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WWT Llanelli will be closed for one day on Wednesday 20 May.

We’re sorry for this short-term inconvenience, but this date has been chosen to allow our team to rearrange the shop and entrance ahead of the upcoming Welcome Project construction, and get everything ready in time for a fantastic May half-term experience. We will reopen on Thursday 21 May as usual. Thank you for your support and understanding.

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Recent Sightings 7th-11th March

Highlights - Jack Snipe, Peacock Butterfly, Red Kite, Peregrine and Mediterranean Gull

British Steel Hide

There was a Red Kite and a Peregrine on the Salt Marsh along with a few Little Egrets. There was also a good variety of waders on the Lagoons and estuary including: Grey Plover, Knot, Black-tailed Godwit, Dunlin, Lapwing, Redshank, Greenshank and Snipe. On the Dafen Scrapes there is a noticeable decrease in numbers of Wigeon. Lots of Black-headed Gulls with numbers in the mid hundreds.

Millennium Wetlands

The first Butterfly of the year, a Peacock, was seen on the way down to the Herons Wing Hide. A couple of Mediterranean Gulls were seen in among the Black-headed Gulls on the Deep Water Lake. On the Eastern Scrapes there were good numbers of Snipe and there was a Sparrowhawk circling overhead. A Common Frog was heard croaking in a ditch near the canoe safari. On the Deep Water Lake islands there was a Jack Snipe. There are still quite a few Pochard on the Deep Water Lake in the numbers in the high teens, which is hopefully a sign of a good breeding year.

Fresh Water Lagoon

8 Spoonbills were seen roosting on the Fresh Water Lagoon right in front of the Observatory Hide. The Black-headed Gulls are starting to congregate on the Fresh Water Lagoon islands in readiness for the breeding season.

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