. Tracy, 


62 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


about the year 1857. Within twenty yards of the same spot 
Mr. Tracy shot another, which he forwarded to Mr. Dix. ‘This 
was on December 7th, 1868. It proved to be a male, and had a 
single occipital plume about three inches long, white, tipped with 
dark brown ; the back and wings were beautifully shot with olive 
green; the white spots on the back and wing coverts, Mr. Dix 
adds, were more distinct and larger than they are represented in 
Yarrell’s figure. Mr. H. Mathias has informed us that a Night 
Heron was shot in the Lord’s meadow, at Lamphey, when he was 
a boy. Two others were killed near Kingsbridge, Pembroke ; 
one of these Mr. Mathias saw in the shop of Mr. Tracy, at 
Pembroke, immediately after it was shot. These two specimens 
are, without doubt, those mentioned by Mr. Dix. In 1876, 
three Night Herons roosted for several days in a tree in a garden 
belonging to Canon Lewis, at St. David’s, within thirty yards of 
the Cathedral. One was shot, on May rath, and proved a fine 
adult male, with three white occipital plumes. This handsome 
specimen is now in the possession of Dr. Propert, of St. David’s. 
The Night Heron, like many of the family, is a nocturnal 
feeder, hiding itself, and roosting during the day in thick bushes 
and trees. 


BITTERN, Botaurus stellaris—A rare, occasional winter visitor. 


The Bittern is nowa very rare bird in Pembrokeshire, and there 
are but few instances of its occurrence of late years. It was 
more common fifty years ago, in Mr. Tracy’s time. He used to 
recelve a few every winter, and, about the year 1842, he states 
that he had no less than thirteen Bitterns to set up, all killed 
the same week, the weather being very severe at the time. Bit- 
terns have been obtained occasionally at Tregwynt, in the north 
of the county. Sir Hugh Owen has shot them at Goodwick. 
One was killed at Dale, February 2nd, 1888. Two were brought 
to Jeffreys, the bird-stuffer in Haverfordwest, in the severe 
winter of 1890. One of these was from Tregwynt. A white 
Bittern is said to have been seen near Solva, in the winter of 
1886. It escaped slaughter, and was probably a Spoonbill. In 


The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 63 


former days, the Bittern was a resident wherever there were mires 
and reed and rush-grown bogs for it to skulk in, and was, 
doubtless, a common Pembrokeshire bird. 


AMERICAN BITTERN, Botaurus Jlentiginosus. — A very rare, 
accidental straggler from America—only one specimen—that 
obtained at St. David’s, in October, 1872 (vide Zoologist for 1883, 
p. 341). This bird was seen and identified by Mr. Cecil Smith, 
the author of ‘The Birds of Somerset.” Mr. Smith states that 
he saw it in the possession of Mr. Greenway, who had shot it. 
Mr. Greenway had recorded it at the time in Land and Water, 
with some doubt as to its being the American Bittern. It is 
singular that only two stragglers from America, this species and 
the Yellow-billed Cuckoo, have occurred on the coasts of 
Pembrokeshire, while upwards of a dozen have been noticed on 
the no very distant coasts of Devon and Cornwall. We can only 
surmise that others may have visited us without having been 
noticed or recorded. 


SPOONBILL, P/atalea /eucorodiai—An occasional visitor in the 
winter ; not very rare, sometimes arriving in considerable flocks. 
The direction from which the Pembrokeshire Spoonbills reach 
us is somewhat of a puzzle. The bird is a common species in 
Holland, and, therefore, as might naturally be expected, a 
regular visitor to the eastern counties of England. But birds 
crossing the German Ocean do not penetrate so far to the west 
as the Principality, save in a very few exceptional instances. We 
must, therefore, look to some other quarter for our Spoonbills, 
and are inclined to believe that they come to us from the south 
of Spain v7é the Bay of Biscay. Flocks of Spoonbills have been 
observed in the winter-time on the north coast of Cornwall, 
and this would seem to favour the route we have suggested. We 
learn from Mr. H. Mathias that, in the years 1854 and 1855, as 
many as eleven Spoonbills were shot on the shores of Milford 
Haven. The specimen in Mr. Mathias’ collection at the Tenby 


64 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


Museum was killed near Mallock Bridge in 1854. In 1885, five 
or seven were shot in one day near the same bridge. Mr. 
Mathias saw all these birds in Tracy’s shop, in Pembroke, 
soon after they were set up. Several of them were young birds, 
and one of them was so small and so ill-fledged that it seemed 
wonderful how it could have reached the Pembrokeshire coast. 
Sir Hugh Owen has told us that a flock of seven Spoonbills was 
seen on Goodwick Sands in 1856. Mr. Dix saw an immature 
Spoonbill in ‘Tracy’s shop in 1867, and was informed that two 
or three are seen about Pembroke almost every year. One was 
killed near St. David’s, on October 31st, 1890, as we learn from 
Mr. Mortimer Propert, who saw the bird when he was out with 
the hounds on a stubble field, in company with some farm-yard 
Geese a few days before it was shot. It was finally killed ona 
farm called Arglof, midway between St. David’s and Solva, and 
was, as we heard from Jeffreys, the bird-stuffer, a very fine, 
white bird, but without a crest. In most of the instances we 
have given above, of the visits of the Spoonbill to Pembroke- 
shire the dates were not supplied to us, but we believe that, 
as in the south-western counties of England, they were all 
during the winter, in this differing from the appearances of the 
bird in the eastern counties, where it is in general seen in the 


spring. 


GLOSSY IBIS, Plegadis falcinellus—An occasional visitor; very 


rare; only one instance. Mr. Tracy mentions a Glossy Ibis, a 
fine adult, that was shot at Slebech, in the autumn of 1834, and 
was in the possession of the gamekeeper. Mr. Thomas Hall, 
birdstuffer, of London Wall, in the Zoo/ogis¢ for 1858, mentions 
another that was killed so near to the borders of the county as 
Laugharne Marsh. ‘This was on April rg in that year. 


EGYPTIAN GOOSE, Crenalopex egyptiacus—Introduced. This 


species is included in Mr. Mathias’ list. We know of no recent 
instances of its having occurred at large, nor do we know of any 
ornamental waters within the county where it is kept. Any 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 65 


that have been obtained must have wandered away from lakes 
where fowl are preserved, perhaps at a considerable distance, as 
these Geese are notorious stragglers. 


BEAN GOOSE, Axser segetum.—An occasional winter visitor. All 


the wild Geese, with the exception of the Brent Goose, are rare 
in Pembrokeshire at the present day. During our eight years 
residence in the county the Bean Goose alone occurred to 
ourselves. In the severe winter of 1880 a flock of seven or 
eight frequented the neighbourhood of Stone Hall, and once or 
twice were seen by us flying low over our grounds. 


[PINK-FOOTED GOOSE, 4xser brachyrhynchus.—This species is 


included by Mr. Mathias, but as it appears to be unknown in the 
south-western parts of the kingdom, we are doubtful if it was 
correctly identified. It is a very common winter visitor to the 
eastern counties of England. ] 


WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE, 4xser albifrons. — An occasional 


winter visitor in severe weather. Has been seen by Sir Hugh 
Owen at Goodwick. One received by Jeffreys, the Haverfordwest 
bird-stuffer, from Fishguard, in December, 1890. 


BRENT GOOSE, Zernicla brenta.—A winter visitor, sometimes 


abundant. We are informed by Sir Hugh Owen, that Brent 
Geese usually appear on the sands at Goodwick, at the first 
northerly or north-easterly gale between September 29th and 
October 7th; and again later in the winter. They are also 
seen at Broadmoor, near St. Bride’s Bay, where two were shot 
on October 15th, 1888 ; also on the Milford Haven creeks, &c. 


BARNACLE GOOSE, Bernicla leucopsis—A winter visitor, not so 


numerous as the preceding species. Has been shot by Sir Hugh 
Owen, on Goodwick sands, where it generally arrives about the 
first of October, and is often met with in company with the 


9 


66 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


flocks of Brent Geese. It has also occurred at Orielton, near 
Milford Haven, as we are informed by Col. Saurin. A freshly 
shot specimen was washed ashore near St. David’s, at the begin- 
ning of December, 1893, as we learn from Mr. Mortimer Propert. 


MUTE SWAN, Cygnus olor.—tIntroduced. The chief station in the 


county of these beautiful birds is at Stackpole Court, where a 
number frequent the romantic lake in the park in what may be 
considered a wild state. The lake winds about in a serpentine 
shape, its banks, at places, bordered by finely timbered woods, 
and at one part, on the side towards the sea, by a warren. 
At its extremity towards the sea a narrow range of sandhills 
separates it from the shore. The Swans come and go as they 
like, and are most numerous during the summer, when there 
are nearly a hundred on the lake, many pairs being engaged in 
nesting. In the autumn, when the weeds die down beyond their 
reach, and the water is high, most of the Swans disappear, and 
in the middle of winter, not more than eight or ten will be found 
remaining. A few of the birds visit the Milford Haven creeks, 
and one is occasionally shot on the neighbouring marshes, but 
the majority evidently leave the county altogether, and probably 
migrate far to the south. The few Mute Swans that occasionally 
appear on the estuary of Taw and Torridge, in North Devon, 
may be stragglers from the Stackpole flock. The Swans all 
return again to their Pembrokeshire home in the spring. Lord 
Cawdor informed us that he never introduced any fresh blood, 
and that the number of Swans varied with the abundance of the 
American weed, that, after twenty-five years, had begun to 
diminish, and had almost died out in some parts of the water. 


WHOOPER, Cygnus mustcus.— A rare, occasional winter visitor ; not 


many on record. One, in the collection of the late Mr. John 
Stokes, at Cuffern, was shot many years ago at Pantyphillip, some 
three miles inland to the south of Fishguard. One at Stack- 
pole frequented the lake there for some time, until it was shot 
by Lord Cawdor, with his rifle, from the bridge crossing the lake. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 67 


Singularly enough, that same day, a party shooting through 
the covers in the park, brought in a specimen of Bewick’s Swan 
that had been shot out of a flock of six or seven passing over- 
head. Among the “various” captured in the decoy at Orielton, 
a Swan Is included, but the species is not given. 


BEWICK’S SWAN, Cygxus bewicki—An occasional winter visitor. 
This small species of Swan is a not uncommon visitor to the 
S.W. parts of the kingdom, and cannot be considered rare in 
Pembrokeshire, where, during our own limited acquaintance with 
the county, we knew of several instances of its occurrence, and 
secured a fine example for our collection. On Nov. roth, 1887, 
a fine adult was shot on Trevithan Pool, near St. David’s, by Mr. 
Harding Harries. The bird was seen on the water in company 
with a flock of tame geese, and when Mr. Harries approached, 
instead of taking wing, it swam among the geese and endeavoured 
to conceal itself in their midst, sinking its body as much as it 
could, and bending down its graceful neck. Mr. Harries waded 
into the water, and, with a single shot, laid the beautiful stranger 
dead upon its back. Five other Bewick Swans, all immature 
birds, were shot by a farmer, near St. David’s, in the winter of 
1887; all these are said to have been plucked and roasted. 
Another young Bewick’s Swan, in dirty white plumage, was shot 
near St. David’s, in December, 1890, and sent to Jeffreys, in 
Haverfordwest, to be stuffed. Many Swans, probably all belong- 
ing to this species, were observed in various parts of the county 
that severe winter, and flocks, numbering fifty birds, were seen 
flying over. Mr. Jefferys, of Tenby, informs us that he received 
a specimen of Bewick’s Swan from the neighbourhood of St. 
David’s, evidently a favourite locality for the birds, as it is the 
nearest point to the opposite coast of Ireland, where these swans 
are seen by the thousand during the winter, and that he sold it to 
a Mr. Mason, of Burton-on-Trent. A flock of Wild Swans, num- 
bering about fifteen, is reported as having been seen at St. 
David’s at the beginning of November, 1892. These were pro- 
bably Bewick’s Swans. 


68 The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 


COMMON SHELDRAKE, Zadorna cornuta.— Resident. This 
handsome duck has been seen by Sir Hugh Owen, on the sands 
at Goodwick. Mr. Dix states that a pair or two nest on sand- 
hills below Milford Haven. Numbers nest on sandhills near 
Laugharne, just beyond the eastern borders of the county, in 
Carmarthenshire. A Sheldrake was captured, with other fowl, 
on Orielton decoy, one winter. 


RUDDY SHELDRAKE, Zadorna casarca. — Accidental visitor. 
During the summer of 1892, a large number of Ruddy Shel- 
drakes visited this country, an immigration almost as extra- 
ordinary in its way as the incursions of Pallas’ Sandgrouse, and 
flocks appeared at many places on all the coasts of England, 
Ireland, Wales, and Scotland, and many examples were shot. 
One was obtained out of a small flock near St. David’s during the 
month of July that year. These birds had probably come from 
North Africa. This beautiful species, which also bears the 
name of the Brahminy Duck, and is abundant in India, is com- 
monly kept on ornamental ponds, and the few occurrences 
which had been previously noted in this kingdom have been 
usually regarded as escapes. 


WIGEON, Mareca stenelofe—A common winter visitor. The 
Wigeon occurs in flocks in the autumn and winter all round the 
coast, and a few visit inland rivers and ponds. We have seen 
Wigeon in the Cleddy below Stone Hall, and have occasionally 
flushed and shot single birds from small pools and ditches when 
Snipe shooting. The Wigeon is by far the most numerous of all 
the ducks that visit us in the autumn. On the decoy at 
Orielton in eight seasons (1877-1885), 4,150 Wigeon were taken 
as against 1,197 Wild Duck and 2,975 Teal in the same period. 
We append a list of fowl supplied us by Col. Saurin, of Orielton, 
taken in the decoy from 1877-1885. We believe this list is 
published by Sir R. Payne Gallwey, Bart., in his book on 
“Decoys.” The Orielton decoy was partially constructed in 
1868, and added to in 1871, 1873, and 1876. No record of 
fowl taken was kept before 1877. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 69 


ORIELTON DECOY (Cot. Saurin). 
(Near Milford Haven.) 


First Birds|Last Birds 
taken. taken. 


Season. Duck. |Wigeon| Teal. | Pintail. pie Various | Total. 


1877-78 | Nov. 28 | Feb. 15 5 | 504 | 341 ° fo) 3 853 


1878-79 | Aug. 22| Feb. 11 | 183 | 452 | 871 6 4 15 | 1531 


1879-80 | Sept. 17| Feb. 14} 244 | 604 | 485 6 6 23 | 1368 


1880-81 Sept. 30} Feb. 26| 100 | 275 | 317 2 I 16 7i1 


1881-82 | Sept. 28} Feb. 23] 70 | 535 | 190 I I 5 802 


1882-83 | Sept. 16| Feb. 10} 85 | 643 | 264 I I 3 997 


1883-84 | Aug. 25/ Feb. 23} 150 | 562 | 363 3 I I | 1080 


1884-85 | Nov. 1 | Feb. 22 360 | 575 | 144 | 9 2 I 1091 


= Besides these 1 Sheldrake, 1 Barnacle Goose, 1 Pochard, and 2 Gadwall have 


7 


been taken. The ‘‘ various” include Swans, Pheasants, Snipe, Water-hens, 
Coots and Divers. 


PINTAIL, Dajila acuta.—A winter visitor; scarce. Sir Hugh 
Owen has seen and killed many Pintails on Goodwick Moor. 
But only 28 were taken on Orielton Decoy in eight seasons, 
and this fact would indicate that this species is rare. We have 
never met with it ourselves, It is a most excellent bird for the 
table. 


WILD DUCK, Azxas boscas.—Resident ; common ; breeds all over 
the county in suitable places, on wet moors, by the side of 
streams and ponds. We had several broods every season 


70 The Birds of Pembrokeshire, 


below Stone Hall, on the Cleddy, and by the side of tiny 
streams joining that river. The Wild Duck must have been 
far more abundant fifty years ago. In a meadow below Stone 
Hall the remains of an ambush at a bend of the stream still 
exist. Concealed within it an old farmer, who lived close at 
hand, used to shoot the Ducks as the flocks flew up and down 
the stream just at daybreak, or at dusk, and is reported to have 
often picked up twenty or more before his breakfast. In snowy 
weather, accompanied by rough northerly winds, we have our- 
selves seen great numbers of Duck on the Cleddy, and have 
had good sport with them. The rougher the wind the greater 
used to be our success, as the wind both prevented the birds 
from hearing our approach, and impeded their flight. We 
found a brood one summer close to the house, and the old 
Duck permitting herself to be caught, we carried them all to 
one of our ponds, but they did not stay there, quickly wandering 
off again to the river. 


