Originally posted by kernelbogey
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What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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The two birds had no obvious signs of injury and were found in suspicious circumstances, police say.
Sorry for this.
On a brighter note 'my' Goldfinches have begun to return to the garden after they went on strike for two months. I inadvertently purchased 'peanut granules' instead of sunflower hearts and they flatly refused them. I got Starlings in their place but only while the granules lasted. Gradually the starlings departed and the Goldfinches returned when they forgave me.
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Originally posted by Padraig View Post
Originally posted by Padraig View Postand the Goldfinches returned when they forgave me.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostI’ve returned to the Scottish abode to discover two new - if temporary - residents. The walls in the house (built c.1835 in the Gothick style as the home farm for Taymouth Castle) are about 2.5 feet thick, with the occasional slit window, glazed at the inside end, allowing easy access from the outside. Ideal for a tawny owl. So two chicks growing apace, with maw and paw hooting and hollering during the night. Fortunately the room into which the window intrudes is a spare bedroom so they are not being disturbed. It is a bit like having ‘Springwatch’ on 24/7.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostMy two owlets have now fledged and left the nest, even at a relatively tender stage (a characteristic of tawny owls, it seems). I feel privileged, somehow, to have provided shelter/board and lodging for them. No shortage of field mice hereabouts for their supper.
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Not one but two birds of prey (Sparrowhawks?) spotting circling together above Arrow Valley North.
Incidentally, we now think the dearth of birds visiting our garden might simply have been neighbours putting stuff in their garden to entice birds. Whatever it was, we now have a steady appearance of several types, like we did before...
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostSwifts screaming over the village in the sunshine.
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Mrs C and I have been thoroughly enjoying using the Cornell Merlin app on our phones. For those unfamiliar with it one of its tools is like a bird Shazam...you point the phone in the direction of the bird sound and up pops the bird. One great bit is if you are listening and hearing four or five or more birds calling, the app lights up the relevant bird from your list so it helps distinguish which bird is calling when. I was lying awake a couple of nights ago and counted the birds that I had heard over the previous week within a mile of the house. The total came to almost forty; from the various finches; tits; corvids; and warblers. In the process I heard birds that I had no knowledge of in the area...goldcrest, whitethroat, blackcap, willow warbler - indeed this morning I saw my first ever goldcrest just 400 yards from the house. We also heard a cuckoo but it was too far away for the app to register it. My favourite app. One of my favourite moments was hearing a call in a tree...the app put up a picture of a long-tailed tit, I looked in the tree and there on the branch was the long-tailed tit staring back at me....
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostMrs C and I have been thoroughly enjoying using the Cornell Merlin app on our phones. For those unfamiliar with it one of its tools is like a bird Shazam...you point the phone in the direction of the bird sound and up pops the bird. One great bit is if you are listening and hearing four or five or more birds calling, the app lights up the relevant bird from your list so it helps distinguish which bird is calling when. I was lying awake a couple of nights ago and counted the birds that I had heard over the previous week within a mile of the house. The total came to almost forty; from the various finches; tits; corvids; and warblers. In the process I heard birds that I had no knowledge of in the area...goldcrest, whitethroat, blackcap, willow warbler - indeed this morning I saw my first ever goldcrest just 400 yards from the house. We also heard a cuckoo but it was too far away for the app to register it. My favourite app. One of my favourite moments was hearing a call in a tree...the app put up a picture of a long-tailed tit, I looked in the tree and there on the branch was the long-tailed tit staring back at me....
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I don't know if there is, or ought to be , a thread for moths we have seen. This heat wave has brought a chalk carpet and a grey birch into our house, the first of these, I am told found normally only in Southern England. I wondered if this is an effect of climate change. We may see more fauna moving north.
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostMrs C and I have been thoroughly enjoying using the Cornell Merlin app on our phones. For those unfamiliar with it one of its tools is like a bird Shazam...you point the phone in the direction of the bird sound and up pops the bird. One great bit is if you are listening and hearing four or five or more birds calling, the app lights up the relevant bird from your list so it helps distinguish which bird is calling when. I was lying awake a couple of nights ago and counted the birds that I had heard over the previous week within a mile of the house. The total came to almost forty; from the various finches; tits; corvids; and warblers. In the process I heard birds that I had no knowledge of in the area...goldcrest, whitethroat, blackcap, willow warbler - indeed this morning I saw my first ever goldcrest just 400 yards from the house. We also heard a cuckoo but it was too far away for the app to register it. My favourite app. One of my favourite moments was hearing a call in a tree...the app put up a picture of a long-tailed tit, I looked in the tree and there on the branch was the long-tailed tit staring back at me....
Is the app iOS only?
What's that bird? Ask Merlin—the world’s leading app for birds. Just like magic, Merlin Bird ID will help you solve the mystery. Merlin Bird ID helps you identify birds you see and hear. Merlin is unlike any other bird app—it's powered by eBird, the world’s largest database of bird sightings, sound…
Looks like it is available for Androids too ...
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Also looks as though the Cornell Bird App works with a pretty sizeable download file. I have had phones in the past which wouldn't take such a big file.
Currently trying to download the 633 Mbytes bird file - I hope this goes via our Internet connection, and not via the phone network - as that might bust my monthly usage.
Also I need to check whether it will all work - enough memory etc. Does seem to be OK, though a slow feed.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI don't know if there is, or ought to be , a thread for moths we have seen. This heat wave has brought a chalk carpet and a grey birch into our house, the first of these, I am told found normally only in Southern England. I wondered if this is an effect of climate change. We may see more fauna moving north.
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