Continuing onwards quickly, by early evening on 22 August, Nick was 940km (585 miles) further south-east from his previous location in Nigeria and was in Cameroon. Transmission located him in the Adamawa region close to the edge of the Mbang Mountains and 24km (15 miles) east of the capital of Ngaoundéré, which has a population of over 152,500.
Updates from our Cuckoos
Read the latest updates from our Cuckoos on their epic migration between the UK and tropical Africa, or track their movements in real-time on our Cuckoo migration map.
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Nick continues to Cameroon
David leaves Montenegro
On the evening of 22 August, transmissions from David’s tag revealed that he had left his location in Montenegro and travelled 470km (290 miles) south. At that time he was near the Greek islet, Apasa, to the east of Ithaca, one of the Ionian Islands in Greece. A further poor quality signal 40 mins later shows him south of Petalas, the largest island of the Echinades, among the Ionian Islands.
Four Cuckoos remain in Chad
Waller, Chris, Sussex and BB are all still in Chad and sending regular transmissions. Last year Chris was the first of our tagged Cuckoos to move south of Chad, arriving in the Central African Republic by the 18 September. Not long after this the Cuckoos moved on to the Congo Rainforest.
Ken moves east
Ken has travelled 330km (210 miles) east within Burkina Faso and is now the only remaining tagged Cuckoo in the country. Both Skinner and Nick have left and continued eastwards.
Dry conditions for Dart
The outlook for Dart is looking fairly bleak with no further transmissions to report. We think it is likely that he has perished in Mallorca. A supporter of the project emailed in to let us know that just after Dart's arrival there was a huge wildfire on Mallorca. It's likely that conditions weren't good if the area was very dry so even if he wasn't in the area affected by the fire, he may have struggled to find food.
No news from Nelson
No further signals have been received which means we haven’t heard anything from Nelson’s tag for almost five weeks. We are a little worried this may spell bad news for Nelson, however, it is too early to tell yet.
End of the road for Ryder?
Unfortunately the only further signals we have received from Ryder show that he did not continue to complete his desert crossing. The signals show that he backtracked a short distance into central Mauritania, a location from which he has not continued onwards from. He has now been in the middle of the desert for 5 days. We think it is likely that he did not have the fuel reserves needed to complete the journey, and was unable to feed up in the barren landscape in which he stopped.
David sitting pretty
David is still in the south-east of Montenegro and has yet to make his move to Africa. He remains close to the Scutari Lake which spans both Montenegro and Albania and his current position is only 20km (12 miles) from the border with Albania. We expect him to make a move in the next couple of weeks.
Whortle - time to move on?
Whortle has moved north slightly from Linares de Mora and has been sending regular transmittions from a location near to Cantavieja, Spain. We are expecting him to move on shortly and make the crossing to Africa.
Skinner moves to Niger
On the 18 August Skinner’s tag transmitted from Niger revealing that he had moved on from his last location in Burkina Faso. He is still close to the border between the two countries and around 100km (60 miles) from Niamey, the capital and largest city of Niger. Niamey lies on the Niger River and has an estimated population of over 780,000.
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