GADWALL, Chawlelasmus streperus.—An occasional winter visitor ; 
rare. ‘Che Gadwall is included in Mr. Mathias’ list, and is said 
to have been shot near Pembroke. We have seen a pair 
stuffed in a case at Orielton, that were taken in the Decoy with 
other fowl. One in the gallery of British birds at South 
Kensington Natural History Museum was presented by Lord 
Cawdor, and came in all likelihood from the lake at Stackpole. 


GARGANEY, Querguedula circia.—An occasional summer visitor ; 
rare. Included in Mr. Mathias’ list. Specimens in the Stack- 
pole Court collection. Three were shot on a pond on a farm 
called Bramble, near Pen-y-cwm, in the north of the county, 
February 28, 1888. 


TEAL, Quergquedula creccaa—A common winter visitor; perhaps, 
also a resident in limited numbers. Although we have no 
evidence that it does so, we consider it extremely likely that a 
few pairs of Teal may nest annually in suitable places in the 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 71 


county. Every winter little flocks of Teal made their appear- 
ance on the Cleddy beneath Stone Hall, where it was compar- 
atively easy to get shots at them by following the river in its 
windings, as the birds generally dropped into corners of the 
stream where willows and rushes afforded shelter. Very fre- 
quently, too, we used to come across single Teal when after 
Snipe, flushing them from drains, warm ditches, and small 
rush-bordered pools, thus adding variety to our bag. A buff- 
coloured Teal in the National Collection at South Kensington 
was presented by Lord Cawdor, and came from Stackpole. 


SHOVELLER, Sfatula clypeata—A winter visitor, not very 
common. Occasionally the Shoveller deserts the sea wrack on 
the coast, and comes inland to feed on the fresh water ponds, 
and one day when Woodcock-shooting at Trecwn, we disturbed 
three Mallard Shovellers from the small lake at the head of the 
cover. In their full adult plumage the Mallard Shovellers are 
among the handsomest of our British Wild Ducks. We have 
always found this species most excellent for the table. 


RED-CRESTED POCHARD, Picdigula rufina.—A very rare acci- 
dental winter visitor from the south of Europe. Only one 
occurrence; Mr. Tracy informed Mr. Dix, that he shot a female 
Red-crested Pochard at Stackpole, and that Lord Cawdor took 
it up to London to be identified. The date is not given. This 
is the bird included in Dr. Gray’s Catalogue of the British 
birds in the British Museum, and is still in the National Collec- 
tion at South Kensington. In his “Handbook of the Rarer 
British Birds” (pp. 159, 160), Mr. Harting mentions wo 
Pembrokeshire Red-crested Ducks, but we have no doubt that 
both his entries refer to the same bird, the one killed at Stack- 
pole, which Lord Cawdor presented to the British Museum. 


TUFTED DUCK, /iligula cristata.—A winter visitor ; common. 
This small species, one of the most active in diving of all the 
diving Ducks, is occasionally met with on inland ponds. We 


72 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


have seen it in little parties on the lake at Stackpole in the 
early spring, and one winter one was shot on one of the ponds 
at Stone Hall. It may occasionally remain to nest. Great 
numbers are to be seen during the winter diving in the shallows 
in Goodwick Bay. 


SCAUP, /udicula marila—A winter visitor; common. This is 
more of a maritime species, and is very rarely met with at any 
distance from the coast. In general it keeps some little distance 
out at sea, where it may be met with throughout the winter in 
large flocks. Sir Hugh Owen sees it commonly off Goodwick. 
It is hardly worth powder and shot for the table, as the flesh 
is strong and rank, 


POCHARD, fuligula ferina—A winter visitor; not uncominon. 
Has occurred to ourselves on small ponds, some distance from 
the coast. Some are taken on the decoy, at Orielton. Mr. 
Dix mentions one that was shot on a pond in his neighbourhood. 
This species is also an accomplished diver. 


GOLDEN-EYE, Clangula glaucion.—A winter visitor; not very 
common. Mr. Dix states that a few are seen most winters, but 
that adult Mallards are rare. In the severe winter of 1880 we 
saw several in immature plumage, on the Cleddy, below Stone 
Hall. Two adult Mallards in the National Collection at South 
Kensington are labelled ‘‘ Pembrokeshire,” and were presented 
by Lord Cawdor. The Golden-eye is often met with on the 
bays along the coast, in company with Scaups, Pochards, and 
Tufted Ducks, a few Common Scoters sometimes mingled with 
them, all diving together in the shallows over some favourite 
feeding-grounds. 


LONG-TAILED DUCK, arelda glacialis.—An occasional winter 
visitor; rare. There are two immature birds of this species in 
Lord Cawdor’s collection that had been shot at Stackpole. Mr. 
Tracy informed Mr. Dix that one was shot at Haverfordwest, on 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 73 


June rsth, 1843, a remarkable date for this northern bird to 
have been found so far to the south. From his description, this 
specimen appears to have been in almost complete summer 
plumage. It had one white scapular feather, and a few white 
feathers on the crown of the head, and on the back of the neck ; 
the white feathers remaining on the head and neck were about a 
quarter of an inch longer than the others. 


EIDER DUCK, Somateria mollissima.—An occasional winter visitor; 
rare. We saw some adults of this beautiful bird in the Stack- 
pole collection, that had been obtained at Stackpole, or on the 
coast between Stackpole and Tenby. Mr. Dix mentions an 
immature male that had been shot near Pembroke, as also being 
in Lord Cawdor’s collection, and an adult male, which he 
believes had been killed in Carmarthenshire. A young male 
Eider was shot at Dale, January 18th, 1891. 


SCOTER, @demia nigra.—A winter visitor; not rare. Mr. Dix 
states that immature birds are not uncommon on the coast. 
Numbers are seen occasionally in Goodwick Bay. Sir Hugh 
Owen shot one off the pier head at Goodwick. 


VELVET SCOTER, @demia fusca. — A rare winter visitor. 
Mr. Mathias has told us of one that was brought into Tracy’s 
shop at Pembroke many years ago. Six were seen in Good- 
wick Bay on November 16, 1886, as we were informed by Sir 
Hugh Owen. Mr. Charles Jefferys informs us that one was 
picked up exhausted on the shore at Tenby, in December, 
1889, and brought to him alive. ‘This species can readily be 
distinguished, with glasses, at some considerable distance on the 
water, owing to the white speculum on the wings. 


GOOSANDER, MMereus merganser.—A regular winter visitor; not 
uncommon. One shot by Mr. W. Summers on the lake at 
Heathfield in the early spring of 1884, was sent to us, and 
although infested by a large parasite was in good condition; it 
was a female. Heathfield is several miles from the coast. 


Io 


74 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


Another was obtained at Tregwynt, on the north coast, in 
January, 1888. We ourselves watched one swimming and 
diving in the lake at Stackpole, March 22, 1888. Mr. H. W. 
Evans, of Solva, possesses a pair of Goosanders in his collection, 
male and female, that were shot in Solva harbour. Mr. Dix says 
the Goosander occurs more frequently than the Red-breasted 
Merganser. The Mallard Goosander, in full plumage, is the 
most beautiful of all the divers that visit our estuaries and bays 
in the winter time. 


RED-BREASTED MERGANSER, JMergus serrator—A_ winter 
visitor; rare. In Mr. Mathias’ list. Mr. Dix says ‘‘ occasionally 
obtained.” We know of no recent occurrences. 


SMEW, Mergus albellus—A winter visitor ; not uncommon. In 
Mr. Mathias’ list. Has been shot by Sir Hugh Owen, at 
Goodwick. Mr. Dix says: ‘A beautiful adult male in 
the Earl of Cawdor’s collection, was shot on the lake at Stack- 
pole Court. Immature birds are not infrequently seen In 
its pretty black and white pie plumage, and with its hand- 
some crest, the Mallard Smew is another conspicuous species, 
that we have distinguished at a great distance on the water. 
It is one of the tree-building species like the Golden-eye and 
some other ducks, and its pure white eggs are still considered 
as rarities by oologists. It nests in Lapland and the north of 
Europe. 


RING-DOVE, Columba palumbus.—Resident. To be met with in 
all the wooded parts of the county, but it cannot be considered 
abundant anywhere, and we never saw such flocks in the winter 
time as are commonly observed in England. We had many 
Ring-doves in our plantations at Stone Hall, where they were 
constantly harried and devoured by the too numerous Sparrow- 
hawks. Occasionally the birds would do us damage in the 
kitchen garden, but as we always liked to see them about our 
trees we never permitted them to be interfered with. In the 
early months of the year they used to feed greedily in our 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 75 


grounds on the roots of the Pilewort Crowfoot (Ranunculus 
ficaria), for which they were to be seen searching about in 
small flocks. Mr. Dix considered that Ring-doves were more 
numerous in his north-eastern corner of the county than they 
were in the south, and remarks that few persons have any idea 
of the damage they do to turnips and rape during the winter 
months. 


STOCK-DOVE, Columba palumbus.—Resident ; chiefly to be found 
upon the coast. We were informed by Mr. Moore, the head- 
keeper at Picton Castle, that a few pairs of Stock-doves nested 
in some hollow trees in the park, and we believe we saw some 
of the birds one day when we were crossing the park in his 
company. We learn from Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, that 
Stock-doves frequent and nest in the ivy-coloured cliffs near 
that delightful watering-place. We believe that many of the 
Pigeons that frequent the cliffs in the St. David’s district, and 
are generally considered to be Rock-doves, are either Stock- 
doves or escaped farmyard Pigeons. We never detected a 
Stock-dove among our Ring-doves at Stone Hall. 


ROCK-DOVE, Columba livia—Resident. Mr. Tracy, writing fifty 
years ago, stated that a few pairs then nested in the cliffs on the 
coast. But we must state that we have never seen a Pembroke- 
shire specimen of this species, and some eggs sent to us from 
St. David’s were evidently too large for those of the Rock- 
dove. However, from what Mr. Mortimer Propert tells us, we 
believe that there may be a pair or two of genuine Rock-doves 
nesting in the caves on Ramsey Island. We have ourselves, on 
various visits to that most romantic and charming island, seen 
many Pigeons flying along the cliffs, but were never able to get 
sufficiently near them to be certain what they were. Mr. E. W. 
H. Blagg, of Cheadle, Staffordshire, who was staying at Tenby in 
the summer of 1887, assures us that he saw Rock-doves in the 
neighbourhood of the Stack Rocks, and also at the ‘‘ Huntsman’s 
Leap,” a name given to a deep fissure in the cliffs, where there is 
a sheer descent of a hundred feet or more to the beach below. 


76 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


“ Atthe latter spot,” he writes, ‘‘I can call to mind seeing a few 
Doves come out of the deep fissures in the steep cliffs, far away 
below us, so that we had a good view of their w/zte rumps, and 
this was my first introduction to Rock-doves ; since then, in 
1892, I have seen crowds of wild Rock-doves in the Shetlands.” 
He adds further “ Stock-doves i have known well all my life. 
Of course there are lots of them near Tenby, and I have come 
across plenty of them on the coast of Carnarvonshire ; ¢hey 
seem to prefer ivy-covered cliffs, not very high as a rule, but 
I think the Rock-Doves like cliffs that are too wild and steep 
for ivy to grow on them, with caves and deep fissures to shelter 
ine 


TURTLE DOVE, Zurtur communis.—A summer visitor ; scarce. A 
few pairs nest in the south of the county. In driving about the 
northern districts we have occasionally noted a single Turtle 
Dove in May and June. We saw one at Solva, towards the end 
of May, 1887, and another near St. David’s, and one was shot 
at Stone Hall as late in the year as October 23rd, 1887. We 
know of no instance of the nest having been found in the north 
of the county, neither did Mr. Dix, who considered the Turtle 
Dove only a straggler to Pembrokeshire. He states that it has 
been known to breed in the woods at Orielton, near Pembroke, 
but he believed only on one occasion. He writes: “On 2oth 
June, 1867, I was surprised to see one fly across a small field 
here, which was being sown with turnips; the same morning, 
within a less distance than a mile, I heard two others in different 
plantations ; three pairs were regularly heard and seen here for 
about ten days ; I was careful they should not be disturbed, as I 
hoped they would remain through the summer ; however, they 
all left, and we have had none since: their note is so peculiar it 
is not easy to suppose they would remain unnoticed, more par- 
ticularly as they were several times mentioned to me during the 
time they remained.” 


PALLAS’S SAND- GROUSE, Syrrhaptes paradoxus. — This 
singular bird, whose first appearance in the British Isles was 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 77 


noted early in July, 1859, at Tremadoc, at the north end of 
Cardigan Bay, was observed in Pembrokeshire at each of its great 
visitations in 1863 and 1888. A female bird was shot near 
Haverfordwest, February 8th, 1864 ; and is recorded in Professor 
Newton’s excellent account of the first immigration of the species 
to this country in the volume of the Zézs for 1854, page 211. The 
Haverfordwest specimen was the last reported occurrence of this 
bird in Great Britain on its first visitation. Sir Hugh Owen has 
informed us that a Sand-Grouse was shot in Pembrokeshire, in the 
spring of 1870; this occurrence is singular, as no other Sand- 
Grouse is recorded from the British Isles in the year 1870. In 
the second, and still more numerous irruption of Pallas’s Sand- 
Grouse, in 1888, a female was shot in the parish of Ambleston, 
on 28th May in that year; and about that date, we heard from 
Mr. Mortimer Propert that some “strange birds” had been seen 
near St. David’s, that were probably a flock of Sand-Grouse. 
The home of this species is to be found on the steppes of Tartary, 
and the cause which induced it to wander so far away, and in 
such numbers, is quite unknown. 


PHEASANT, Pahasianus colchicus and torquatus.—Introduced. 
The Pheasant thrives remarkably well in Pembrokeshire, not 
only in the preserves, but in the wild unpreserved districts in 
the county, where it meets with all its requisites—water, shelter 
and food. It delights in the stiff fox-covers of from four feet to 
five feet high furze, which are so numerous, and in these, as we 
have often experienced, neither dogs nor beaters will avail to 
flush it. The birds shot in these impenetrable covers are worth 
some trouble to obtain, being fine and heavy, and of most excel- 
lent flavour. The ring-necked Pheasant (/. torqguatus) 1s NOW 
the predominant variety throughout the county. It is said to 
have been introduced by Sir John Owen, Bt., of Orielton, some 
fifty or sixty years ago, and it has extended itself even to the 
remote “mountain” districts, ‘The Rev. W. Scott, rector of 
Slebech, has told us that when he was a boy at school in Car- 
marthen, he well remembers the town crier one day being sent 


78 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


about the streets to request the people to abstain from injuring 
the Pheasants that had just been turned down upon an estate at 
no great distance from the town. This, doubtless, had refer- 
ence to the ring-necked birds, and was, probably, their first 
introduction in that part of Carmarthenshire. We have only 
very rarely encountered specimens of the old breed of red birds 
in the covers in North Pembrokeshire. In very severe winters, 
after deep snows and long protracted frosts, we have once or 
twice picked up dead and frozen hen birds in our covers, but 
we never came across a dead cock bird in such weather, and 
believe that these hardy birds can find a subsistence for them- 
selves almost anywhere, and are practically omnivorous, When 
Snipe shooting, we have often put up and shot straying cock 
Pheasants in unexpected places, on the barest hill tops, and in 
the wettest bogs. No doubt, a considerable number of Pheasants 
fall victims to the foxes that swarm beyond all reason in some 
parts in the north of the county ; several times we have had our 
setter draw up to and stand a fox kennelled in some trash on 
the “mountain,” with one of our Pheasants half-eaten by his 
side, and we have wondered whether it was the “ varmint ” that 
we allowed to trot off towards our covers, or the remains of 
game that had been winded by our dog. 


RED-LEGGED PARTRIDGE, Caccadis rufa.—Introduced. Lord 


Cawdor in the south of the county, and Mr. J. Worthing- 
ton, of Glyn-y-mel, Fishguard, in the north, have attempted 
to naturalise the red-legged Partridge, but have met with no 
success. We have seen the fine, healthy young birds reared 
at Glyn-y-mel, but they soon disappeared after they were 
turned out in fields where it seemed likely they would remain, 
nor were any ever met with afterwards during the shooting 
season in the neighbourhood. Mr. Moore, the head keeper at 
Picton Castle, has told us that he once shot a single example of 
this species at Picton, and this is the only one that, to our 
knowledge, has been obtained anywhere at large within the 
county. Attempts to introduce the red-legged Partridge have 
also failed both in Devonshire and Dorsetshire, and it seems 


The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 79 


natural to conclude that the climate of the south-west of the 
kingdom is too humid for it. We cannot think of any other 
reason to account for its refusing to establish itself in the various 
(in all other respects) suitable districts on which it has been 
turned out. 


