A roll call of migratory birds has begun at the Adyar Estuary. But a word of caution. Those birders trying to stay stone-cold sober should think twice before putting themselves on the path to the Estuary. In a stroke of ill luck, they might find one trigger that could end up throwing them off the wagon. If the sight of liquor bottles, even empty ones, could be the trigger they better bird elsewhere.

On the evening of September 15, the excitement over the sighting of the Saunders’s tern by a multitude of human eyes was still alive. The Saunders’s tern was around, but staying out of view, even beyond the reach of those elongated telephoto lens. But the surprise sojourner was not greatly missed. Eurasian oystercatchers and Ruddy turnstones, both put together still accounting for just a handful of feathers, had checked into Hotel Adyar Estuary. A lone Terek sandpiper tried valiantly but unsuccessfully to wrench the limelight from them. The smaller ones — Tibetan sand plovers, Sanderlings, Kentish plovers and Greater sand plovers — gave birders more reasons to linger longer, not too far from where Adyar disgorges into the sea.

Kentish plovers around empty liquor bottles at the Adyar Estuary near the broken bridge on September 16, 2025. Photo: Prince Frederick