Birding in Wales

From the seabird islands of Pembrokeshire to the upland kites of mid-Wales, from Anglesey choughs to Snowdonia ravens — Wales offers some of Britain's most atmospheric birding.

Wales is the home of the red kite recovery — from one breeding pair in 1900 to 2,000+ today. It also holds the world's biggest gannet colony (Grassholm), Britain's largest Manx shearwater colony (Skomer), and the heart of British chough habitat. Inland, the oak valleys of mid-Wales are textbook western-oakwood, with pied flycatcher, redstart, wood warbler, and dipper.

Top sites

1. Skomer Island (Pembrokeshire)

One of the world's most important seabird islands. 350,000+ Manx shearwaters (largest colony anywhere). Puffins on coastal slopes May-July. Day boats from Martin's Haven; book ahead. Stay overnight if possible — the shearwater fly-in at dusk is unforgettable.

2. RSPB South Stack (Anglesey)

Cliff-top with chough, raven, peregrine, plus seabird ledges. Lighthouse + Ellin's Tower viewpoint. Great spring sea-watching for Manx shearwater + skuas.

3. Mid-Wales kite country

Gigrin Farm (Powys) is the famous red-kite feeding station — 100+ kites every afternoon. Surrounding hills hold breeding kites, buzzards, peregrines. Carngafallt RSPB for oakwood specialties.

4. RSPB Conwy + Anglesey wetlands

Conwy estuary for wintering wildfowl, passage waders. Anglesey RSPB cluster (Valley Wetlands, Cors Erddreiniog) for marsh harrier, occasional bittern, breeding shovelers + pochard.

5. Newport Wetlands NNR (Gwent)

Severn estuary edge. Wintering wildfowl, large gull roosts, occasional rare visitors. Easy access from M4.

Welsh specialties

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