PARTRIDGE, Zerdix cinerea —Although not to be numbered as 
ranking among the Partridge counties, owing to the comparative 
scarcity of cornfields and its generally “mountain ’’ character, 
Pembrokeshire, nevertheless, seems to be well adapted to this 
well-known and favourite bird, and in the southern districts, 
notably on Lord Cawdor’s estates in the parishes of Castle 
Martin, &c., it is fairly plentiful, and very good bags are made. 
In good seasons, such as the Jubilee year, for instance, it is 
also sometimes abundant in the wilder parts of the county, and 
we have had excellent sport. In hard winters, when snow lies 
long upon the ground, great numbers of Partridges perish. 
Many are starved and frozen, and many more fall victims to 
vermin that can then more easily discover them, and we have 
found their remains lying about the fields. A wet June, when 
there are frequent thunderstorms, is also disastrous, as then the 
young broods perish almost to a bird, and the sportsman will 
find the fields bare of coveys when September comes. We 
have had our own stock reduced to almost a vanishing point, 
but a couple of good seasons will work like magic; the birds 
seem to spring up again from nowhere, and plenty of em- 
ployment is again provided for setters and_breech-loaders. 
Owing to the quantity of furze and other rough cover, the 
Pembrokeshire partridges, in the north of the county especially, 
suffer little at the hands of poachers, as it is almost impossible 
to take them with nets. 


QUAIL, Coturnix communis——An irregular summer visitor. One 
or two are noted every season, and in certain years it is 
numerous. Mr. Tracy writes: ‘I receive a specimen or two 
almost every autumn, or during the winter.” The only occur- 


80 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


rences which came under our own notice were all of single 
birds obtained in the winter months. Captain O. T. Edwardes, 
of Tyrhos, shot one in December, on Tyrhos Common, close 
to Stone Hall. Mr. Dix writes: “An adult female was shot at 
Boncath, near here, on September 7th, 1867, and was sent to 
me a day or two afterwards; it was flushed from amongst some 
rushes in a wet springy meadow, where in winter we usually 
find snipes. This singularly agrees with the observations in the 
‘Birds of Norfolk.’ Eight or nine years ago five were seen 
near here, of which three were shot; and about twelve years 
ago three were seen near Eglwyswrw, and all were shot; they 
were all found in and near similar cover to the bird I have. I 
think I never saw a bird so loaded with fat as that sent me; 
although rolled up in four or five thicknesses of newspaper, the 
grease went through all, and the feathers were so saturated that 
I almost despaired of cleaning them.” Mr. Dix was an intimate 
friend of Mr. H. Stevenson, the author of the “ Birds of Nor- 
folk,” and on referring to that admirable work, we find (vol. i, 
p. 431) that Mr. Stevenson attributes the scarcity of the Quail 
in the county of Norfolk, at the present day, to the fact that the 
rough, swampy places that were the birds favourite grounds, 
have all been enclosed and ploughed up. In the Zoologist for 
1870, Mr. Dix records the abundance of Quail in Cardiganshire 
and North Pembrokeshire that year. There were many nests, 
and. he himself heard of 330 having been killed by eighteen 
sportsmen, who supplied him with their lists, and thinks that 
the total number bagged may have been from four to five times 
that number. Nearly the whole were shot in September. Early 
in October several sportsmen looked after Quails, but could 
find none. The first Quail was noticed in the middle of July, 
near a field in which two nests were subsequently found. 
“This was a barley field, and when it was cut, about August 
14th, two nests were found; one contained eggs. Near the 
other nine young ones, just hatched, were seen; these remained 
near the same spot for some time. Another nest with eggs was 
found within a day or two of the above date, and not more than 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 81 


two hundred yards distant.” We cannot but think the date 
here given is rather a late one for the birds to be found nesting, 
and would point to the flight having reached Pembrokeshire 
late in the summer. The birds would certainly begin to nest 
immediately on their arrival. Mr. Dix states that although 
there were so many Quail in the north of the county, only one 
or two were seen in the south; 1870 was a great year for Quails 
all over the kingdom, especially in the west and south-west. In 
1893, Quail were again numerous in most parts of England, and 
were met with commonly in North Pembrokeshire, and many were 
killed in the St. David’s district. The report from the Small’s 
Lighthouse mentions Quail appearing there on the morning of 
September 3rd, 1885, indicating the departure of the birds 
towards the south. We cannot gather whether this refers to a 
single bird, or to a passing flock. 


RED GROUSE, Zagopus scoticus.—Resident? We fear that it is 
extremely doubtful if a single Red Grouse is left on the Precelly 
Mountains. Formerly a few broods were to be found there, 
and Col. John Owen, of Rosebush, used to get a few brace on 
the hills. In the autumn of 1885, a lady of our acquaintance 
received a present of a brace that had been shot there, and 
these are the last that we have ourselves heard of. Mr. 
Mortimer Propert tells us that he saw what he believed to be 
Grouse on Brennin Fawr, near Crymmych, on September 9th, 
1892. This is on the Cardiganshire side of the Precelly range. 


BLACK GROUSE, Zé¢rao tetrix.We cannot say how long ago 
the Biack Grouse ceased to exist as an indigenous bird in the 
county. Mr. Dix states that he had heard of a few in the 
neighbourhood of Fishguard, but he certainly referred to those 
the late Mr. Barham turned down at Trecwn in his attempt to 
naturalize the birds upon his beautiful estate. However, the 
birds never nested, and soon wandered away, and were all shot 
down. We have never met with a sportsman who had ever 

II 


82 The Birds of Pembrokeshire, 


shot a Black Grouse in the county, and only a few and limited 
localities in it are suited to the bird. The Black Grouse has 
disappeared, apparently, from several districts in South Wales, 
where it was once common. Its former abundance is supposed 
to be attested by the number of inns scattered about, bearing 
the sign of the “‘ Black Cock.” This may either witness to the 
presence of the bird, or only to its heraldic representative, as 
the Black Cock is the old crest of the Mathew family, at one 
time owners of large estates in various parts of South Wales, 
just as numerous inns standing on what was once their property, 
still bear the sign of the ‘‘Black Lion,” from the three rampant 
black lions that are on their shield. In the summer of 1878, 
Mr. Edward Laws, of Tenby, and Professor Rolleston, of 
Oxford, discovered bones of the Black Grouse in the Longbury 
Bank Cave, near Tenby. 


WATER-RAIL, Rallus aqguaticus—Resident. We had numerous 
Water-Rails at Stone Hall, and often saw them feeding on the 
lawn in company with Moor-hens. In the dusk, when they were 
running on the garden paths, we sometimes took them for rats. 
We used to see plenty of them by the Cleddy when fishing, and 
in the winter sometimes flushed them from little ditches bor- 
dered by brambles and furze, when we were after the Snipe. 
We do not think they were more numerous in winter than at 
any other season, although some people might imagine them to 
be so because they are then more often seen, as much of the 
cover they can skulk in has then died down. Unless the spots 
frequented by the Rails are actually visited with a good dog 
accustomed to hunt them, they might be altogether undetected 
and considered rare, although in point of fact quite numerous, 
and that close at hand. In many parts of the country, where to 
our knowledge it is a common resident, the Water-Rail, for the 
above reason, is regarded as quite a rare bird, and we have once 
or twice had one sent to us to be named. A Water-Rail was 
seen on the Smalls Rock, by the Lighthouse, October rsth, 
1880; others on November 6th, 1883 (‘“‘ Migration Reports”). 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 83 


SPOTTED CRAKE.—An occasional visitor in the autumn; rare. 
To our surprise we never ourselves encountered this bird at 
large in Pembrokeshire, and every season we were shooting over 
ground exactly similar to that in which we had been accustomed 
to meet with the bird in other parts of the kingdom. It is 
evidently a rarity in the county. Sir Hugh Owen has shot it 
occasionally on Goodwick Moor ; and we know of one that was 
shot in the neighbourhood of Fishguard, in October, 1888. 
Mr. C. Jefferys has informed us that he shot a Spotted 
Crake near Tenby. There is a specimen in the Stackpole 
Court collection, and the bird is included in Mr. Mathias’ 
list. The Spotted Crake would seem to be equally scarce in 
the neighbouring county of Cardiganshire, where Mr. J. H. 
Salter informs us that he has not yet come across a single 
specimen. 


BAILLON’S CRAKE, Porzana baillont.Accidental ; only two on 
record. Sir Hugh Owen has informed us that he saw two of 
the ‘‘ Lesser Spotted Crake” on Goodwick Moor, in the autumn 
of 1869, and shot one of them. ‘The bird “looked like a field- 
mouse when swimming.” He has since recognised his specimen 
in Yarrell as Baillon’s Crake. 


CORN CRAKE, Cvex pratensis.—Summer visitor. The Corn-Crake 
is numerous in most parts of the county, where it arrives about 
the middle of April. We often saw it on our lawn at Stone 
Hall, and always had one or two nests close at hand. In the 
shooting season we noted it until the end of October, the latest 
birds being always found on wet places on high ground. We 
owned a setter that was very clever in catching and bringing us 
Corn-Crakes, and we would take the birds from him and let 
them go. One season he caught us a Corn-Crake several days 
in succession at the same corner in a field, which, we thought, 
indicated that the birds do not stray far from their place of 
birth until they migrate. 


84 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


MOOR-HEN, Gad/inula chloropus.—Common resident. Numerous 
everywhere in the county by the side of streams, ponds, &c. 
At Stone Hall we had numbers, semi-domesticated, that fed on 
the lawns, and nested by the fishponds. By one of our ponds 
we counted seven nests one summer. As soon as the young 
birds can take care of themselves, the old birds evidently drive 
them away, as no increase was observable in the number usually 
frequenting the grounds, as must have been the case had all the 
broods remained. Occasionally we noted a nest in a tree over- 
hanging the water five or six feet from the surface, but the 
usual site would be among the grasses and rushes at the edge of 
the ponds. Rhododendron bushes were often selected, and for 
several years in succession there was a nest in the boat house. 
When snow has been on the ground we always found that the 
banks of the Cleddy had numerous tracks of foxes, and sup- 
posed the “‘ varmints” were after the Moor-Hens and rats. The 
Moor-Hen appears to have been scarce in the part of the 
county with which Mr. Dix was acquainted, and he expresses 
his surprise at their rareness, as the country was so well suited 
to them. A single Moor-Hen was noticed at the lantern of the 
South Bishop’s Lighthouse at 1 a.m., on October gth, 1884, 
indicating that it was then migrating. We should have thought 
the Moor-Hen an unlikely species to be affected by the migrat- 
ing impulse. 


COOT, Fudica atvaa—Resident ; but confined to the few large ponds 
in the county, such as those at Orielton, Heathfield Stackpole, 
&c., where there are rushes, &c., for their nests. Mr, Dix con- 
siders the Coot ‘‘a regular winter visitor, but not numerous.” 
Sir Hugh Owen has shot Coots at Goodwick. 


[GREAT BUSTARD, O#is tarda,—We have no record of this fine 
bird in Pembrokeshire, but venture to include it, as one has 
been obtained in recent years so near to it as at Llanelly in 
Carmarthenshire. ‘This occurence is related in the Zoo/ogist for 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 85 


1891, p. 104. During Christmas week, 1890, a female Great 
Bustard was shot near Llanelly, and was sent to a bird-stuffer at 
Carmarthen. Pembrokeshire is at a great distance from the old 
haunts of the Great Bustard, and at the time the bird still existed 
as an indigenous species it very seldom wandered, and we do 
not believe that our county was ever likely to have been visited 
by it. ] 


STONE CURLEW, @acnemus scolopax.—A winter visitor; very 
rare ; only one occurrence known tous. The Stone Curlew is 
a common summer visitor to the eastern counties, to Salisbury 
Plain, &c., but is only known in the south-west as an occa- 
sional straggler in the winter months. One was shot by Mr. 
Browne Edwardes near St. David’s in January, 1891, and 
recorded at the time in a local paper. 


[COLLARED PRATINCOLE, Glaveola pratincola—A very rare 
accidental visitor from the south. It is the lucky fate of the 
Pratincole when it wanders northwards to the British Isles to 
be more often seen only than to be secured. This rare bird 
is included in Mr. Mathias’ list on the strength of one that 
was seen several times by Mr. Bowen at Llanstinan many 
years ago. Mr. Bowen pursued the bird for some time, and 
had one unsuccessfu! shot at it. Mr. Mathias went to Llan- 
stinan on purpose to search for it, but was not fortunate enough 
to see it. ] 


GOLDEN PLOVER, Ciaradrius pluvialis.—A winter visitor ; per- 
haps, also, a resident. Mr. Dix says, “common on the moun- 
tains in winter, they were seen here last year by the second week 
in October.” Although we have ourselves failed to detect the 
Golden Plover among the birds nesting on the Precelly Moun- 
tains, we think it extremely likely that a few pairs may breed 
there, and we are the more inclined to this opinion as we have 
only been able to search a limited portion of the mountains on 


86 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


the western side. The Golden Plover nests on the Breconshire 
Mountains, and commonly on the moors in North Wales, and 
the Precelly Mountains offer very suitable ground for their 
summer quarters. Mr. J. H. Salter, of University College, 
Aberystwyth, informs us that Golden Plovers breed sparsely on 
the Cardiganshire hills. We used to see large flocks every 
autumn and winter around Stone Hall, and often shot them 
when we were after Snipe, getting them within range by imitat- 
ing their whistling call. In the very cold spring of 1886, when 
a black frost with snow lasted for a stretch of six or seven 
weeks, the lower parts of the county were visited by tens of 
thousands of Golden Plovers. The birds might be seen on the 
muddy shores of Milford Haven, and in all the meadows adjoin- 
ing the coast, searching in vain for food. We actually saw some 
in the town of Haverfordwest. We saw others on the hard 
turnpike road that ran in front of our dog-cart like chickens. 
A few visited our kitchen garden at Stone Hall. Starving as 
they were, they did not perish in such numbers as the poor 
Peewits, that during this cruel frost we found lying about dead 
and frozen in the fields by scores. 


GREY PLOVER, Sguvatarola helvetica.—A winter visitor; not 


common; in Mr. Tracy’s experience, ‘‘only in severe weather 
are they seen on our shores, and are then very easily obtained, 
as they are by no means shy.” We have found the Grey Plover 
to have avery different disposition in other parts of the kingdom 
where we have shot it, but never without a very careful stalk, 
as we always found it to be one of the very wildest birds, even 
more suspicious and difficult to approach than the Curlew itself. 
Sir Hugh Owen has seen the Grey Plover at Goodwick, but is 
not able to include it in the list of birds that have fallen to his 
gun, a sufficient proof of its extreme wariness. 


RINGED PLOVER, #¢gialitis hiaticula—A common resident on 


the coast ; large flocks arrive in the autumn. This pretty bird 
nests commonly at many places on the coast. Mr. Tracy gives 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 87 


the following interesting particulars of a nest: “A pair of these 
birds nested on a rabbit warren on a high exposed piece of 
ground (we think we know this spot at Stackpole). I took the 
eggs from the nest, and in a week the female had laid her four 
eggs again within a few yards of the former ones. These I again 
took, and in thirteen days four more eggs were laid very near the 
last nest, but these were decidedly much smaller than the 
former ones. On visiting the place about three weeks after- 
wards I again found a nest containing four eggs, but these were 
a great deal smaller, and had almost lost their character, as they 
were nearly round, and not pointed at the end, like the true 
type of Plover’s eggs. One, which I suspect to have been the 
last laid, was not larger than a Robin’s egg, and quite round, 
clearly showing the female bird had completely exhausted 
herself in her efforts to increase and multiply. I have no doubt 
of their being the same pair, as there were no others seen near 
the place.” 


DOTTEREL, Zudromias morinellus.—A passing migrant in the 
spring and autumn. This species is very rarely seen in Pem- 
brokeshire. We are indebted to the Rev. Clennell Wilkinson, 
rector of Castle Martin, for the information that one was shot in 
his parish in the spring of 1888. It is not in Mr. Mathias’ list, 
or in the one we have received from Sir Hugh Owen. 


LAPWING, Vanel/us vulgaris.—Resident. The well-known Lap- 
wing is one of our commonest birds, nesting in most districts of 
the county, and to be seen commonly in large flocks in the 
autumn and winter. In the bitter spring of 1886 numbers 
perished, and were to be found lying dead by the frozen drains 
in most of the meadows. We had many about our garden, and 
placed food for them on the paths, barley-meal, &c., but they 
would not touch it. We used to watch them from our windows 
running on the lawn, and stopping with a jerk every few paces 
to listen (like a thrush) for the movement of any worm beneath 
the frozen ground. 


