10' from Song Thrush this morning....
What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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Pair of siskins on the feeders. Not that rare but first time in our garden for four years. (I keep notes & dates in our spotting guide in a mildly obsessive way).
It's the tawny owl that constantly evades us - never spotted, heard regularly though & definitely a pair (the male has a sweeter hoot y'know)
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Richard Tarleton
Good one for the RSPB garden birdwatch if you were doing that! Siskins a rare treat in our garden, they breed a few miles away in alder woodland. We have a tawny pair, but they seem to prefer pitch dark, I don't bother trying to see them, just nice knowing they're there....
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I love Siskins! They always turn up here in Spring, stay a few days, then gone. Last year one was joined, very unusually, by 3 Redpolls, 2 of them males in full summer plumage, all eating the sunflower hearts. Gone the next day as the Siskin remained.
On the mend, I braved the not-so-cold wind today to install the RSPB Squirrel Baffles and a new medium-size seed dispenser. Old tweed coat, hair flying, cat romping and climbing the apple trees. Life returns! The large transparent umbrella domes have an oddly space-age appearance, but we'll see how the birds take to them tomorrow. Quickly at ease, I would guess. The hooks the RSPB offer make hanging, and choosing a twig, very easy.
The sparrowhawks cause frequent "dreads" among the larger birds who often whoomph off the lawn having barely settled to eat. It tends to be a Great Tit that gives the alarm, but they don't always get it right. I imagine a rooftop dialogue, feral to feral:
"I was enjoying that!"
"Don't moan, that tit just saved your life."
"It was a SEAGULL, you idiot!"
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amateur51
As I was tottering home this afternoon around 16:00, the sky was still pale blue and I was listeing to the bird-song that has become more prevalent of late, mostly robins and tits. And then suddenly a squadron of five green long-tailed parakeets flew rapidly overhead making quite a racket - in fact I heard them before i saw them - and headed off in a South-easterly direction.
All very cheering as we enter the longest part of the Winter, I always feel.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Padraig View PostIn Glencullen
Thrush, linnet, stare and wren,
Brown lark beside the sun,
Take thought of kestrel, sparrow-hawk,
Birdlime and roving gun.
J.M Synge
Sadly the last line still the fate of millions of spring and autumn migrants around the Mediterranean.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostPadraig, what's a "stare"? Starling, by any chance?
Sadly the last line still the fate of millions of spring and autumn migrants around the Mediterranean.
I don't see many flocks now, though I still have a pair who visit the garden.
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