.....pygamy cupwing....nice little looker!!!....I want one
What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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[QUOTE=vinteuil;n1301667]
... I don't know your location, but that's a more impressive roll-call than we usually get here in Hammersmith!
Mind you, Merlin had something of a hiccup just now - it identified our usual roster of blackbirds, robin, parakeets &c - and then suddenly 'identified' a pygmy cupwing (Pnoepyga pusilla). Don't often see them in Shepherd's Bush...
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Although Merlin hears them but I haven't seen a Greenfinch, Chaffinch or Thrush in our garden for several years, the once-common Bullfinch has made one appearance here (S. Suffolk) in the last 10 years.
E]
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post.....pygamy cupwing....nice little looker!!!....I want oneEssentially a tiny brown tennis ball supported by tiny chopsticks.
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Originally posted by Padraig View PostAfter some years - Two turtle doves
Make that - Two collared doves.
My former workplace includes a farm which has been part of an initiative to encourage turtle doves for a good few years now, as they used to breed in the area.I did hear a pair calling about 8 years ago and understood just why the sound captures people's attention. Sadly there haven't even been any sightings, let alone breeding activity, for about 6 years.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
Better than 2 wood pigeons though. I've noticed round here that collared doves have become conspicuous by their absence the past 2 or 3 years. I know they are not native but I think they are engaging birds, and certainly much to be preferred to their hefty destroyer cousins. They are much better co-diners at bird tables too, not least due to altogether daintier build and much less pushy attitude.
My former workplace includes a farm which has been part of an initiative to encourage turtle doves for a good few years now, as they used to breed in the area.I did hear a pair calling about 8 years ago and understood just why the sound captures people's attention. Sadly there haven't even been any sightings, let alone breeding activity, for about 6 years.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Believe it or not, my father, in his later years, bought a pellet gun in order to shoot at the woodpigeons in the back garden. Mum would tell him "You won't get much of a meal out of one of those"! As far as I know he never used it. I think our Persian ginger tom cat had more success there on the meal front.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
Proper wood pigeons(ie not feral town pigeons) are substantial birds
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As kids growing up in the country, we were encouraged to destroy the nests of 'cushie-doos' - the local farmers didn't like them scarfing down their grain (but it did make for well-fed and well-flavoured birds). Only female sparrowhawks are large enough to prey on them and, even then, the weight of the bird in its claws is sometimes too much with the hawk being unable to take off. Not a pleasant sight to encounter outside one's front door but I'd rather it had been a wood pigeon than a blackbird.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Believe it or not, my father, in his later years, bought a pellet gun in order to shoot at the woodpigeons in the back garden. Mum would tell him "You won't get much of a meal out of one of those"!
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A couple of years back, I read 'Peregrine' by JA Baker. I believe he wrote the diaries over a number of years, following the peregrine in the south east of England in the fifties - it's a fascinating diary following Baker's obsessive hunt for this ace predator. I think I read that Werner Herzog called it one of the best books ever. On Saturday morning I heard David Attenborough read a five-part abridged version of the book on Radio 4 Extra. It was wonderful to revisit this extraordinary book.
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Toucans! The jungle surrounding the Mayan ruins at Palenque in Mexico is a home to them. Handsome birds with their extravagant bills, but they disappointingly croak, similar to crows. No sign of Guinness in any of the nearby watering holes. And in Durango, Condor’s, soaring on the thermals. We travelled to Mexico to witness the total eclipse, and were lucky to witness it perfect viewing conditions. The oft quoted effect on silencing birds at totality was evident. It is one of nature’s most remarkable and impressive spectacles. I fear I have joined the nerdy band of eclipse chasers.
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