88 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


TURNSTONE, Strepsilas interpres.—An autumn visitor to the coast ; 


rather rare. Sir Hugh Owen has shot the Turnstone on the 
sands at Goodwick. We have heard of others at Angle and 
Tenby, all immature birds in their first plumage. We have no 
record of one obtained in the spring in the beautiful nesting 
dress. Mr. Tracy considered this species scarce, and stated 
that only an occasional one was to be met with in the autumn, 
and mostly the young of the year. In August, 1892, several 
Turnstones were shot near Tenby, where Mr. C. Jefferys 
informs us that they are rare. 


OYSTER-CATCHER, Hematopus ostralegus.— Resident. The 


Oyster-catcher occurs in small numbers at various places on the 
coast, and nests on the Bishop’s Rock, also on Skomer, where we 
found pairs of old birds and their newly-hatched young on the 
last day of May, 1886. In their handsome plumage of vividly- 
contrasted black and white the old birds, as they flew anxiously 
low overhead against the blue sky, were beautiful objects. Mr. 
Tracy states that, on several occasions, he took the eggs of the 
Oyster-catcher on a small island at the entrance of Milford 
Haven, and Sir Hugh Owen has shot the bird on the sands at 
Goodwick. The plaintive whistle of the Oyster-catcher, or Sea 
Pie (to give it its commoner name), is one of the characteristic 
bird-notes of the pebbly beaches around our coasts. We have 
not often met with the bird on a sandy shore. 


AVOCET, Recurvirostra avocetta.—A rare accidental visitor. The 


singular and graceful Avocet, once a regular summer visitor in 
considerable numbers to the fen-lands of the eastern counties of 
England, is now only a chance visitor to our shores, and is very 
rarely observed in the south-western parts of the kingdom. 
When it now appears it is generally in the winter time. Mr. 
Tracy states that he received two to stuff that had been killed 
in the neighbourhood of Pembroke in the winter, but does not 
give the dates. One of them is, doubtless, the beautiful speci- 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 89 


men in the Stackpole collection Mr. Dix speaks of as having 
been killed near Pembroke. Mr. C. Jefferys has informed us 
that an Avocet was shot near Tenby about the year 1883. We 
know of no other occurrences. Two Avocets in Col. Montagu’s 
collection, labelled “South Wales,” may have come from Pem- 
brokeshire, a county with which the Colonel appears to have 
been well acquainted. 


GREY PHALAROPE, Pralaropus fulicarius.—An autumn visitor. 
Our memory goes back to the time when the Grey Phalarope 
was regarded as a very rare bird, each occurrence being carefully 
chronicled. But for many years hardly an autumn has passed 
without this pretty species being detected on our coasts, and 
after severe gales great numbers are periodically intercepted on 
their migration southwards from the shores of Greenland, and 
driven into the English and Bristol Channels. Numbers are 
also seen along the Welsh shores fronting St. George’s Channel, 
and after an autumn gale we have heard of Phalaropes being 
plentiful at Aberystwyth. The birds are wonderfully tame, and 
quite fearless of man, and many suffer in consequence, being 
easily killed by stones cast at them. Alas ! that the pretty little 
tempest-tossed wanderers should receive so cruel a reception. 
Some are carried by the wind far inland, and occur at alk 
manner of unlooked-for places. We have a note of one that 
was shot on a pond in Letterston village, six or seven miles from 
the coast. Sir Hugh Owen has seen Grey Phalaropes at 
Goodwick. One was shot at Castle Martin in November, 
1886. One, obtained at Stackpole, is in the collection there. 
Grey Phalaropes have often occurred on Caldy Island, and at 
Tenby, and were numerous there in the autumn of 1891 ; others 
in the autumn of 1893. The Haverfordwest birdstuffer fre- 
quently receives them from the neighbourhood of Pembroke, 
St. David’s, &c., and had many sent to him in the autumn of 
1891. We have no instance of one having been obtained in 
the spring in the red nesting plumage. In fine weather the Grey 
Phalaropes pass our coasts at a considerable distance out at sea, 

12 


90 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


perhaps, even far out in the Atlantic to the west of Treland. 
They only approach the shores when driven in by rough 
weather. 


WOODCOCK, Svolopax rusticula—An autumn visitor, doubtless 
also a resident in limited numbers. Although we have no in- 
stance of a Woodcock’s nest having been found in the county, 
it must certainly breed occasionally, if not regularly, in some of 
the large covers. We had always formed to ourselves large 
expectations of the sport to be had in Pembrokeshire in Wood- 
cock shooting, and it was chiefly on this account that we were led 
to fix for a time our residence in the county. But we were 
greatly disappointed. The days of large bags seem to have 
passed away ; and, although old sportsmen had great things to 
tell of doings at some of the famous covers in by-gone years, in 
our own experience Pembrokeshire seemed to rank far behind 
Devonshire as a Woodcock county. Through the kindness of 
our old friend Colonel John Owen, of Rosebush, who for many 
years rented the Trecwn shooting, we had many days with him 
in those beautiful covers where rhododendrons and alders com- 
bine to make attractive lodgings for the Cocks, and on several 
occasions found them plentiful ; one day we must have had over 
a hundred flushes. In beating the Trecwn covers we generally 
began by trying the wooded hill-sides in order to drive the 
Cocks down into the large alder-beds in the valley, where we 
would finish in the afternoon. Here the Cocks would be some- 
times plentiful, and almost every step forward flushes would 
ensue. Watching the ground carefully between the alder stools 
we would occasionally detect a Cock, or a couple of Cocks, 
squatting upon the ground; others moved elsewhere would fly 
towards us, and settle at our feet. As the birds were flushed 
again they often disappointed us of a shot by darting off through 
the bushes, only a foot or two above the ground, when we dared 
not fire for fear of hitting a beater, or one of the other guns, for 
in such a cover it was next to impossible to keepin line. We 
were careful not to shoot unless the Cocks topped the alders, 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. gt 


or crossed us above them. Woodcock shooting with a party in 
large alder covers is dangerous work, and a rash shot might 
speedily afford employment for the doctors. We have enjoyed 
good sport in the covers of Sealyham, Cuffern, Tregwynt, in the 
woods near the Tufton Arms, &c., &c., and in our own small 
covers at Stone Hall there would frequently be a good show of 
Cocks, when a passing flight would drop in, and we have 
flushed as many as 50 of a morning. We often had Cocks in 
the kitchen garden, and among the rhododendrons and laurels 
on the lawn. The covers at Slebech are noted for Woodcocks, 
and in former years 60 would be bagged there in a day’s shoot. 
In mild and wet weather the Cocks resort to the high furze on 
hill-sides, and in such places we have found them in con- 
siderable numbers. In snows, and in hard black frosts, they 
leave the covers for the coast. In the severe winter of 1880 
great numbers were shot at St. David’s. A friend tells us that 
he then found one of the hotels there full of Woodcocks, and 
sportsmen would go out and return in a couple of hours with 
their pockets full. All the little furzy combes running down 
towards the sea were thronged with them, and there was one 
little spot close to the stream which runs at the back of the old 
Cathedral where directly a Cock was shot another came and took 
its place, and this went on throughout the day. In the beautiful 
covers at Tregwynt which face the sea over 40 Cocks have 
been killed in a day during a deep snow. We have flushed 
numbers of Cocks some seasons up to the end of March, when 
we have been fishing the Cleddy, and working our way through 
covers bordering the stream, and as the Woodcock nests early 
in the year we felt convinced that some of these late birds must 
remain in the county to breed. We have seen a very pretty 
variety that was shot in the south of the county, that had its 
back and shoulders thickly mottled with small patches of white. 
Sir Hugh Owen has told us that he has shot “ small dark Cocks 
of only 7 ozs.” Many sportsmen look upon these extra small 
birds as a distinct species, asserting that when they are flushed 
they dart off at once, like a Snipe ; but Cocks vary much in size 


92 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


and weight, and we believe these very small-sized birds to be 
merely the young birds of the year, and the offspring, probably, 
of small birds. We invariably found the labourers, and farm 
people in general, when we were out shooting, eager to give us in- 
formation respecting any “‘ cyffylog,” or Woodcock, they had seen ; 
it was evidently in their opinion, ¢4e sportsman’s bird, and in 
comparison they attached but small importance to the “ Ze?- 
vusen,” the Partridges, or to the “ faysants ;”” next to the Wood- 
cock a hare, doubtless because of its extreme rarity, the 
“‘ yseyfarnog,” was considered worthy of being reported. As is 
well known, Woodcocks gladly avail themselves of any holly 
bushes in the covers, because of the dry and warm shelter 
afforded by their thick leaves. If, as a holly bush is approached, 
the ground beneath it is carefully scrutinised, the bird may 
sometimes be seen squatting, and we have frequently succeeded 
in espying one. We remember being present at a shoot at 
which, at the end of the day, four Cocks were found to be in- 
cluded in the bag, all four having been potted on the ground 
beneath the shelter of holly-bushes. 


GREAT SNIPE, Galinago major.—A winter visitor, rare. The 


Great Snipe never occurred to us in Pembrokeshire; it is at 
all times very rare in the south-west of the kingdom. Mr. 
Mathias includes it in his list. Mr. Tracy says: ‘‘The Great 
Snipe has, in several instances, been killed in this county ;” 
but he does not furnish localities and dates. We know of 
no recent occurrence. 


COMMON SNIPE, Gallinago celestis. — Resident; numerous 


arrivals from the northin the autumn and winter. The Common 
Snipe, like the Woodcock, is far less plentiful in the county than 
it used to be. We have heard old sportsmen speak of the great 
bags it was possible to make fifty or sixty years ago, not to be 
accomplished anywhere now. Our old friend, the late Mr. John 
Stokes, of Cuffern, once got between sixty and seventy couple in 
a day and a half on the moors in the neighbourhood of the 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 93 


Tufton Arms belonging to the Trecwn estate, besides Woodcocks 
and other game. There are still a few remote and almost 
inaccessible spots adjoining the mountains where a good shot 
might secure from twenty to thirty couple a day, but on all 
easily reached grounds that in old days were alive with Snipe 
the bird is now but sparingly represented. However, sportsmen 
who are able to range over the wilder parts of the county still 
meet with a few Snipe to give an agreeable variety to the bag, 
and we used to get sixty couple or so in the course of the season 
around Stone Hall. The Snipe still nests all over the county in 
suitable places, and on a summer evening’s walk its peculiar 
drumming is one of the country sounds certain to meet the ear. 
There were every season a few nests at no great distance from 
our residence, and the young birds generally ‘‘ came down” (the 
local term for hatching off) successfully. Varieties of the 
Snipe are not very common. Captain John Tucker Edwardes, 
of Sealyham, firing into a wisp that rose one frosty morning by 
the side of one of the small ponds at Stone Hall, shot a pure 
white Snipe, and curiously enough did not observe it when it 
was flushed among the other Snipe. We examined this speci- 
men at Sealyham, and could not detect any darker feathers upon 
it, and it was evidently a perfect albino. Sir Hugh Owen shot 
a White Snipe at Llanstinan, in 1853, and another very light 
coloured one in 1855, that he presented to Mr. John Stokes, of 
Cuffern, by whom it was beautifully mounted. This bird we 
found to be nearly completely white, one or two of the scapular 
feathers only being a pale buff. One that fell to our own gun, 
was a very pretty mealy variety, being powdered over the head 
and shoulders with small specks of white. We have, once or 
twice shot Snipe in the so-called Scolopax russata plumage, 
but these we looked upon as large male birds in a transitional 
stage of moult. We have seen Snipe in this red plumage in 
the middle of April. The outline of the tail in the full, or 
Common Snipe depends entirely on the growth of the tail 
feathers ; if the outer feathers are not fully grown one has the 
bird with pointed tail ; or, if the outer feathers have attained 


94 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


their full length while the central ones have not done so, then 
there is the wedge-tailed Snipe that we have often shot at 
the beginning of the autumn, specimens of which have once 
or twice been forwarded to us, and supposed to be a distinct 
variety. We have never seen one of the dark plumaged Snipe, 
that used to be known as ‘‘Sabine’s Snipe,” in Pembrokeshire, 
but among the myriads of Snipe that were formerly obtained we 
doubt not it has occurred. The Welsh name of the Snipe, 
“ oiach,” is a good rendering of the cry of the bird. 


JACK SNIPE, Limnocryptes gailinula—A winter visitor. This 
diminutive Snipe is fairly numerous, appearing about the middle 
of September at its accustomed places on the moors, and on all 
boggy places where there is sufficient cover for it to hide in. 
We have heard sportsmen state that in seasons when Jack Snipe 
are plentiful, the Common Snipe is scarce, and vice versa, but we 
have not found this borne out in our experience. The abun- 
dance of either species, at certain localities, depends entirely on 
the weather. In severe frosts, the birds naturally congregate 
about warm springs, or other damp places that remaining un- 
frozen afford them food. The Jack Snipe is usually solitary ; but 
may be occasionally met with in little flocks of upwards of a 
dozen, on some favourite ground, just after their arrival in the 
autumn, or immediately before their departure for the north in 
the spring. 


DUNLIN, Zynga alpina.—A winter visitor ; perhaps, also a resi- 
dent. The Dunlin is common in the autumn and winter all 
round the coast, wherever there are sands and oozes. Al- 
though we failed to detect it in the summer-time, on the west- 
ward front of the Precelly Mountains, we consider it extremely 
probable that a pair or two may nest on those hills, especially as 
it has been found breeding at no great distance in Cardigan- 
shire, where Mr. J. H. Salter, of University College, Aberyst- 
wyth, discovered its nest ‘‘on a large heather-grown peat bog, 


The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 95 


some twelve miles from the sea.” (Zoologist, 1893, p. 269.) 
And, in a letter to us, Mr. Salter gives the exact locality, the 
Gors Teifi, and tells us “a pair or two breed here and there 
all over the hills, but preferably in the neighbourhood of water.” 


LITTLE STINT, Zynga minutaa—An occasional autumn visitor ; 
rare. This tiny Sandpiper is sometimes met with on the sands 
in company with the flocks of Dunlin. It has occurred on 
Goodwick Sands to Sir Hugh Owen, and Mr. Jefferys, of Tenby, 
informs us that a specimen was shot on the south sands there in 
September, 1893. In Mr. Mathias’ list. 


CURLEW SANDPIPER, 7Z7inga subarguata.—An autumn visitor. 
To be seen in company with Dunlin on the sands, and to be 
easily distinguished from them by their longer legs and more 
upright carriage, and by the white upper tail coverts that 
become visible directly the birds take wing. We imagine that 
in spite of the distinctions we have pointed out, this species 
(that we always found to be common, and sometimes abundant, 
on the opposite coasts of North Devon) has been confounded with 
the Dunlin, as it does not appear in either Mr. Tracy’s or Mr. Dix’s 
lists, and is only included by Mr. Mathias. The shape of the 
beak, which gives the bird its name, being slightly curved, like 
that of the Curlew, is another distinguishing mark by which it 
may be readily known. 


PURPLE SANDPIPER, 7Z7ringa striata. — An autumn visitor ; 
not uncommon. Mr. Tracy writes: ‘‘ Rather scarce ;” but Mr. 
Dix considered it ‘‘about as numerous as the Knot.” This 
species is never to be met with in large flocks, and but seldom 
is seen on the sands or oozes. Anyone who wants to meet with 
it must search the pebbly shores, on the rocks just above the 
water’s edge, where two or three of these Sandpipers may be 
found running briskly along hunting for food. Even in places 
where it is not uncommon, the Purple Sandpiper does not 
appear to be often shot, and it is very rarely brought in to the 


96 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


birdstuffers. It is not in Mr. Mathias’ list. From its habit of 
running at the base of the cliffs among the rocks, with whose 
tints the colour of its plumage greatly corresponds, this bird may 
easily escape observation, and only a naturalist familiar with its 
habits would be competent to detect it. 


KNOT, Zvinga canutus——An autumn and winter visitor. Flocks of 


Knots appear on the sand flats and oozes at the end of August 
and beginning of September from their breeding station in the 
far north. Mr. Tracy states that they were to be seen 
commonly every autumn near Pembroke. Also on the sands at 
Goodwick, &c. The flocks are foolishly tame when they first 
arrive. 


RUFF, Machetes pugnax.—An occasional autumn visitor; rare. 


Not in any of the lists. This species, once common as a 
resident and nesting bird in the fen districts of England, seems 
to be very rarely obtained in Pembrokeshire, and we are only 
able to include it on the strength of a single specimen that we 
have seen at Cuffern, obtained by the late Mr. John Stokes, 
many years ago from the neighbourhood of Pembroke. It 
may very likely have been shot occasionally without being 
recorded. 


