The tide was well in when I arrived at the tern posts, so no waders but Sandwich Terns numbered 75 with three Common Terns on the beach nearby.
To the point, where Andre Morgan was already going through the wader roost, but we couldn't find anything apart from the usual.
I was walking back when Simon Cox turned up and immediately found the King Eider, drifting downstream on the ebb tide. It remained just inland of the point for the duration. Sandwich Terns were still coming in: I estimated 150 min but they were mixed in with Black-headed Gulls.
A look at the sea was called for, as it was sunny and very calm. There was no evidence of inshore fish shoals, but some large feeding rafts of gulls were well offshore.
A short look from the toilet block, where there were a few newly arrived Red-throated Divers, all in summer plumage, plus around 70 auks (all in range were Guillemots) then I went up to the turn car park.
Jerry Moore was there when I arrived and we spent a pleasant session going through the birds on the sea. My eventual count of Red-throated Divers was 23, plus quite a few more Guillemots and a Great Crested Grebe. Lots of Sandwich Terns scattered around but no skuas, unfortunately.