How does your garden sound?

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  • pastoralguy
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 7870

    #16
    Here in South Edinburgh, Mrs. PG and I put a bird table in the corner of the front drive. It's been commandeered by the local sparrows and we've counted up to 70 sitting on the feeder and hedge. What a noise they make! A singing hedge a friend of mine calls it!

    Only trouble is that it's costing us a fortune to maintain it with food.

    Ah well...

    Comment

    • salymap
      Late member
      • Nov 2010
      • 5969

      #17
      I seem tojust feed one hungry squirrel at the moment. The birds ignore the nut cage until the squirrel drops half his booty, then he scampers off and sits in a tree glaring at me.

      He gets very cross when I disturb him and waves his front feet [arms?] in a threatening manner

      Actually he's very funny to watch. Vermin ? not to me.

      Comment

      • amateur51

        #18
        Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
        the odd peregrine if we're lucky.
        How is old Worsthorne these days?

        They don't come much odder

        (due to be ninety on 22 December - hope you get there, old timer ;bubbly:)

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        • Richard Tarleton

          #19
          Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
          How is old Worsthorne these days?

          They don't come much odder

          (due to be ninety on 22 December - hope you get there, old timer ;bubbly:)
          Believe it or not my mother wanted to call me Peregrine I don't know how seriously she pressed the case but luckily it didn't happen. This was aspirational more than anything - her father was a shipping clerk and from a long line of Lancashire shoemakers and saddlers I think my father may have pointed out that this would have condemned me to be beaten to pulp on a regular basis by the school bullies.

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          • Mary Chambers
            Full Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 1963

            #20
            Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
            From the title I expected this thread to be about birdsong and the like.
            That was my first thought, too. Lots of birds here, though I can't beat pastoralguy's 70 sparrows. I do have sparrows, though, and most other common garden birds. When I'm unlucky, there are pigeons, although this is suburbia rather than city. My favourite birds are the long-tailed tits, so pretty.

            I can hear traffic, faintly, from the main road if I'm in the garden, but not at all in the house. There is hardly any traffic in this road, because it doesn't go anywhere. At the moment the only house close to mine is empty (though sold), so this is really a very quiet place. It could change suddenly when the new people move in! I value the quietness very much.

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            • jayne lee wilson
              Banned
              • Jul 2011
              • 10711

              #21
              Yes, I expected birdsong too... livelier now the moult is almost over, the orchard dispensers eaten out every day by this years' Green-, Chaff- and Goldfinches, Blue and Great Tits feasting on nuts and suet...Long-Tailed Tits as ever keeping it in the family.
              Dunnocks in their usual flirtacious threesomes, Blackbirds still skulking silently in the undergrowth, Jackdaws getting noisier and flocking again after their summer dispersal (this almost seems to happen in a single day after the young are big enough for their parents to ignore their pleas for food. The daylong cacophony of KIA and UK-KAW suddenly isn't there one morning. It seems very empty!). The Buzzards, soaring over all summer with their augmented "MEW!" have diappeared too. Their young must have fledged.
              Our Magpies are always scolding the local Cats and Foxes...

              That unforgettably resonant "KRONK, KRONK!" drew my attention to a pair of Ravens last Sunday, flying directly towards Moel Famau, where I last saw them over 20 years ago!

              The Robins haven't started singing yet, always a true sign of autumn's cooling. They often do this by the streetlights at night in the winter. Last birdsounds now are always the Crows, with their excitable dusk acrobatics!
              Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 07-10-13, 17:26.

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              • Richard Tarleton

                #22
                Suburban gardens often support much higher densities of birds than open countryside, because of the amount and variety of food on offer.....we're on the edge of countryside with fields and woods....the seed and nut feeders are also a feeding station for the local sparrowhawk who takes a toll, but that's why blue tits have so many young....I can usually tell by the alarm calls when she's made a pass. Our garden birds sound similar to jayne's. Being close to the estuary means plenty of flyovers - the rule for the garden bird species list (currently standing at 80) is that you have to be in the garden when you see it.

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                • HighlandDougie
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 3131

                  #23
                  Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post
                  The Robins haven't started singing yet, always a true sign of autumn's cooling.
                  Alas, they have here in the north. About to flee back to the south where my winter will be greatly cheered by the song of one of my favourite birds, the blackcap, as well as the blackbirds stuffing themselves on the olives, which I'm much too lazy to pick (and I'm sure that the birds will derive a lot more pleasure than I would from some not very good oil).

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                  • doversoul1
                    Ex Member
                    • Dec 2010
                    • 7132

                    #24
                    I think this is the nearest to (I) Fagiolini we can grow in the UK. They did very well in my garden (the beans, that is)

                    Borlotto


                    Back to digging

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                    • jayne lee wilson
                      Banned
                      • Jul 2011
                      • 10711

                      #25
                      Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
                      Suburban gardens often support much higher densities of birds than open countryside, because of the amount and variety of food on offer.....we're on the edge of countryside with fields and woods....the seed and nut feeders are also a feeding station for the local sparrowhawk who takes a toll, but that's why blue tits have so many young....I can usually tell by the alarm calls when she's made a pass. Our garden birds sound similar to jayne's. Being close to the estuary means plenty of flyovers - the rule for the garden bird species list (currently standing at 80) is that you have to be in the garden when you see it.
                      80 sounds good - I never counted mine! I'll have a go later. No estuary to bump it up though, sea about 2 miles away. Sparrowhawks mainly terrorise the Ferals here (whose numbers reached 42 in the heat wave, about 25 daily now (8 residents). I heard a Robin at last in the deep dusk this evening - it must know what's coming later this week. I do see Blackcaps in the winter but they never sing here then...

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                      • Flosshilde
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 7988

                        #26
                        Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
                        From the title I expected this thread to be about birdsong and the like.
                        I did think of calling it 'Composing your garden', but thought that people might think it was a mis-type for 'composting'; 'Plants called after composers' sounded rather prosaically obvious, so I decided that 'How does your garden sound' would be more interesting & a nice play on 'How does your garden grow'. So could we get back on topic, please?

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                        • Beef Oven!
                          Ex-member
                          • Sep 2013
                          • 18147

                          #27
                          Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post

                          Has anyone else got plants named after composers (or any other musicians)?
                          I've got a Robert Plant.

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                          • teamsaint
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 25251

                            #28
                            Originally Posted by Flosshilde

                            Has anyone else got plants named after composers (or any other musicians)?



                            No, but with all the rain this summer, most of mine have been Berli oz'd.
                            Last edited by teamsaint; 07-10-13, 20:54.
                            I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.

                            I am not a number, I am a free man.

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                            • edashtav
                              Full Member
                              • Jul 2012
                              • 3676

                              #29
                              The musical saw has ruled our garden for a fortnight whilst 25 trees (including 20 in a rampant coniferous hedge) have been felled. It occurs to me that I don't know which composer first wrote a saw part for an orchestral work. Answers please ...

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                              • teamsaint
                                Full Member
                                • Nov 2010
                                • 25251

                                #30
                                Originally posted by edashtav View Post
                                The musical saw has ruled our garden for a fortnight whilst 25 trees (including 20 in a rampant coniferous hedge) have been felled. It occurs to me that I don't know which composer first wrote a saw part for an orchestral work. Answers please ...
                                well here is a tune featuring a saw though not orchestral. (track 12 Better home. )

                                Sorry can't find a link to listen to , but I have seen it played live this very year.
                                Lucy Farrell did the B and Q ing.
                                Last edited by teamsaint; 07-10-13, 20:47.
                                I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.

                                I am not a number, I am a free man.

                                Comment

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