SANDERLING, Cadidris avenavia.—An autumn visitor; scarce ; 


also sometimes seen on its passage northin the spring. The 
Sanderling is occasionally to be seen on the sands in September 
in small flocks, and one or two are sometimes to be found in 
company with the Dunlin and Ring-Plovers. Sir Hugh Owen 
has shot it on the sands at Goodwick. It has been seen on the 
Newgale sands, where a female was shot on June rst, 1857, 
which, Mr. Tracy states, had the ovaries well developed. 


COMMON SANDPIPER, 7Z7ingotdes hypoleucus.—A summet visitor. 


This pretty species, which sometimes goes by the name of the 
“Summer Snipe,” arrives about the middle of April from the 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 97 


south, by which date we always noticed a pair or two by the 
western Cleddy beneath Stone Hall. They remained for a 
week or ten days, and then quitted us for their nesting places 
higher up the stream. When fishing the brooks that run down 
from the Precelly Mountains near Maenchlogog, in June and 
July, we always found these Sandpipers abundant, and very 
noisy and excited when we were near their nests or young. In 
company with Ring Ouzels, Dippers, Common Snipe, Wheat- 
ears, Grey Wagtails, and Whinchats, we were glad to welcome 
them, and regarded their lively presence as they flew before us 
up the stream with their peculiar jerking flight with pleasure, as 
they added the charm of beauty and interest to our ramble. 
Early in August the Sandpipers leave their nesting stations and 
descend with their young to the mouths of the streams, by 
whose banks they have spent the summer, and pass a couple of 
months on the salt marshes and in the muddy creeks adjoining 
the shore before they migrate southwards for their winter 
quarters. 


GREEN SANDPIPER, Héelodromas ochropus—An autumn visitor. 
This Sandpiper, which is larger than the preceding species, and 
is to be known by its conspicuous white tail, broadly barred with 
black, and by its shrill whistle when it is flushed, makes its 
appearance by the sides of pools and creeks near the coast about 
the middle of August, and is fairlycommon. It has its favourite 
stations on the marshes, and the places where it has been 
noticed one year are almost certain to be revisited season after 
season. Not unfrequently it occurs throughout the winter 
months, and is always one of the very wildest of birds, and 
difficult to approach. Sir Hugh Owen has seen it at Good- 
wick. Mr. Tracy writes: “A few of these beautiful birds may 
always be obtained about the margins of our fresh water rivers 
and ponds during the autumn and winter.” Mr. Dix, in his 
neighbourhood, considered the Green Sandpiper scarce, but 
remarks that it was a regular visitor to certain spots every 
August, only remaining for a few days. This species differs 


13 


98 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


from other Sandpipers that place their eggs upon the ground in 
swamps or at the edges of ponds and streams, by always selecting 
the deserted nest of a Pigeon or Crow to breed in, at some con- 
siderable height from the ground. It is believed, with some 
probability, to occasionally nest in the British Isles, as it has 
been noted in every month in the year, and young birds have 
been met with so little advanced in plumage as to preclude the 
idea that they could have come from any distance. 


WOOD SANDPIPER, Zotanus glareola—A passing migrant in 
the spring and autumn; very rare. Somewhat smaller than 
the Green Sandpiper, and to be known from that bird by the 
more slender bands of black drawn across the white tail, this 
species is only occasionally seen as a chance visitor in the 
British Isles. It is not included in any list of Pembrokeshire 
birds that we know of. We came upon a Sandpiper one day in 
the spring of 1886, that rose close at our feet by the side of one 
of the small ponds at Stone Hall, and, being very well 
acquainted with the Wood Sandpiper, we were both surprised 
and pleased to identify it in the stranger, and are thus able to 
add it to the County List of Birds. 


REDSHANK, Zo¢anus ca/idris.—An autumn visitor. In Mr. Tracy’s 
time, the well-known and vociferous Redshank was a common 
bird in the creeks abutting on Milford Haven, and in all the 
marshes around Pembroke, but it appears of late years to have 
become scarce, even on its most favourite grounds. Sir Hugh 
Owen has told us that it had become rare at the time he was 
accustomed to shoot wild fowl about Milford Haven in his punt, 
where, fifty or sixty years ago, it was probably a common nesting 
species. He has since met with it at Goodwick, and we have 
seen it, in small flocks, on Newgale sands. Mr. Dix states, 
that in his time, it was common about the mud-flats of 
Pembroke river. The Redshank, is probably, still a regular 
autumn visitor to the county, although in greatly reduced 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 99 


numbers. A flock of twelve, we learn from the Migration 
Report for 1883, alighted on the Tuskar Rock, seven miles off 
the coast of Wexford, opposite St. Bride’s Bay, on May 18th, 
1883. 


SPOTTED REDSHANK, 7Zofanus fuscus. — An autumn visitor ; 
rare. In Mr. Mathias’ list: his brother, Mr. Lewis Mathias, of 
Lamphey Court, shot one in the Portclew Bottoms, near 
Freshwater East. Mr. Mathias informs us that he had seen 
several from time to time in Mr. Tracy’s shop at Pembroke. 
These were all birds of the year, and had been obtained in the 
autumn. Its longer bill and longer legs serve to distinguish 
this bird from the Common Redshank. In the nesting season 
it assumes a very singular plumage, in which it is black all over, 
save that the feathers of the back, scapulars, flank, and tail are 
tipped with semi-circular edgings of white, and the upper tail 
coverts are pure white. In this plumage itis very rarely obtained 
in the south-west of England. 


GREENSHANK, Zotanus canescens.—An autumn visitor. This fine 
Sandpiper is not very uncommon. Mr. Tracy says: ‘It is 
occasionally taken in the autumn.” We have seen a fine 
specimen at the house of Mr. John Worthington, Glyn-y-mel, 
Fishguard, that was shot by Sir Hugh Owen, at Goodwick. 
Our friend, the Rev. Marcus S. C. Rickards, vicar of Twig- 
worth, Gloucester, obtained a Greenshank on Caldy Island, 
during a recent visit to Tenby, He writes: “ Not many days 
after my arrival, I rowed over to Caldy Island, on the shore of 
which I started a Greenshank. After disembarking and walking 
inland, I roused a pair by the margin of a pool. They rose 
with the accustomed cry, and flew up the hills chasing and 
toying around each other in a very graceful and interesting 
manner. This was, to the best of my recollection, about the 
25th August.” The Greenshank nests commonly by the sides 
of lochs in the north of Scotland. 


100 The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 


BAR-TAILED GODWIT, Zimosa /aponica.—An autumn visitor ; 
to be seen occasionally on its passage northwards in the spring, 
when it is in its bright chestnut breeding plumage. This species 
is not uncommon on the sands and mud-flats around the coast 
in September, when all the birds are in their ash-grey winter 
plumage, some few of the adults still retaining a few of the 
rufous feathers upon the breast. Mr. Tracy states that it was 
common in his time around Pembroke ; Sir Hugh Owen has 
met with it in small flocks on Goodwick sands, and Mr. C. 
Jefferys, of Tenby, has informed us of one that was shot on the 
south sands there in September, 1889. On their first arrival 
the Godwits are very tame, and the flocks will permit the gunner 
to walk up to them where they are feeding on the ooze in a 
straggling line; the outer birds will run in towards the main 
body on his approach, and the compact mass of birds will afford 
the chance of a successful shot. We have, ourselves, had great 
sport on many occasions on the mud-flats of the North Devon 
rivers, and as these birds are excellent for the table we always 
found them to be greatly appreciated by the friends among 
whom we distributed our spoils. The Bar-tailed Godwit nests 
in the far north of Lapland, &c., and well authenticated eggs are 
scarce in collections. 


BLACK-TAILED GODWIT, Zimosa cegocephalan—An occasional 
autumn visitor ; rare. This is a bird with rather longer legs and 
bill than the Bar-tailed Godwit, and although it was formerly one 
of the waders that each spring visited the fen districts in the 
east of England to nest it is now everywhere scarce, and only an 
uncertain visitor either in the spring or autumn. Mr. Tracy 
merely remarks that it is “scarce,” without giving particulars of 
occurrences. It is included by Mr. Mathias in his list, and Sir 
Hugh Owen informs us that he has shot it at Goodwick. 


WHIMBREL, Wumenius pheopus.—A passing migrant ; seen on the 
coasts in May and again in September when it is passing South- 
Common. Mr. Tracy writes: “I strongly suspect this bird 
breeds in the county, but I have been unable to find its eggs 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. IOI 


I have watched several pairs, during the summer months, so late 
as the latter end of June, that had every appearance of having 
nests in the locality, but without success. They then generally 
leave us about two months, as I do not see them again until 
the latter end of September.” The Whimbrel breeds in the 
Orkney and Shetland Islands, and its nest has not yet been 
detected elsewhere in the British Islands. On the last day of 
May, 1884, we were on Skomer Island, where we nearly trod 
upon a Whimbrel among the fern. The bird ran slowly off with 
trailing wings, and all the gestures of a bird just started from its 
nest, until she disappeared the other side of a hillock. We were 
following in pursuit of a wounded bird at the time, and un- 
fortunately did not pause to search for a nest, and when we re- 
turned subsequently to do so we found that we had lost the 
position, and our investigations were fruitless. It would have 
been very interesting to have taken eggs of the Whimbrel so far 
to the south. 


CURLEW, Nwmenius arqguata.—Common on the coasts, especially 
in winter, when it is seen in flocks. Single birds often heard 
and seen flying overhead some distance inland. We have 
found pairs of Curlews in June on the summits of the Precelly 
Mountains, and have little doubt they were nesting. During 
severe frosts in the winter, Curlews visit the fields to search for 
food, and Mr. Dix states that a flock of five appeared on a 
water meadow near his residence, and, although the birds were 
very watchful, one was shot, which proved in good condition. 
We believe the Curlew occasionally nests on Skomer Island. 


ARCTIC TERN, Sterna macrura.—Seen commonly on passage in the 
spring and autumn in the estuaries and off the coast, at Mil- 
ford, &c. Also in Goodwick Bay, where it has occurred to Sir 
Hugh Owen. 


COMMON TERN, Sterna fluviatilis—A common migrant off the 
coast in spring and autumn. We learn from the boatmen that 
there is a small colony of Common Terns on Skokholm Stack. 


102 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


In the spring of 1884, we were told that about twenty pairs 
might be counted there. Some Common Terns were seen on 
the Tuskar Rock on May 24th, 1883 ; and others were noticed 
passing to the south-west, until May 27th. Some of these birds 
may have been on their way to Skokholm. 


ROSEATE TERN, Sterna dougalli.—Now only a rare visitor, but 
perhaps, formerly a regular summer visitor, and nesting on 
Skokholm Stack, where Mr. Mathias has informed us that some 
used to breed in company with the Common Terns. Mr. 
Mathias, who knows this beautiful species well on wing, has 
several times (but not in recent years) seen Roseate Terns 
fishing off the east shore of Dale parish within Milford Haven. 
The disappearance of the Roseate Tern from the south-west of 
Pembrokeshire cannot be accounted for, as we have no belief 
that it was ever shot down or its nests robbed, and can 
only be set side by side with its vanishing from the Scilly 
Islands causelessly, and from other localities on our coasts that 
it used to visit. The latest Pembrokeshire example of this now 
rare bird that we can mention is one reported to us by the Rey. 
Clennell Wilkinson, rector of Castle Martin, a beautiful adult in 
perfect plumage, that was picked up dead some way inland in 
the neighbourhood of Pembroke, in 1885. 


LITTLE TERN, Szerna minuta.—Occasionally seen on the coast 
when passing. In Mr. Mathias’ list. Has occurred to Sir 
Hugh Owen at Goodwick. A stuffed specimen is preserved in 
the Bank at Fishguard. 


[SANDWICH TERN, Sterna cantiaca.—Although this species is 
not included in any of the lists, we feel {certain that it must 
occasionally visit the Pembrokeshire coasts, the Milford Haven 
estuary, the neighbourhoods of Tenby, Fishguard, &c. But we 
must at the same time state that it is very rarely seen off the 
North Devon coast.] 


- 


LANDING PLACE, GRASHOLM, WITH KITTIWAKES ON THEIR NESTS. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 103 


BLACK TERN, “ydvochelidon nigra—Seen occasionally on its 
passage in the autumn. The Rey. Clennell Wilkinson has seen 
Black Terns flying over a large pool of fresh water on the 
Burrows in Castle Martin parish, and Sir Hugh Owen has shot 
it at Goodwick. Included in Mr. Mathias’ list. The Black 
Tern is a lacustrine species, and may often be met with flying 
over pools in salt marshes near the coast. In such places we 
have frequently seen it, the birds hawking about like large 
Swallows. 


KITTIWAKE, Rissa fridactyla. — An abundant resident. This 
pretty species is by far the most numerous of the Pembroke- 
shire Zavide. Great numbers nest on Ramsey, Skomer, and 
Grasholm Islands ; also in places on the cliffs of the mainland, 
as on cliffs at Flimstone, adjoining the Stack Rocks near Pem- 
broke, where there is a large colony, &c. A breeding station 
of the Kittiwake is a very interesting scene. On the ledges of 
the cliff nearest to the water, and rising tier above tier, the 
nests are thickly placed, and are constructed of seaweed lined 
with grass, and look white from the droppings of the birds. 
The Kittiwakes, sitting on the nests, look like white Doves, and 
the cries of the birds fill the air. The Kittiwake is a maritime 
species, and is never found away from the coast, unless it is 
blown inland by violent gales, and is never to be seen in com- 
pany with the Common and Brown-headed Gulls searching 
freshly-ploughed fields for worms. 


GLAUCOUS GULL, Larus glaucus. — A winter visitor; rare. 
Specimens of this splendid Polar Gull are occasionally obtained 
upon the coast. ‘here is a fine adult, with a white mantle, in 
the Stackpole collection, that was shot many years ago, near 
Tenby. In the winter of 1891, Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, 
informs us that he several times saw a Glaucous Gull flying about 
in company with Herring Gulls. 


104 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


HERRING GULL, Zarus argentatus—A common resident. The 
Herring Gull may be seen on our coasts all the year, and nests 
in great numbers upon the various islands, and also on many 
of the cliffs on the coasts. Since the Sea Birds’ Preservation 
Act this Gull has greatly increased in numbers, and on Skomer 
Island devours so many of the young rabbits, as to occasion 
serious loss, as we were informed by Mr. Vaughan Davies, the 
tenant. One of the sights of St. David’s is the number of 
Herring Gulls that may always be seen in the fields surrounding 
that romantic little cathedral city. In the spring our fields at 
Stone Hall were visited by flocks of Herring Gulls, and, at all 
times of the year, in rough weather, numbers of the birds 
forsaking the shores would be seen searching the fields for food 
far inland. We have received from Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, 
avery pretty photograph of a Herring Gull’s nest, taken 77 sttu, 
with the three speckled eggs clearly visible. The nest is a large, 
untidy structure of grass. 


LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL, Zarus fuscus.— A common 
resident. Not so numerous as the Herring Gull, this species is 
nevertheless, well represented in Pembrokeshire, and nests 

- upon the various islands, selecting the ground on the topmost 
slopes of the cliffs, and there breeding in small societies of 
from twenty to thirty pairs, apart from the other Gulls, in places 
where it is perfectly easy to walk among the nests, and to 
admire the beautiful clutches of eggs. This Gull is also a 
greedy stealer and devourer of other birds’ eggs, young rabbits, 
&c., and like the Herring Gull, comes far inland, visiting the 
meadows in the spring, at which season we always saw some in 
our fields at Stone Hall, in company with the Common and 
Herring Gulls. 


COMMON GULL, Zarus canus.—An autumn and winter visitor. 
Although named the “ Common” Gull, this species is by no 
means so numerous either as the Herring Gull, or the Kitti- 
wake, and does not nest with us, going northwards in the spring 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 105 


to its breeding stations in Scotland, where it places its nest on 
the ground at the edges of lochs. It is to be seen commonly 
on the sands and mud flats on the shore during the winter, and 
also very often on fields inland, and we have often been amused 
by watching the scrambles between the Rooks and the Common 
Gulls for worms when the birds have been closely following the 
plough. In the winter of 1886, we several times saw, and once 
or twice got very close to, a perfect albino Common Gull that, 
with other Gulls, daily visited a field near Stone Hall. The 
Common Gull was reported by Colonel Montagu to nest upon 
Ramsey Island, but the nests he describes are evidently those 
of the Kittiwakes. 


