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Tag Archives: colour-ringed birds

Three colour-ringed gulls

01 Wednesday Oct 2025

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, colour-ringed birds, colour-ringed Black-headed gull, colour-ringed gulls, colour-ringed Lesser black-backed gull, Roath Park Lake

Though I do sometimes see colour-ringed gulls in my local area, they’re often too distant for me to get photographs that are clear enough to read the details on their rings. So, during a recent walk around Roath Park Lake when I saw three ringed gulls, I made sure to get clear images so I could report my sightings. Not only does this provide valuable information on the movements of gull species, several of which are now endangered, but it’s also fascinating to find out where these gulls have been.

This male Lesser black-backed gull, with the orange ring inscribed R=U, was ringed at 5 weeks old on 5 July 2021 in Cardiff. Most of the subsequent reported sightings of this bird have been at Roath Park Lake, from September 2021 through to my sighting in September this year, but it has ventured much further afield; on 26 October 2022 it was seen in Matosinhos, a coastal city in northern Portugal. From Cardiff, that’s a straight-line distance of approximately 1,445 kilometers or 898 miles though, of course, the bird is unlikely to have flown straight there; it’s more likely that it followed the coasts of England and France to reach Portugal. And it’s also possible that it has been to Portugal or, indeed, other European destinations but hasn’t been sighted there, or hasn’t been reported when sighted.

This second Lesser black-backed gull, V&Z, a female, was also ringed in Cardiff but much more recently, on 17 July this year when it was just one week old. So far, it has only been reported from Roath Park Lake, on three occasions in September.

Today’s final colour-ringed gull has a very interesting story to tell. This Black-headed gull was initially ringed with a simple metal ring at Roath Park Lake in March 2019. That summer, the bird returned to its breeding grounds in Denmark, where it was recaptured by local bird ringers, who gave it the colour ring 9RK. It’s been reported wintering at Roath Park Lake annually ever since so it’s very likely that it makes the return trip to Denmark to breed every spring/summer.

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Canada goose DAKP

24 Tuesday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Canada goose, colour-ringed birds, Colour-ringed Canada goose, Roath Park Lake

It’s always interesting to learn a bird’s history. During last Monday’s jaunt around Roath Park Lake, as well as enjoying the Shovelers, I spotted this colour-ringed Canada goose so reported my sighting. This bird was ringed near Waterhead, Ambleside, in Cumbria, in June 2016 but has since decided it prefers south Wales.

231024 canada goose (1)

First, it checked out the lake around Caerphilly Castle, where it was spotted in July 2017. Later that year, in December, a report was sent in from Cosmeston Lakes, and the goose also checked in at the coast near Ogmore, in September 2018. Since then, though, Canada goose DAKP seems to have settled at Roath Park Lake, where it’s been since December 2019. Interestingly, there are some gaps in reported sightings: from early February to late July 2020, from October 2020 to May 2021, from February to August 2022, and from late March to late July this year. Whether this means it travels elsewhere to breed, or just fancies a change of scene from time to time is impossible to tell.

231024 canada goose (2)

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A Flatholm gull

22 Friday Sep 2023

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, colour-ringed birds, colour-ringed Lesser black-backed gull, Flatholm gulls, Lesser black-backed gull

At Cosmeston, during Monday’s walk, I spotted this juvenile Lesser black-backed gull and was able to read the code on its left leg ring, F:D94. With a little searching on the European Colour-Ring Birding website, I found that the bird was probably ringed on the island of Flatholm, just over 3 miles off the south coast of Wales and a well known breeding site for Lesser black-backed gulls. I fired off an email reporting my sighting.

230922 lbb fd94 (1)

Just a short time later I got an email back, saying that the ringing group on Flatholm has now set up a website for the birds they ring. I found the website easy to use and it gives you instant feedback about the gull you’ve seen. F:D94 is one of this year’s breeding successes and was ringed as a chick on Flatholm on 1 July. So, for any birders amongst my followers, if you happen to spot a Flatholm bird (they have a tiny metal ring on their right leg and, on their left, a blue plastic ring with an alpha-numeric code that starts with an F), please do report your sighting on their Flat Holm Gulls website.

230922 lbb fd94 (2)

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A ringed Lesser black-backed gull

20 Thursday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, colour-ringed birds, colour-ringed gull, colour-ringed Lesser black-backed gull, Lesser black-backed gull

Whenever I spot a colour-ringed gull, I always try to get photographs of the ring so I can report the sighting and find out the bird’s history. Sometimes that history is quite exciting, with birds being reported from foreign shores, but this particular seabird, a Lesser black-backed gull spotted at Roath Park lake last week, is a bit of a stay-at-home.

221020 ringed lbb gull (2)

According to Peter Rock, urban gull expert and ringing scheme organiser, the gull was ringed in Cardiff in 2020 but has only ever been sighted at the lake. Peter does say that it might ‘set off late to spend its winter somewhere unknown’ … or it might just hang around in Cardiff all year, as many gulls do. If I visit the lake during the winter months, I will certainly be looking out for it.

221020 ringed lbb gull (1)

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A well-travelled Black-headed gull

08 Friday Feb 2019

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

bird migration, birding, birdwatching, Black-headed gull, British birds, colour-ringed birds, colour-ringed Black-headed gull, tracking bird movements

When I was in Barry earlier this week, I noticed one of the Black-headed gulls at The Knap was colour-ringed so I took its photo and reported my sighting by checking who was ringing what where on the European Colour-ring birding website.

Today I heard back from Paul Roper of the North Thames Gull Group (NTGG) and the information he supplied is fascinating. This bird was ringed as an adult (‘third calendar year or older’) at the Pitsea Landfill Site in Essex on 12 March 2016 but it doesn’t seem to spend much time in England. As Paul commented in his email, ‘This one is particularly interesting as it appears to breed in Finland and goes there via Germany’.

190208 Black-headed gull

Another thing that intrigued me was how site faithful this bird is in its choice of where to over-winter and Paul confirmed that, from their records, many birds ‘do seem to stick to a site faithfully in the winter’. From sightings dated 11 November 2016, 15 August 2017, 5 February 2018 and my sighting on 4 February 2019, we can see that, once it’s finished breeding in Finland, this little Black-headed gull heads back to Britain to spend its winters in Barry, in south Wales. You can see a map of its movements on the NTGG website here. There must be something about the fish and chips in Barrybados that keeps bringing it back!

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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