East Anglian skies are amazing:

That is looking towards Blakeney Point, where the seal colony is. I have not been to see them on this trip.
This chap made himself more readily available, and there is nothing wrong with a black-headed gull, even though many rarer birds have been seen today:

Meanwhile, I have been reflecting on a comment Simon Slade made here a day or two ago. We had quite a long discussion about that over tea out this afternoon (tea, not cakes). Holidays are for asking about the meaning of things.
They're also about not moving the car. We suspect that this break will follow the pattern of many we take. We arrive, park the car, and then walk wherever we want to go. This is not about limiting our horizons, but expanding them. There is so much to see here that the need to drive disappears. If we went further, we would miss what is on our doorstep.
Now, it's time for a dusk walk. Roosting is beginning.
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Ah yes, Johnathon Livingston Seagull https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Livingston_Seagull (if you haven’t read it)
[…] mentioned earlier this afternoon that I was going out at dusk to see if there was any roosting activity going on amongst the birds […]