GREATER BLACK-BACKED GULL, Zarus marinus.—Resident. 
A few pairs of this fine and powerful Gull nest upon the islands 
off our coasts. Mr. Mortimer Propert has taken its eggs on the 
Bishop’s Rock, near St. David’s, and we are informed by Mr. 
C. Jefferys, of Tenby, that a pair have nested on St. Margaret’s 
Island, a small island connected by a reef of rocks, dry at low 
water, with Caldy. The eggs were twice taken from this nest in 
the summer of 1892. Mr. E, H. W. Blagg, of Cheadle, 
Staffordshire, tells us that a pair of great Black Backed Gulls 
nested on St. Margaret’s Island in 1887, when he was visiting 
Tenby, and that there were three eggs in the nest on June roth. 
It is probable that there are other nesting stations of the birds 
on our coasts, where we trust they may be unmolested by the 
egger. The Greater Black-Backed Gull seldom leaves the 
shore, but we have occasionally noticed a pair in fields adjoin- 
ing the coast. Mr, J. H. Salter, of Aberystwyth, writes to us 
that he sees the Great Black Backed Gull “about the ‘ llyns’ or 
pools on the hills in March ; it seems to go up there for the 
lambing season, when Ravens and Buzzards are also specially 
busy.” 


BROWN-HEADED GULL, Zarus ridibundusx—An autumn and 
winter visitor. Common on the coast, and often to be seen on 
fields inland, in company with Common and Herring Gulls. 


14 


106 The Birds of Pembrokeshtre. 


There is no nesting place of this pretty species, that breeds on 
the ground in swampy places, and by the edges of lakes, in 
Pembrokeshire, nor in any of the adjoining counties that we can 
discover. Indeed, the only place in the Principality that we at 
present know of (we consider there must be some others) where 
the Brown-heads nest, is on Mochras Island, on the coast of 
Merionethshire, where Mr. J. H. Salter found empty nests and 
other traces that the birds had reared young, at the end of 
June. 


LITTLE GULL, Zarus minutus.—An occasional visitor ; rare. Mr. 
H. Mathias informs us that examples of this small species, that 
is no larger than a common Pigeon, have been obtained in the 
county, but can furnish no particulars, and has not included it 
in his list of birds supplied to Mason’s Guide to Tenby. We 
are indebted to Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, for telling us of the 
occurrence of an adult Little Gull in winter plumage, at that 
watering place, on the south sands, at the beginning of January, 
1892. This specimen is now in the Tenby Museum, and we 
have a very pretty photograph of it, with its wings extended, that 
was kindly forwarded to us by Mr. C. Jefferys. There were two 
seen when this bird was obtained, but the other, being only 
slightly wounded, succeeded in escaping. As the Little Gull 
has been observed at Lundy, and has frequently been obtained 
on the coasts of Devon and Somerset, it is evidently no very 
great stranger in the Bristol Channel, and we consider that it 
must sometimes enter the fine harbour at Milford Haven, where, 
no doubt, some of those mentioned by Mr. Mathias were 
obtained. 


SABINE’S GULL, Xema sabinit—A rare, occasional straggler from 
the far north; only three occurrences. In Mr. Mathias’ list. 
One killed by a keeper of Lord Cawdor was seen by Mr. Mathias 
in Tracy’s shop, at Pembroke. This was a young bird in the 
first year’s plumage, and is now in the collection at Stackpole. 
In the first edition of his well-known work on “ British Birds,” 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 107 


page 422, vol. iii, Mr. Yarrell states: ‘‘I have notes of one killed 
at Milford Haven, in the autumn of 1839.” Then, in the 


Zoologist for 1892, page 423, Mr. Charles Jefferys, of Tenby, 
relates the capture by himself of an immature Sabine’s Gull, on 
November rath, that year, near the village of Amroth. ‘ There 
was a strong wind blowing in shore and a heavy sea. It was 
late in the afternoon, almost dusk, and the bird was flying along 
the surf-line, as if looking for food. It was in good condition, 
and is now being preserved.” Mr. C. Jefferys has since informed 
us that this specimen is now in the Kelvin Grove Museum at 
Glasgow. Sabine’s Gull is another very small species that is 
extremely rare in this kingdom in its pretty adult plumage in 
which it has a dark, lead-coloured cap and throat, the latter en- 
circled by a black ring. It breeds beyond the Arctic circle, and 
its forked tail, and the angle at the symphysis of the under 
mandible, make it to be easily distinguished in all plumages from 
the Little Gull, with which we have known it to be occasionally 
confounded. After rough weather in the autumn this small 
Gull is not very rare along our south-western coasts. 


GREAT SKUA, Stercorarius catarrhactes—The Skuas, or Parasitic 
Gulls, pass our coasts in the autumn on their way south from 
their breeding stations in the north. In fine weather they keep 
far out at sea, and it is only after exceptionally severe gales that 
some of them are seen on the coasts. The Great Skua, a very 
powerful and courageous bird, has nesting places on the Shetland 
Isles, at Unst and Foula, where they are now preserved, or they 
would soon have become exterminated by collectors of birds’ 
skins and eggs. All the Skuas kill and devour other birds, and 
are greedy feeders upon carrion, and will chase and rob other 
Gulls of their fish. The Great Skua is included by Mr. H. 
Mathias in his list. He saw a specimen in Tracy’s shop at 
Pembroke. Sir Hugh Owen informs us that it is always to be 
seen in Goodwick Bay in a good herring season ; that he has 
noticed it to be a very bold and savage bird, and that he has 
shot it on Goodwick sands while eating carrion. It is dark 


108 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


fulvous in plumage, has some golden hackles on the throat, is 
the largest of the Skua family, and may be at once known from 
all the other species through the absence in its tail of any 
elongated central feathers. The Skuas in some years continue 
in southern waters until the spring is well advanced. On May 
28, 1883, “hundreds of Skua Gulls” were noticed off the Tuskar 
Rock, opposite St. Bride’s Bay; more on 31st; while others 
were observed on June 7th, 8th, and even on June 22nd (Migra- 
tion Report, 1883). 


POMATORHINE SKUA, Séercorarius pomatorhinus.—This species 
comes next in size to the Great Skua, and possesses in its adult 
plumage two elongated central feathers in its tail which broaden 
towards their tips. Ut is by far the commonest of the family 
upon our coasts, and a few are to be seen every autumn, and 
after heavy gales large flocks are observed. Dr. Propert 
possesses one, an immature bird that we have seen at his house 
in St. David’s, that was shot on Ramsey Sound. Sir Hugh 
Owen has seen this Skua in Goodwick Bay, in all stages of 
plumage, and calls it “the most falcon-like of the Gull tribe.” 


RICHARDSON’S SKUA, Stercorarius crepidatus.—This is a smaller 
species, to be at once recognised in the adult, by the two long 
and jointed central tail feathers. It is more scarce on our 
south-western coasts than the Pomatorhine Skua, but a season 
rarely passes without one or two being noticed. Sir Hugh 
Owen has shot an immature bird at Goodwick. There are 
two well-marked varieties of this species, one with a white 
breast and underparts, the other black all over, and in the black 
birds the blackness differs in its intensity, in some being of a 
rusty colour, in others of a deep coal black. The two varieties 
freely interbreed, the result being birds of a mottled plumage. 
We have seen examples pied black and white, the patches of 
the two opposite colours being symmetrically placed, and giving 
to the birds a very peculiar appearance. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 109 


BUFFON’S SKUA, Stercorarius parasiticus—This, the smallest of 
all the Skuas, also called the Long-tailed Skua, from the 
extreme length of the two central foiz¢ed tail feathers, appears, 
for the main part, to accomplish its migrations along the 
eastern shores of the kingdom, as its appearance upon our 
western coasts are so irregular as to be quite accidental. In 
the stormy autumn of 1891 a number of these Skuas were blown 
into the Bristol Channel, and many were obtained upon the 
opposite coasts of Devon and Somerset, and some, no doubt, 
put in at Milford Haven, but we are without record of any. 
The only county specimen of which we have knowledge is a 
young bird in the plumage of its first autumn that was sent to us 
for examination by Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, where it had been 
shot while flying over the South Sands one day in the autumn 
of 1889 or 1890. We were able at once to decide that it was a 
young Buffon’s Skua, from the distinguishing test furnished by 
Mr. Howard Saunders in his very useful Manuai of British 
Birds. He points out that the “ readiest distinction, at any age, 
is to be found in the shafts of the primaries. These are a// white 
in the Arctic (Richardson’s) Skua, whereas in the Long-tailed 
Skua ¢he two outer ones only on each side are white, the rest 
being dusky.” Our friend, Mr. W. S. M. D’Urban, of Exmouth, 
possesses an example of Buffon’s Skua, from the coast of South 
Wales, one that was shot in January, 1892, at Rumney, near 
Cardiff. All the Skuas are carnivorous, and besides feeding on 
fish, will greedily devour dead animals, and will strike down and 
eat other birds. A specimen of Buffon’s Skua, obtained some 
years ago in Somerset, had actually struck down a Ring Dove, a 
bird as large as itself, upon which it was feeding, when it was 
disturbed and shot by a keeper. 


STORM-PETREL, Pvocel/aria pelagica.—This tiny Petrel, commonly 
known by the name of “ Mother Carey’s Chicken,” is resident 
on Skomer Island, where it nests in the chinks of an old wall on 
the top of the cliff, and probably nests also on other islands off 
the Pembrokeshire coast. When we were on Skomer on the 


110 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


last day of May we visited this wall, but as the Storm-Petrels are 
late in breeding there were no eggs there then, although we 
distinctly perceived the unmistakable Petrel odour clinging in 
places to the stones, showing that the birds were at that time 
visiting the wall. The Storm Petrel does not lay its single white 
egg before the end of June, or even later, for in the Zoologist 
for 1886, p. 457, the Rev. H. A. Macpherson mentions an 
adult and nestling that he saw in Leadenhall market, in London, 
as late as 2oth September. Both, he was told, had come from 
Skomer; the nestling was taken on 18th September, and was 
fully feathered, but still retained some of the sooty down, especi- 
ally upon the belly. After severe gales the little Storm Petrel 
is occasionally picked up inland at some distance from the coast. 
In stormy weather in the autumn some are captured at the Light 
House on the South Bishop’s Rock; on the night of October 
14, 1883, eight were taken; it was misty weather, with a S.E. 
breeze, and a drizzling rain. A great number of small birds 
struck that night against the light, ninety were killed, and two 
hundred were taken in a net. Three ‘ Falcon Hawks and a 
Large-horned Owl” were also present, and “made sad havoc 
among them” (Migration Reports, 1883). It seems strange that 
the Storm-Petrels should be betrayed into danger by the glare 
of the Light House lights. One would have thought that, from 
being always about and skimming over the water at night time, 
they would have become accustomed to the lights ; we can only 
suppose that in misty weather they are bewildered and become 
reckless, and so approach too near to what in ordinary weather 
they would be careful to avoid. 


LEACH’S PETREL, Procel/aria leucorrhoa.—This is a little larger 
than the Storm-Petrel, is of a browner black, has a grey line 
across the edges of the wing-coverts, and a deeply forked tail, 
so that one of its common names is the Fork-tailed Petrel. It 
is not known to breed on any of our islands, but it is not very 
rare, as a visitor in stormy weather, and, like the Storm-Petrel, 
is occasionally picked up inland. The Rev. Clennell Wilkin- 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. III 


son believes that a Petrel seen by him skimming over a pool in 
the Burrows in his parish of Castle Martin one day in the summer 
was a Fork-tailed Petrel. Mr. Dix states that it has been taken 
several times after severe storms in Milford Haven, and saw one 
in Tracy's shop in Pembroke that had been picked up near that 
town, 


MANX SHEARWATER, Pufinus Anglorum. — Local name 
“Cockle.” Resident. The Manx Shearwater is, without doubt, 
the most interesting of our Pembrokeshire birds, from the fact 
that Skomer Island is the largest breeding-station, and may be 
considered the metropolis, of the species in the British Isles. 
The numbers there are almost incredible. And yet any visitor 
to Skomer in the day time, who left the island before night, 
would probably fail to see a solitary Shearwater, and if he was 
ignorant of the indications of their presence, might depart quite 
unaware of the vast bird population slumbering beneath his feet. 
For, during the day, the ‘“ Cockles” are all asleep in their 
burrows ; some of these they have stolen from, and perhaps 
share with the rabbits, others they have excavated for themselves. 
Some of the burrows go straight in, but the greater number have 
yarious turns and twists, so that it is a tedious business, some- 
times, to dig to and to reach the single white egg, which is 
almost the size of an ordinary hen’s egg. We have sometimes 
met small parties of these Shearwaters abroad on the sea during 
the day-time, and during the autumn we have seen the water 
covered by large flocks of them throughout the day, but certainly 
at the nesting season they are almost exclusively nocturnal, and 
do not come out from their holes to feed until quite late at 
night. One beautiful summers night that we spent on 
Skomer, with Mr. Mortimer Propert, for the purpose of 
making acquaintance with the Shearwaters, we were greatly 
surprised at the late hour they emerged from their burrows. 
We went out several times after sunset to search for them, 
but all in vain, none had appeared. Several times we re- 
sumed our game at whist in Mr. Vaughan Davies’ hospitable 


112 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


house, before we went out and were successful in discovering 
that the birds were at last upon the move, and this was close 
upon eleven p.m. The birds were then flying in numbers over 
the ground to and fro about the height of our heads, almost 
brushing our faces as they flitted past. Their strange wailing 
cry resounded on all sides, and they kept up an unearthly chorus 
until the first streak of dawn. We saw numbers come forth 
from holes at our feet, flapping with their wings for a yard or 
two along the ground before they were able to rise into the air, 
and it seemed as if it was necessary for them that the ground 
should slightly incline downwards, in order that they might gain 
a bite upon the air. The old sheep-dog of the farm was with 
us, and amused herself by catching the Shearwaters one after 
another, and bringing them uninjured to our hands. Not 
wanting any, we would then toss them up into the air, and let 
them go, once or twice getting the benefit of a vomit of the 
greenish oil which the bird is able to discharge, either when 
frightened, or for the purpose of defence. We watched the 
birds for a long time in the calm and semi-twilight of the 
beautiful night, and it appeared as if they flew about the island 
for a long time before going out to sea, and that others were 
constantly coming in again from the water. There seemed, 
indeed, no diminution in the numbers flying over the island all 
through the night, for when we at last retired to bed, we still 
heard the same wailing cries, often close outside our bedroom 
window. It was not until day dawned that the chorus gradually 
died away, and rising early, and going out to take a walk over 
the island, we detected but a single Shearwater sitting at the 
entrance of its burrow, into which it scuttled on our approach. 
Thrusting our arm inside, we found that it was a straight 
burrow, as, lying down, we were just able to touch the egg at its 
end, also the bird. Mr. Vaughan Davies informed us that one 
year he ploughed cartloads of the poor “Cockles”’ into the 
ground for manure, setting boys at night to knock them down 
with sticks, and to kill them, as they came out of their holes. 
Numbers of Manx Shearwaters nest on the adjoining island of 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 113 


Skokholm, which is uninhabited, and is merely a summer run 
for sheep. A few may nest on Ramsey Island, and we have seen 
the birds in Ramsey Sound, but Mr. Mortimer Propert is not 
sure that they do. ‘The Shearwaters are occasionally seen in 
flocks in Fishguard Bay. We were for some time doubtful, and 
rather incredulous, as to any Shearwaters nesting on Caldy, 
which in our opinion seemed too tame an island for them, but 
after the evidence that we subjoin, it is without question that a 
few do so, or at least upon the connected island of St. Margaret’s. 
In the summer of 1887, Mr. E. W. H. Blagg, who was then 
staying at Tenby, informs us that several evenings he saw a large 
flock of Manx Shearwaters flying off Caldy Island, and believed 
that the birds nested there. Mr. Dix states, ‘‘ numbers breed at 
Caldy Island,”’ but we had an idea that they had ceased to do 
so since he wrote this, a quarter of a century ago. On several 
occasions, when we ourselves have visited Tenby, on making 
inquiries, we failed to find anyone who could tell us if there 
were still Shearwaters upon Caldy; indeed, we were once 
expressly told that no such birds were known upon the island. 
Writing to us upon this point, Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, states : 
“The Manx Shearwater wsed to breed upon Caldy, and I think 
a few still do now in the fissures of the cliffs. I can give you 
more decided information about St. Margaret’s Island, which, as 
you know, is connected with Caldy by a reef of rocks, dry at low 
water. While on this island last May (1893) I frightened out 
of holes and fissures four or five Manx Shearwaters ; they 
appeared to come from cracks about half-way down the cliffs, 
and may, or may not, have been nesting there; it certainly looks 
as if they were.” We believe, ourselves, that the “Cockles” 
only frequent and nest on islands where there is a sufficient 
quantity of soil upon the top for them to dig their burrows, 
and that they are for this reason absent from islands that are 
mere rock, but this would certainly not apply to Caldy, which 
is suitable to the birds in every respect, except that it is too 
much run over, and the birds may therefore have been frightened 
away from it. 


