Anyone hear the Broadcasting House item about how to tell the difference between the songs of blackbird, thrush and mistle thrush? The blackbird received the Walther von Stolzing award. Sad to say, it's ages since since I saw or heard a mistle thrush in our garden.
What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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Mistle Thrushes are a daily sight and song here and we always have 1 or 2 pairs breeding nearby. Small groups in the winter with that racketing call overhead. Usually one of the first to start singing early in the year too, very distinctively shorter, differently pitched and more repetitive than a Blackbird. But how the song carries!
Song Thrushes, otherwise know as the Northern Nightingale, are, like House Sparrows, all but extinct here though, I'm lucky even to hear one singing in Spring and so far this year - none at all. Reversal from a few decades ago when to encounter Turdus Polaris - Missile Thrush was an exciting moment....
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostMistle Thrushes are a daily sight and song here and we always have 1 or 2 pairs breeding nearby. Small groups in the winter with that racketing call overhead. Usually one of the first to start singing early in the year too, very distinctively shorter, differently pitched and more repetitive than a Blackbird. But how the song carries!
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And, admittedly en France, a few hundred kilometres south of England, the first cuckoos heard this year
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostOne of my daughters, walking near Buttermere (Lake District) heard cuckoos just this weekend. She sent an audio clip to prove it! It seems they are preferring the North. None heard in my Devon location for several years...though there's always some on the Isles of Scilly.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post
Song Thrushes, otherwise know as the Northern Nightingale,
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Originally posted by Vespare View Post....Another report of a cuckoo - the first time I've heard one in 20 years of living in my present rural situation, Hertfordshire.
Used to hear them very regularly in North Kent 50 years or so ago.....
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I'm fortunate to have a good selection of small birds, decorative or otherwise, in my garden, but the jewels are definitely the goldfinches. It's impossible to remain down when they are flitting around flashing their colours and making that wonderful joyous song. I can see why they were so popular as cagebirds.
Today I have quite a lot of starlings on the grass - family groups I would guess as there are some young ones squawking for food. Several of the adults have located a couple of ant nests and are indulging themselves. I remember some years ago a friend being very concerned at what she thought were sick birds on her lawn - lying around with wings at odd angles - that promptly flew away when she went out to investigate. Dustbathing is another behaviour that can cause concern - especially for novice chicken keepers - as the birds lie there apparently dazed.
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We were in Trieste last week and visited the castle high above the city, there we heard what I took to be nightingales singing their heads off in the trees but were they? I couldn't catch sight of them except for one that looked too big to be a nightingale and to my very imperfect eyes seemed too have a white chest, any suggestions as to what it might have been?
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A few evenings ago, the Overground train I was travelling on pulled in to Hoxton station, and the doors opened to a chorus of blackbird song. The towers of various shapes crowd the City, just a short distance away, but of our song birds the blackbirds always seemed the most at home in the middle of London, even in my bomb site-strewn childhood; and sycamore trees are in abundance in the vicinity of Hoxton. Today I heard a number of song thrushes in the wild seminatural landscapes that line the Ravensbourne, not far from here.
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... of course I love birds. To look at.
But in recent days...
Three o'clock in the morning it seems relentless. In the gardens between these west London terraces we have (to my untrained ears) - chattering magpies - alarm calls of blackbirds (there is a tree with a nest just outside the bedroom window) - the bicycle pump noise of a great tit (I think).
So LOUD!
I'm a forgiving sort of chap, but a week more of this....
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