The morning session was excellent, with superb views of a Madeiran Storm-petrel (a really fresh bird, whatever that means as to more specific identification) and a couple of Sooty Shearwaters amongst hundreds of Great and Cory's Shearwaters. The evening was less spectacular, with no gadly petrels seen.
The afternoon was broken up by a quick search for the Yellow Warblers in the tamarisks (no luck), as well as crippling views of a newly-arrived juvenile White-rumped Sandpiper that Morten picked up coming in over the airfield. The bird proceeded to show really, really well down at the beach:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiZMXmKk7n7BO90IcEJOWoBrv6DxKuhBhyfWcpKLMWqPJKCvEJLIjPaJZma36ZG6_aomMmH7_Y7LrRYRV59RexztKvhghVeFfoGQZAtNAu4_nu-T8uy6GLM9cvG0HmN0CuoT2RYgkY_zOd0/s280/WRS1.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhumtJn4CJ-kCr5665SN2QEZQMrsBDxKphzeHo27XzfYJpopTIMA_21pSTwnvKexu3AAjrqMtO321FWeHs5LBuzYXfOyV_X6TJIEuIkSg5LC6akO4Xwp2q9zHXGoX7gqQt65hyphenhyphen6GV9SKCkg/s280/WRS2.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzVPh6aPbewDRzSJYDZmUJq9tzCLn_Cza_6BqlQO8oUkYH2VBylbh22AntKgHQUiLPHftx6pwkoc-zWbiALJUD9I8M3rOYM0rniJLxeOJD5Tmn7PmomDuWNXa6vC9JUqai5kt5VepIw9Un/s280/WRS3.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgijR_0DluhI9gaF6uHkkoUf7xyNjy7N3AbvwSp03_Zv9aBAqbMfdvqKstGeaIB1uNCofymANreGblMy7XHR-UbhhYpqZbNa1ULiMChfMhW6DbEExwLRcO9I3lqPl65-esqbM8TG9ccfJZP/s280/WRS4.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgA1tVWZPmAXsBVgShLh1nh7FEnCHNBrGIfrTMf3JP5Xzmjy21b-pNrSpGpySC8PFWFmTUy-e_ShuyCjKStopMwuq0OIXv7x7-WuJfbEH2aPMt6L02yQyp2a2HdK9AIQRz28rHby8llWDBM/s280/WRS5.jpg)
Apparently a Dickcissel on Flores today. Who knows what is going on right now.
Birds
White-rumped Sandpiper: juvenile on the beach
Madeiran Storm-petrel: one past the windmills
Sooty Shearwater: two past the windmills
Great Shearwater: maybe four-figure numbers offshore today
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