15 


114 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


GREATER SHEARWATER, Pufinus major. — An occasional 
visitor; rare. Writing to us on September r8th, 1886, the Rev. 
Clennell Wilkinson, rector of Castle Martin, says: ‘‘ The Greater 
Shearwater I think I have seen washed up dead on the shore, 
but that was some years ago, and I am not now very certain 
about it.” This is a considerably larger and lighter coloured 
bird than the Manx Shearwater, and is an irregular visitor, 
sometimes in large flocks, from the Atlantic to the coasts of 
Devon and Cornwall, and is well known to the people of the 
Scilly Isles, so that it very probably enters the Bristol Channel 
occasionally, and may occur in Milford Haven, &c. 


FULMAR, Fulmarus glacialis.—A very rare accidental straggler in 
the autumn and winter. This, the largest of the British Petrels, 
is a well-known Polar species, inhabiting a few islands to the 
extreme north of the British Isles ; St. Kilda, a remote island of 
the Hebrides group, being its metropolis, and here the birds 
annually resort to nest in incredible numbers. When obtained 
anywhere in the south, the Fulmar is generally picked up, some- 
times inland, either dead, or in an exhausted state, when it is in- 
capable of flight. There is only a single instance of its occurr- 
ence in Pembrokeshire, and this was one that was brought alive 
to Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, in December, 1890, having been 
caught on a cod line in Tenby Bay. 


GREAT NORTHERN DIVER, Colyméus glactatis. — A winter 
visitor. The Great Northern Diver is a regular visitor in the 
winter to our bays from the north, and is sometimes numerous 
in Milford Haven. Adults, in full plumage, are rare. Mr. 
Dix states that, after a severe gale, one was shot in Milford 
Haven, at the beginning of December, 1865. Sir Hugh Owen 
has shot the Great Northern Diver in Fishguard Bay. Immature 
birds are most frequently obtained. From its powers of diving, 
its rapid progress beneath the water, where it uses both wings 
and feet, it is difficult for a boat rowed by good oars to overtake 
the Great Northern Diver, and, as it can keep its body sub- 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 115 


merged, only showing its head and neck above the surface, sink- 
ing again in a second at the flash of the gun before the shot 
can reach it, its pursuit is not easy, and, as we have ourselves 
witnessed on several occasions, it succeeds in making its escape, 
or does not succumb until after a long chase. The Great 
Northern Diver remains on the waters oft our coasts until the 
end of April; from the Tuskar Rock Lighthouse we have the 
report that the “ Black Divers” disappear about May rst, and are 
not seen again until the following October. 


BLACK-THROATED DIVER, Colymbus arcticus.—A winter visitor. 
The Black-Throated Diver, a very beautiful bird in its full 
breeding plumage, nests on some of the lochs in Scotland, 
and comes south in the autumn and winter. It is by no means 
acommon bird on the south west coasts, and our only authority 
for giving it a place among the Birds of Pembrokeshire is its 
being included by Mr. Mathias in his list. It is considerably 
smaller than the Great Northern Diver, and although immature 
birds of both species are alike in plumage, the Black-Throated 
Diver may be always recognised by its smaller size. As we have 
frequently shot the Black-Throated Diver in the winter months 
on the North Devon tidal rivers, the Taw and Torridge, we have 
no doubt that it visits Milford Haven, where it may have been 
obtained and confounded with the commoner species of which 
we have next to write. 


RED-THROATED DIVER, Colymbus septentrionalis——A winter 
visitor; common. Sometimes called the Speckled Diver, from 
its pretty spotted back, this is the commonest of the three large 
Divers that visit our bays and estuaries in the winter. Like the 
Black-Throated Diver, the Red-Throated Diver also nests on the 
Scotch lochs, where it is a familiar bird. It is common in the 
winter in Milford Haven, Fishguard Bay, &c. Its spotted back 
makes it readily distinguishable from the immature Black-Throated 
Diver, whose back is without spots. In its full adult plumage 


116 The birds of Pembrokeshire. 


it has a red throat, and the top of the head and sides of the 
neck are bluish grey, with white and black lines running down 
the back of the neck, and on the back the white spots of the 
winter dress have become so small as almost to have disappeared. 
Our own acquaintance with the various Divers was made in the 
estuaries of Devonshire, where we have occasionally seen the 
Red-Throated Diver in flocks of a dozen or more. Writing 
from Aberystwyth, Mr. J. H. Salter informs us that on April sth, 
1893, he observed Red-Throated Divers passing northwards, 
and that he had nearly twenty in sight at once. 


GREAT CRESTED GREBE, Podiceps cristatus——A winter visitor. 
Not very common in Pembrokeshire. Sir Hugh Owen has seen 
it at Goodwick. Mr. Dix says: ‘* A few are seen during the 
winter, but invariably in immature or winter plumage.” How- 
ever, Sir Hugh Owen appears to have met with it in its adult 
dress, as he informs us he has seen both the Great Crested and 
the Tippet Grebes, the latter being the common name of the bird 
in its full plumage. 


RED-NECKED GREBE, Podiceps grisezgena.—A winter visitor ; 
rare. Mr, Dix was informed by Mr. Tracy that he had several 
times killed examples of the Red-Necked Grebe, the rarest 
member of the family in the south west of England, on the mill- 
pond at Pembroke. This species is not included by Mr. 
Mathias. 


SCLAYONIAN GREBE, Podiceps auritus——A winter visitor ; rare. 
According to Mr. Dix a few specimens of this Grebe occur every 
winter in their immature or winter plumage. Mr. Mathias 
omits it from his list. It used to be the commonest of all the 
Grebes in the winter time on the North Devon rivers, where we 
have frequently shot it, and have sometimes seen three or four 
of a day. It is thus likely to occur on the Pembrokeshire side 
of the Bristol Channel. It is a much smaller species than either 
the Great Crested Grebe or the Red-necked Grebe. 


The Bivds of Pembrokeshtre. 117 


EARED GREBE, Podiceps nigricollis—A winter visitor; rare. In 
Mr. Mathias’ list. Mr. Tracy informed Mr. Dix that he had 
several times obtained the Eared Grebe on the Pembroke river. 
As they come upon our list the Grebes diminish in size one 
after the other, and the Eared Grebe is smaller than the Sclavo- 
nian Grebe, and the immature and winter plumaged birds may 
be separated from one another by a glance at their bills. In the 
Eared Grebe the bill curves slightly upwards, but in the Sclavo- 
nian Grebe it is straight. Although all the Grebes in the nesting 
season frequent fresh water ponds and lakes, yet in the winter 
they occur in salt water, where we have met numbers of every 
species on the British list at different times diving and fishing 
among the rocks and sea weed, or in the shallow water close to 
the shore. 


LITTLE GREBE, Zachybaptes fluviatilis—Resident. The Little 
Grebe, or Dabchick, as it is most commonly called, is the smallest 
of the Grebe family, and is the only one that nests in Pembroke- 
shire, and commonly throughout the British Isles. It is more 
frequently seen in the winter months, because then there is less 
cover of aquatic vegetation in which to conceal itself. We have 
seen it on the Cleddy, beneath Stone Hall, and in hard weather 
noticing two or three on the water in company have occasionally 
stalked them, as from a distance we have taken them for Teal; 
but as we approached their diving at once revealed to us what 
they were. The Little Grebe frequents pools, lakes and the still 
waters of rivers and streams wherever there is sufficient cover to 
hide, and here it can easily escape detection, as it will dive, and 
when it comes up again to breathe will do so among the leaves 
and rushes by the bank, where it only thrusts its head above the 
surface and cannot be seen. We have amused ourselves by 
watching them diving in this way in our fish ponds, and although 
quick sighted and familiar with their habits, they very frequently 
managed to come up somewhere where we could not see them. 
Like all the other Grebes this small species visits the tide-way in 
the winter, where we have seen and shot it in salt water. 


118 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


RAZORBILL, Ala torda. — Resident. The great multitude of 
cliff birds to be seen in the summer months on the various 
islands off the Pembrokeshire coast, is one of the unique 
features in the Ornis of the county. No one who has once 
visited in May or June the beautiful islands of Skomer or 
Ramsey, will ever forget the spectacle that has been presented 
to his eyes, whether he be an ornithologist or not. The cele- 
brated Stack Rocks, being within an easy reach both from 
Tenby and Pembroke, are among the curiosities of the county 
which all tourists feel compelled to inspect. And the scene is 
one that well repays the trouble of journeying to the spot. 
Caldy, St. Margaret’s Island, Skokholm, Skomer, Grasholm, and 
Ramsey, besides various cliffs of the mainland, are all of them, 
to a greater or less degree, visited by Razorbills, Puffins, and 
Common Guillemots at the nesting season; and while the 
Puffins lay their eggs in rabbit earths or in holes they excavate 
for themselves, the Razorbills and Guillemots deposit their eggs, 
without the least semblance of any nest, on the ledges of the 
rocks, tier above tier. From our own experience, we are con- 
fident that ifa census were to be taken of the three birds we 
have mentioned, the Puffins, in their innumerable myriads, would 
exceed the other two put together, and then, perhaps, in the 
proportion of ten to one; the Guillemots are very numerous, 
and would rank next, and last of all would come the Razorbills 
that, although when regarded by themselves might justly be con- 
sidered abundant, are yet not to be compared with the extraor- 
dinary hordes of Puffins and Guillemots. As they fly off the 
ledges of the cliff beneath one’s feet, as they pass one in the air, 
or as they alight on their eggs on their return from the water, or 
when viewed on its surface, swimming and diving in small 
parties, the Razorbills, with their brown-black heads and backs, 
and pure white underparts, present the appearance of great neat- 
ness in their brightly contrasted plumage. The white lines, 
too, across the mandibles, above the eyes, and across the 
wings, are also plainly visible to the spectator, when the birds 
approach him, as they will fearlessly, if he only remains quiet. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 11g 


And all the while the air will be full of their crooning cry, and 
the noises to be heard at any great breeding station of cliff 
birds, Kittiwakes, &c., are also part and parcel of an experience 
new and strange. After heavy and continued gales in the 
summer and early autumn, countless cliff birds perish from 
starvation, as they are then feeble from their moult, and unable 
to capture the fish that desert the shallows around the shores, 
and seek refuge from the tempest in deeper water ; and, at such 
times, we have seen the sands (on the North Devon coast) strewn 
for miles with Razorbills, Guillemots, and Kittiwakes, and every 
wave has cast others, dead or dying, to our feet. Varieties of 
the Razorbill are very rare. Indeed, the only one we have ever 
heard of is one sooty-black all over, with the exception of a 
dozen or two small white feathers scattered about the breast, 
that Mr. C. Jefferys, of Tenby, has mentioned to us, that is now 
in the museum of the Hon. Walter Rothschild, at Tring, and 
was obtained at Tenby about the year 1886. As soon as the 
young birds are strong enough to fish and to maintain them- 
selves, and this is about the beginning of August, the cliff birds 
leave their nesting stations, and scatter over the open sea, many 
of them working towards the south, but numbers ascend the 
Bristol Channel, where they may be seen in little flocks through- 
out the winter, and we have ourselves encountered them in 
December and January as far up as the Severn Tunnel in the 
old days when we used to make the passage across in the 
paddle-box steamer to Port Skewet. The eggs of the Razorbill 
are very handsome, and beautiful varieties are met with. The 
collection of cliff birds’ eggs formed by Dr. Propert from 
Ramsey Island, is hardly to be surpassed, except, perhaps, by 
that belonging to the national collection of British birds’ eggs at 
South Kensington, and any ornithologist who finds himself at 
St. David’s ought to inspect it, and will be sure to meet with a 
courteous reception. 


COMMON GUILLEMOT, Zomvia troile.—Resident. The Common 
Guillemot is the well-known ‘‘ Eligoog” of Pembrokeshire; the 
Stack Rocks, on which they nest in such numbers as almost 


120 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


completely to cover them, being often called “the Eligoog 
Stacks.” What we have written above with respect to the 
Razorbill, applies almost in so many words to the present 
species. It is to be found upon all the islands, on some of 
them, as upon Ramsey, in extraordinary numbers, and upon 
some of the cliffs of the mainland. Three parts of the year the 
Guillemots, as well as the other cliff birds, are dispersed upon 
the open sea. They only resort to the islands and cliffs for the 
summer months for the purpose of rearing their young. We 
have visited the Stack Rocks in the early spring before the birds 
had arrived upon them, only to find a few Herring Gulls and 
Kittiwakes perched on their ledges, a Shag or two on the rocks 
just above the sea level, and a pair of otters disporting them- 
selves among the waves that lapped their base. A few weeks 
later, and there would have been a transformation scene! The 
Stacks would have been white with birds, the waters in their 
neighbourhood would have been dotted over by little parties 
diving and fishing, and there would have been an almost deafen- 
ing noise proceeding from the multitude of birds. The Stacks 
are two in number, distant some sixty or seventy yards only 
from the shore, and reach in height almost to the level of the 
cliff on whose top the spectator stands. The largest of them 
is said to be only about thirty yards across on the summit, and 
they both present the appearance of rocky towers rising out of 
the water. The birds cover them from top to bottom, and are 
huddled together on their tops as close together as they can 
pack, but as the spaces after all are small, the total number of 
birds cannot be large, and there is not on these Stacks and on 
the cliffs in their neighbourhood, any more than a mere fraction 
of the immense numbers to be found on Ramsey or Skomer, 
where the birds are distributed over a great length of cliffs. 
But even on these two islands the birds are not found every- 
where, having their favourite cliffs, which are densely thronged 
with them, while others are quite destitute of birds. Mr. Dix 
rowed round the Stack Rocks one day, to discover that the 
Guillemots were more numerous on their ledges fronting the sea 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 121 


than they were on those turned towards the land, although even 
on these the numbers were astounding. Like the other diving 
birds that pursue the fish beneath the water, the Guillemots use 
their wings, and may be said to fly under the waves. One is 
able to form some idea of the vast myriads of fish the seas 
around our coasts must contain, when we consider the millions 
of birds that are daily feeding upon them. No amount of 
netting by fishermen is likely to produce any impression upon 
the shoals of fish ; the only injury that man can inflict upon 
them is in dredging the spawning beds. If only these could be 
left in quiet, there would be no danger of our fish supply becom- 
ing exhausted, however persistent and united the attacks made 
upon it by larger fish, seals, birds, and fishermen. The variety 
called the Bridled Guillemot (once held to be a distinct species, 
and called Lomvia lacrymans), that has a white line curving a 
short distance down the neck on either side from the eye, 
occurs occasionally among the other Guillemots, but is rare ; 
Mr. Mathias includes it in his list. On each of our visits to the 
breeding stations of the birds, we have kept a close watch for 
it, but among the thousands of Guillemots we have closely 
approached on their ledges, we have never succeeded in detect- 
ing one. The eggs of the Common Guillemot are well known 
for their beauty, and one or two are generally carried away by 
visitors to the Stacks as “ curios.” Some very beautiful varieties 
may be picked out from among them, and we are not a little 
proud of our own series procured from Ramsey and Lundy. 
The farmers around St. David’s are said to feed their calves in 
the summer with a custard made from the “ Eligoogs’”’ eggs 
obtained on Ramsey. In the winter time we have seen numerous 
Common Guillemots far up the Bristol Channel, off Clevedon 
and Portishead, and often when we have been crossing the ferry 
to Port Skewet, in company with Razorbills. 


(BLACK GUILLEMOT, Uria grylle.—A century ago there were a 
few Black Guillemots resident on the Pembrokeshire coast. 
Colonel Montagu, writing in his Ornithological Dictionary in 

16 


122 The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


1802, says: ‘‘ We have seen it rarely on the coast of Wales near 
Tenbeigh (séc), where a few breed annually; but nowhere else 
that we could find from thence to St. David’s.” None now 
breed south of the Isle of Man, and the bird has deserted 
Anglesea, and the neighbourhood of Llandudno, in North 
Wales, where it was reported to occur by Pennant, equally with 
our coasts. There is no specimen of a Pembrokeshire Black 
Guillemot now existing that we know of in any collection; nor 
is the bird, in virtue of a chance straggler floated to our shores, 
at the present day included in any list of the birds of the county. 
The Black Guillemot is very abundant off the north-west of 
Scotland, and is a species that does not wander far from its 
habitat ; specimens reported from the Bristol or English Chan- 
nels are few and far between. ] 


LITTLE AUK, Mergulus alle.—An occasional winter visitor. The 
Little Auk is the smallest in size of the cliff birds, and does 
not belong to our coasts, to which it is only a visitor in the 
winter, in very limited numbers, from Polar Seas, where it 
resides in immense multitudes. It is not unfrequently picked 
up dead upon the shore, or at some distance inland, after 
rough weather. Sir Hugh Owen shot a Little Auk in Goodwick 
Bay in 1880, where he has often seen it, and describes it as 
having a very musical loud whistle, and as being always tame. 
He has also seen it and heard its whistling note in early autumn. 
It is included by Mr. Mathias in his list. 


