Originally posted by ardcarp
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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 PostFoxes yes! - but not birds as such, although I've seen blackbirds fanning out their wings as they lie motionless on their tummies in hot sunshine. Perhaps they're sunbathing?
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostMight be anting - that's what they do on my lawn. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anting_(behavior)
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Very fast birds - probably swallows - but could also have been swifts - which came to practice aerial bombardment around our house late yesterday afternoon. Most probably were swallows - as I believe that swifts can't perch on wires or ridges - though maybe they can simply flop down on roof tiles. Several flew straight at me, but diverted at the last second. I'm still trying to get good photos of these birds - particularly in flight. Very difficult.
I'm also not sure if swallows and swifts mix - if they don't that sways the classification towards swallows. There were many of them - often in the air at the same time.
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A couple of weeks ago the swifts at work were doing a mass display - swooping, diving and screaming all at high velocity - round the courtyard which is flanked on two sides by high buildings which magnify the sound and the activity. I reckoned they would be gone shortly as it seems to be a precursor to the seasonal departure. Sure enough a couple of days later all was quiet.
Very few swifts nested in my road this year, although there have been no significant changes(reroofing, although the design of the roof profile and the use of pantiles means that such work doesn't usually cause problems) that would have kept them away so I assume their absence is part of the general decline. When they did the pre-departure displays it was always a bit disconcerting as the combination of narrow road and blocks of terrace housing makes for a canyon effect through which they'd hurtle in a kind of avian Red Bull air race, not keeping above head height or at any distance from any humans around.
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Has anyone else experienced a steep decline in the number of garden birds in the last month or two ? Our regular blackbirds, tits, dunnocks & so on have all but disappeared. We wondered if this was due to many of them having succumbed in the July drought, but recently worrying reports of avian 'flu have begun to circulate. On our country walk yesterday the trees and hedgerows were eerily silent..
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Plenty of twittering here in the SW. Which region are you in, Mac? One unusual sight yesterday was a sky (cloudless) full of swallows all flying about high up and randomly as if they didn't know what they were doing. It may of course just have been caused by an abundance of flying insects. However one expects them to be lined up on telephone wires waiting to go off to warmer climes. Maybe the unusually hot weather has made them linger longer, perhaps worrying about climate change?
Irrelevant PS. Got a really good sighting of a kingdfisher following the course of a local stream. A dipper there too.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostPlenty of twittering here in the SW. Which region are you in, Mac? One unusual sight yesterday was a sky (cloudless) full of swallows all flying about high up and randomly as if they didn't know what they were doing. It may of course just have been caused by an abundance of flying insects. However one expects them to be lined up on telephone wires waiting to go off to warmer climes. Maybe the unusually hot weather has made them linger longer, perhaps worrying about climate change?
Irrelevant PS. Got a really good sighting of a kingdfisher following the course of a local stream. A dipper there too.Last edited by ardcarp; 22-09-22, 22:01.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostPlenty of twittering here in the SW. Which region are you in, Mac?
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Buzzards doing their periodic cruising of the thermals the past few days - mostly just a pair, so I'm wondering if the younger members of the group that is often around have finally moved on to pastures new. I'm not sure if the pair in the wood at work bred this year as we didn't either hear or see any youngsters, and normally they are very much in evidence on both counts.
The various gulls/terns/seabirds all seem to have moved away and the sky's chorus has changed as a result. Unusual for them all to go in such a short space of time; the oystercatchers often go away quite soon after the youngsters are flying well, but there are usually small numbers of other birds staying around, at least on a part-time basis.
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