Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt was being said on the radio this morning that the cold, wet spring had dislodged a large percentage of the caterpillars from leaves and branches that would otherwise have provided birds' food; but I would imagine the plentiful supply of slugs and snails associated with the recent rain and humidity would have helped make up for that shortage.
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Thankfully the usual summer indie-creches of this year's Blue, Longtailed and Great Tits are as populous as ever here, rampaging through dispensers of seed, suet and nibbles, sometimes getting muscled out by wildly noisy Jackdaws.... time to deal with those big RSPB boxes on the step again now... so heavy I have to cut them open in situ and drag the bags through.
As for mess from the Martins, I wish! Try living with resident Ferals... real bucket-water-shovel job that one, several times a year (at least it should be...). But I know them individually & wouldn't want to lose the friendly things. If I'm late with their grain they come and peer in at the kitchen.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 27-06-16, 16:31.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI can't think why anybody would want to destroy a house martin nest, as they're on the outside of the house??
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fhg
Thanks for the audio links. Those swifts are really quite unpleasant to listen to - very high pitched, and really rather loud. Do not listen on headphones with the volume turned up!
The others are not great either.Not particularly tuneful any of them. Mostly I think we hear the chattering sound of magpies round here, and the occasional blackbird. I've not heard the roof birds for a day or two. It didn't seem to me that any of the sound files matched the birds I could hear. If they come back I'll try to grab a recording.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Dave2002 View Postfhg
Those swifts are really quite unpleasant to listen to - very high pitched, and really rather loud.
The subjects of one of the classics of ornithological literature, David Lack's Swifts in a Tower (1956), about the swifts in the Natural History Museum in Oxford....
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostScreaming swifts a marvellous sound - coupled with their dramatic "screaming party" behaviour as they whoosh around the buildings where they nest. They live such extraordinary lives, and are with us for such a short time - spending 80% of their lives on the wing....
The subjects of one of the classics of ornithological literature, David Lack's Swifts in a Tower (1956), about the swifts in the Natural History Museum in Oxford....
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostScreaming swifts a marvellous sound - coupled with their dramatic "screaming party" behaviour as they whoosh around the buildings where they nest. They live such extraordinary lives, and are with us for such a short time - spending 80% of their lives on the wing....
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Garden very quiet currently. Over the last month or so a dwindle of bird activity, though all my usual visitors have made an occasional appearance. Regular patrols by the sparrowhawk, and two bundles of feathers - magpie and blackbird - discovered. My two squirrels are still active, a hedgehog was spotted once and a fox poked his head through the trees one evening in June. Various cats are chased when seen.
On the news today:
Residents in a County Fermanagh village express anger at the "heartless act" of a driver who killed five cygnets.
Afterthought:
Since his precise, potent and subtle portraits of Northern Irish life first came to public attention in the 1970s, Tom Paulin has been an unmissable writer on the contemporary poetry scene. This selection on his work draws on nearly four decades of poetry and translation, updating and expanding upon the Selected Poems 1972-1990, and showcasing the microscopic detail and reinvention of the ordinary with which Paulin writes of place, culture and memory. The Ireland of Paulin's childhood is explored both from a personal and a historical perspective to form a complex picture of a country in turmoil and in recovery. But Paulin's concerns are as international as they are local, as reflected in his long-standing appetite for European writers, histories and languages. Dialectic and lyrical, original and exploratory, ambitious and provocative, Tom Paulin is one of the defining voices of his generation: brilliantly varied and utterly compelling, as apparent from this New Selected Poems.Last edited by Padraig; 08-07-16, 14:15.
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I had a new garden tick the other day, a Willow Warbler in our apple tree. It was really reluctant to show itself and I had to take some photos to be absolutely sure it wasn't a Chiffchaff, a species that we do see here from time to time. Our female Blackbird still appears occasionally and is growing a new tail, having lost her previous one at the beginning in May, probably due to some feather condition. She still has a slimy looking head though.
I've recently bought a copy of this new book and am quite impressed. I don't normally like photographic guides, but this one really works owing to the care that has been taken over the sourcing of photos to ensure that birds are compared in similar poses and lighting. I think the book could be a bit confusing for an absolute beginner, but for someone who knows their basic birds and wants to develop more critical faculties it ought to be very helpful. I certainly learnt new things.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostI've recently bought a copy of this new book and am quite impressed. I don't normally like photographic guides, but this one really works owing to the care that has been taken over the sourcing of photos to ensure that birds are compared in similar poses and lighting. I think the book could be a bit confusing for an absolute beginner, but for someone who knows their basic birds and wants to develop more critical faculties it ought to be very helpful. I certainly learnt new things.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostGood to hear your endorsement - I heard Rob Hume and a bird artist (can't remember who) being interviewed on the Today programme this morning at about 8.20 - the gist of Rob Hume's contribution being that the photos in the book do what the bird artist was saying only artist-drawn illustrations could do.....Sounds a useful complement to the Collins Bird Guide, with illustrations by Dan Zetterstrom and Killian Mullarney, currently the last word in field guides.
Thanks for the link to the Today programme. If you haven't heard it already, there's an interesting, hour-long podcast here (second item down) where Rob Hume and Andy Swash talk about the book.
Edit: I have to add that, considering that the book is too thick and hefty to be called a field guide - it's more of a glove compartment guide - I think it's brilliant value for money, particularly at the current going price (the RRP is £19.95 and even that is a bargain).Last edited by Vox Humana; 15-08-16, 18:27.
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Interesting incident while I was doing my voluntary gardening stint today. A rumpus in a flowerbed 3 ft away from me erupted into a small(last year's hatch I would guess) frog hopping at speed across the path, squealing loudly, and pursued by a teenage blackbird determined to catch it. Rightly or wrongly I decided to intervene as there was plenty of food available for the blackbird due to the gardening activities, and frogs are relatively scarce in the gardens - lots of newts and toads but not frogs - so the blackbird was directed away while the frog buried itself in the box hedging to catch its breath. The other gardener with me was gobsmacked by the noise the frog made, not having known they could, but I was intrigued by the determination of the bird and wondered if it was opportunism or if it had already sampled frog's legs(!). Sadly I knew about screaming frogs and toads from a previous garden and neighbour's cats.
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