PUFFIN, /vatercula arctica.—Resident. This is the last of the 
Pembrokeshire birds that is left to us to describe, and, in the 
summer time, is by far the most numerous on the whole list ; 
we do not believe that we should exaggerate were we to say that 
the Puffins, in number, are then equal to all the other birds in 
the county added together! They occur on almost every 
station that is visited by the other cliff birds, wherever there are 
facilities for making their burrows, but like some other species, 
have their favourite quarters, being found on Ramsey only on 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 123 


the north end of the island, while the Razorbills and Guillemots 
chiefly occupy its western and south-western cliffs, and the large 
rocks standing out in the water to the south. On Skomer, 
where their numbers are marvellous, the Puffins are distributed 
all over the island, and there is scarcely a yard of ground free 
from them, so that we were both surprised and amused by 
coming on them at the least expected places. In walking 
over the island every now and again, our feet would slip through 
into a Puffin’s burrow, and sometimes, we fear, we sadly dis- 
composed the bird sitting within upon her egg. The Rev. C. 
M. Phelps has remarked that the eggs of the Skomer Puffins are 
very fine, and, in some cases, unusually richly marked. The 
same characteristic would seem to apply to the Puffins eggs 
from any part of the Welsh coast, as some we obtained from the 
neighbourhood of Barmouth, in North Wales, are very hand- 
some, being of a pure white, and sparsely dotted over with grey 
patches. The average Puffin egg is a dirty white egg, far from 
ornamental in one’s cabinet. We had frequently been informed 
by friends of the vast numbers of Puffins that inhabited Skomer, 
but from their descriptions we were but little prepared for 
what we actually saw. As our boat approached the island we 
first came upon an immense mass of birds upon the water, that 
proved to be acre upon acre of Puffins ; flocks were continually 
arriving, and others leaving the main body, and all over the 
surface of the sea there were smaller flocks. As we drew near 
to the shore we found the cliffs in front of us so thickly covered 
by Puffins as to look as if they were sprinkled with snow, and 
the air was thick with single Puffins flying off the water with 
ribbands of fish hanging from their mandibles, on their way to 
feed the young in their burrows. The birds were ridiculously 
tame, and when we landed, and were close to them, took but 
slight heed of us, only fixing their little round eyes upon us, 
and seeming to sit a little more upright upon the rocks. But 
there was a continual movement amongst them of those 
arriving and departing, and sitting down among the fern we for 
some time watched the wonderful scene, and as we remained 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 


quiet some of the birds were emboldened to alight almost 
within arm’s reach, and presently we saw a pure white Puffin, 
white all over, save for the wings that were black, fly within a 
few feet of us. In Mr. Vaughan Davies’ house there is pre- 
served a beautiful specimen of a perfect albino Puffin that had 
been obtained on the island, and we were informed that 
varieties are rare, and that this was the only albino that had ever 
occurred. Mr. Dix relates that on Caldy Island, where Puffins 
are also numerous, there was in his time a very cruel custom 
that we heartily trust has been put a stop to by the Sea Birds’ 
Preservation Act, viz., the men and boys of Tenby used to 
slaughter the Puffins wholesale on Whit Monday, and adds: 
“Tt is as much an institution with them as May Day with the 
sweeps.” We are told that on Grasholm the Puffins are a week 
or ten days later in nesting than they are on Skomer and 
Ramsey. In the winter the Puffins disappear from all the 
islands, and are distributed over the seas. They do not appear 
to go far up the Bristol Channel, as the Guillemots and Razor- 
bills do, as we have never met with any, and there are but few 
instances of stragglers having been noticed on the Somerset 
coasts. The singular fact is reported from one of the Light 
Houses at the entrance to Milford Haven that Puffins strike 
against the light annually at the beginning of September, and do 
not do so at any other season of the year. At Caldy they visit 
the Light House in the spring ; twenty occurred there at6 a.m 
on March 4, 1886. 


The Birds of Pembrokeshire. 125 


ADDENDUM. 

CRANE, Grus communis.—Mr. H. W. Evans, of Harbour House, 
Solva, possesses a very fine example, an adult in full plumage, 
of this rare occasional visitor to the British Islands, where, in 
ancient days, it was a regular summer migrant to the eastern 
counties. This specimen was captured April 28, 1893, on 
Vachelich Farm, between Solva and St. David’s, and we have 
been informed by Mr. Evans that it weighed 11} Ibs. in the 
meat, and measured 6 ft. 9 in. across the extended wings from 
tip to tip. ‘It had been seen on Clegyr Issaf Farm some days 
before, and was in grand plumage and condition.” Mr. Evans 
justly regards this beautiful bird as the prize in his collection of 
British birds. 


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Pa a er 


INDEX. 


Doubtful birds ave included between square brackets. 


American Yellow-billed Cuckoo, 43 
—— Bittern, 63 

Arctic Tern, Io! 

Auk, Little, 122 

Avocet, 88 


Baillon’s Crake, 83 
Barnacle Goose, 65 
Barn Owl, 44 

Bar-tailed Godwit, 100 
Bean Goose, 65 

Bearded Tit, 12 
Bee-eater, 42 

Bewick’s Swan, 67 
Bittern, American, 63 
— Common, 62 

—— Little, 61 
Blackbird, 2 

Blackcap, 7 

Black Grouse, 81 

— Guillemot, 121 
— Redstart, 5 

—— Tern, 103 
Black-tailed Godwit, 100 
Black-throated Diver, 115 
Blue-headed Yellow Wagtail, 16 
Blue Tit, 14 

Bohemian Waxwing, 18 
Brambling, 23 

Brent Goose, 65 

Bridled Guillemot, 121 
Brown-headed Gull, 105 
Brown Linnet (Linnet), 23 
aoa Owl, 45 

Buffon’s Skua, 109 
Bullfinch, 24 

Bunting, Cirl, 26 

—— Corn, 25 

— Reed, 26 


Bunting, Snow, 27 
— Yellow, 26 

—— White (Snow), 27 
Bustard, Great, 84 
Buzzard, Common, 48 
Honey, 52 
Rough-legged, 49 


Carrion Crow, 34 
Chaffinch, 22 
Chiff-Chaff, 8 

Chough, 29 

Cirl Bunting, 26 

Coal Tit, 13 
[Collared Pratincole], 85 
Common Crossbill, 25 
—- Guillemot, 119 
—— Gull, 104 

— Sandpiper, 96 
—— Snipe, 92 

—— Tern, Io! 

Coot, 84 

Cormorant, 58 

Corn Bunting, 25 
Corn-Crake, 83 
Crake, Baillon’s, 83 
—— Corn, $3 
Spotted, 83 
Crane, 125 

Creeper, Tree, 20 
Crossbill, Common, 25 
Crow, Carrion, 34 
— Hooded, 35 
Cuckoo, 43 

— American Yellow-billed, 43 
Curlew, 101 

—— Sandpiper, 95 
—— Stone, 85 


128 


Dabchick (Little Grebe), 117 
Dipper, 11 

Diver, Black-throated, 115 
Great Northern, 114 
Red-throated, 115 
Dotterel, 87 

Dove, Ring, 74 

Rock, 75 

— Stock, 75 

—— Turtle, 76 

Duck, Eider, 73 
Longtailed, 72 
Tufted, 71 

-— Wild, 69 

Dunlin, 94 


Eagle, White-tailed, 49 

Eared Grebe, 117 

Egyptian Goose, 64 

Eider Duck, 73 

‘* Eligoog ” (Common Guillemot), 
119 


Falcon, Greenland, 52 
—— Peregrine, 53 
Red-footed, 56 
Fieldfare, 2 
Flycatcher, Pied, 19 
Spotted, 19 
Fork-tailed Petrel, 110 
Fulmar, 114 


Gadwall, 70 

Gannet, 59 

Garden Warbler, 7 
Garganey, 70 
Glaucous Gull, 103 
Glossy Ibis, 64 
Godwit, Bar-tailed, 100 
— Black-tailed, 100 
Goldcrest, 7 
Golden-eye, 72 

— Oriole, 17 

— Plover, 85 
Goldfinch, 20 
Goosander, 73 

Goose, Barnacle, 65 
Bean, 65 

Brent, 65 

—— Egyptian, 64 


Index. 


Goose, [Pink-footed], 65 
White-fronted, 65 
Grasshopper Warbler, 10 
Great Bustard, 84 
Crested Grebe, 116 
—— Grey Shrike, 18 
— Northern Diver, 114 
— Skua, 107 
Snipe, 92 
—— Spotted Woodpecker, 40 
Tit, 13 
Greater Black-backed Gull, 105 
Shearwater, 114 
Grebe, Eared, 117 
—— Great Crested, 116 
— Little, 117 
— Red-necked, 116 
—— Sclavonian, 116 
“Tippet ” (Great Crested), 116 
Greenfinch, 21 
Greenland Falcon, 52 
Green Sandpiper, 97 
Green Woodpecker, 41 
Greenshank, 99 
Grey Phalarope, 89 
Plover, 86 
Wagtail, 15 
[Grosbeak Pine], 25 
Grouse, Black, 81 
Red, 81 
Pallas’s Sand, 76 
Guillemot, Black, 121 
—— Common, 119 
Ringed, 121 
, Brown-headed, 105 
Common, 104 
Glaucous, 103 
Greater Black-backed, 105 
Herring, 104 
Kittiwake, 103 
Lesser Black-backed, 104 
Little, 106 
Sabine’s, 106 


2 


eae 


Hammer, Yellow, 26 
Marrier, Hen, 47 
Marsh, 46 
Montagu’s, 48 
Hawfinch, 21 


Hawk, Sparrow, 50 
Hedge Sparrow, I! 
Hen Harrier, 47 
Hen, Moor, 84 
Heron, 60 

Night, 61 
Herring Gull, 104 
Hobby, 55 
Honey-Buzzard, 52 
Hooded Crow, 35 
Hoopoe, 42 

House Sparrow, 21 


Ibis, Glossy, 64 


Jackdaw, 33 
Jack Snipe, 94 
Jay, 31 


Kestrel, 57 
Kingfisher, 42 
Kite, 51 
Kittiwake, 103 
Knot, 96 


Lapwing, 87 

Lark, Sky, 38 

Wood, 38 

Leach’s Petrel, 110 

Lesser Blackbacked Gull, 104 
— Redpoll, 24 

—— Spotted Woodpecker, 41 
White-throat, 6 

Linnet, 23 

—— ‘ Brown,” 23 

Little Auk, 122 

~—— Bittern, 61 

—— Grebe, 117 

= GullsT06! 

— Stint, 95 

—— Tern, 102 

Long-eared Owl, 45 
Long-tailed Duck, 72 

—— Skua (Buffon’s), 109 
—— Tit, 12 


Magpie, 32 
Manx Shearwater, II 
Marsh Harrier, 46 


Index 


Marsh Tit, 13 
Martin, 20 

Sand, 20 
Meadow Pipit, 16 
Melodious Warbler, 9 
Merganser, Red-breasted, 74 
Merlin, 56 

Mistle Thrush, 1 
Montagu’s Harrier, 48 
Moor Hen, 84 

Mute Swan, 66 


Night Heron, 61 
Nightjar, 39 
Nuthatch, 15 


Oriole, Golden, 17 
Ouzel, Ring, 3 
Water, II 
Owl, Barn, 44 

—— Brown, 45 
—— Long-eared, 45 
— Scops, 46 

—— Short-eared, 45 
—— Tawny, 45 
Oyster-Catcher, 88 


Pallas’s Sand Grouse, 76 
Partridge, 79 
Red-legged, 78 
Pastor, Rose-coloured, 29 
Peregrine Falcon, 53 
Petrel, Fork-tailed, 110 
— Fulmar, 114 
——. Leach’s, 1110 
Storm, 109 
Phalarope, Grey, 89 
Pheasant, 77 

—— Ring-necked, 77 
Pied Flycatcher, 19 
—— Wagtail, 15 

{Pine Grosbeak], 25 
[Pink-footed Goose], 65 
Pintail, 69 

Pipit, Meadow, 16 
Rock, 17 

Tree, 17 

Plover, Golden, 85 
—— Grey, 86 


130 


Plover, Ringed, 86 
Pochard, 72 

Red-crested, 71 
Pomatorhine, Skua, 108 
[Pratincole, Collared], 85 
Puffin, 122 

Purple Sandpiper, 95 


Quail, 79 


Rail, Water, 82 

Raven, 36 

Razor-bill, 118 
Redbreast, 5 

Red Grouse, 81 

Redpoll, Lesser, 24 
Redshank, 98 

Spotted, 99 
Redstart, 4 

Black, 5 

Redwing, 1 

Red-backed Shrike, 18 
Red-breasted Merganser, 74 
Red-crested Pochard, 71 
Red-footed Falcon, 56 
Red-legged Partridge, 78 
Red-necked Grebe, 116 
Red-throated Diver, 115 
Reed-bunting, 26 
Richardson’s Skua, 108 
Ring-Dove, 74 

Ring Ouzel, 3 

Ringed Guillemot, 121 
Plover, 86 

Rock Dove, 75 

Rock Pipit, 17 

Rook, 35 

Roseate Tern, 102 
Rose-coloured Pastor, 29 
Rough-legged Buzzard, 49 
Ruddy Sheldrake, 68 
Ruff, 96 


Sabine’s Gull, 106 
Sanderling, 96 

Sand Grouse, Pallas’s, 76 
Sand Martin, 20 
Sandpiper, Common, 96 
Curlew, 95 


Index. 


Sandpiper, Green, 97 
—— Purple, 95 

—— Wood, 98 
(Sandwich Tern], 102 
Scaup, 72 

Sclavonian Grebe, 116 
Scop’s Owl, 46 

Scoter, Common, 73 
Velvet, 73 

Sea Pie (Oyster Catcher), 88 
Sedge Warbler, 10 
Shag, 59 

Shearwater, Greater, 114 
Manx, III 
Sheldrake, Common, 68 
— Ruddy, 68 
Short-eared Owl, 45 
Shoveller, 71 

Shrike, Great Grey, 18 
—— Red-backed, 18 
Siskin, 21 

Skua, Buffon’s, 109 
Great, 107 
Longtailed, 109 
— Pomatorhine, 108 
—— Richardson’s, 108 
Skylark, 38 

Smew, 74 

Snipe, Common, 92 
—— Great, 92 

—— Jack, 94 

Snow Bunting, 27 
Song Thrush, 1 
Sparrow, Hedge, 11 
—- House, 21 
Sparrow Hawk, 50 
Spoonbill, 63 

Spotted Crake, 83 
—— Flycatcher, 19 
— Redshank, 99 
Starling, 27 

Stint, Little, 95 

Stock Dove, 75 
Stonechat, 4 

Stone Curlew, 85 
Storm Petrel, 109 
Swallow, 19 

Swan, Bewick’s, 67 
—— Mute, 66 


Swan, Whooper, 66 
Swift, 39 


Tawny Owl, 45 
Teal, 70 

Tern, Arctic, 101 
Black, 103 
— Common, 101 
— Little, 102 
Roseate, 102 
— [Sandwich], 102 
Thrush, Mistle, 1 
—— Song, I 

Tit, Bearded, 12 
—— Blue, 14 

— Coal, 13 

—— Great, 13 
—— Long-tailed, 12 
— Marsh, 13 

Tree Creeper, 20 
—— Pipit, 17 
Turnstone, 88 
Turtle Dove, 76 


Velvet Scoter, 73 


Wagtail, Blue-headed, 16 
— Grey, 15 

—— Pied, 15 

—— White, 15 

— Yellow, 16 
Warbler, Garden, 7 
Grasshopper, 10 
-— Melodious, 9 


Index. 


Warbler, Sedge, 10 

—— Willow, 8 

— Wood, 8 

Water Ouzel (Dipper), 11 


Water Hen (Moor Hen), 84 


—-— Rail, 82 
Waxwing, 18 
Wheatear, 3 
Whimbrel, roo 
Whinchat, 3 


131 


White Bunting (Snow Bunting), 27 


— Wagtail, 15 
White-fronted Goose, 65 
White-tailed Eagle, 49 
White-throat, 6 

—— —— Lesser, 6 
Whooper, 66 

Wigeon, 68 

Wild Duck, 69 
Willow Warbler, 8 
Woodcock, 90 

Wood Lark, 38 
Sandpiper, 98 
Warbler, 8 


Woodpecker, Great Spotted, 4o 


Green, 41 

Lesser Spotted, 41 
Wren, 15 

Wryneck, 41 


Yellow-billed American Cuckoo, 43 


Yellow Hammer, 26 
—— Wagtail, 16 


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