Have just got back into Bird Watching after many years, finding it a very relaxing hobby and an important part of my mental recovery. I used to do a lot of 20-25 years ago and saw many good and rare birds. Largely gave it up due to the very unpleasant and cliquey attitude of twitchers the Suffolk ones so annoyed me that I witheld my sightings of two Grey Phalaropes at Blythburgh and the biggest prize of all, a Black Woodpecker (not officially recorded in the UK), which I saw when preparing the wicket at my local cricket club in the north of Lowestoft. I had a good view of it and the flight call was what made me look up in the first place, big bird it was too much bigger than a Green Woodpecker. Hope to get out some more, with plenty of reserves in my neck of the woods and other sights I know of, this part of the UK is certainly a Bird Watchers heaven.
What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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Good for you Suffolks. What a sight, the black woodpecker!
On the subject of cuckoos, they were recently quite abundant in the West Country, but have sadly declined very rapidly. A friend heard one the other day, but alas the Ardcarp family has not. They still seem pretty full-on in the Isles of Scilly...you even see them. But haven't made my pelerinage yet this year. I reckon the decline is more to do with what happens in their African wintering grounds than habitat/host problems over here.Last edited by ardcarp; 20-05-14, 20:42.
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View Posta Black Woodpecker
I thought I was doing well in the Park the other day when in the sunshine on one of the trees just west of the Lancaster Gate entrance, there were sitting two plump bluejays and a green woodpecker. All very colourful and exotic-seeming compared with the standard issue monochrome pigeons and magpies...
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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I've heard and seen Cuckoos at all three reserves I've visited in the last couple of weeks, (Strumpshaw Fen, Carlton Marshes & Minsmere), but they have certainly declined in number. A number of other birds I used to see regularly are seemingly less common, like Greenfinch, Yellowhammer, Skylark & Meadow Pipit and I haven't seen a Marsh or Willow Tit for years.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostYesterday was accursed as one of the swallows which had seemed to be about to rebuild a nest which they last inhabited about 10 years ago flew into a window and broke its neck. Duly buried in the garden which has otherwise seen the return of willow warblers, garden warblers and blackcaps, all singing their heads off. The osprey which normally visits the pond on the neighbouring farm up to three times a day (stocked with trout and carp - or, at least, it was) not in evidence this year, alas.
Here is an article about birds colliding with windows, and it suggests that the problems mostly affect migrating birds - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-27426866
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Lovely late afternoon/early evening at Titchwell yesterday. Some good birds seen including, Spoonbill, Little Egret, Red Crested Pochard, Bearded Tit and Grey Plovers in breeding plumage. I've only seen the latter in winter before, when they are non-distinct, but in breeding plumage they are quite a stunning bird.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostLovely late afternoon/early evening at Titchwell yesterday. Some good birds seen including, Spoonbill, Little Egret, Red Crested Pochard, Bearded Tit and Grey Plovers in breeding plumage. I've only seen the latter in winter before, when they are non-distinct, but in breeding plumage they are quite a stunning bird.
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[QUOTE=SuffolkcoastalGrey Plovers in breeding plumage[/QUOTE]
I know they are called Grey Plovers, but it seems like a misnomer in the breeding season!
Youtube Slimbridge video link below; Grey Plovers at 4' 23".
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Like that description RT and I can see exactly what they mean. There were also a couple of Golden Plovers with them and they provided a great contrast. Hoping to possibly pop over to Lakenheath tomorrow weather permitting. I like to get to any reserves around 3.30-4ish just as the numbers of birdwatchers are starting to drop, and stay till around 6-7.
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A pair of swallows/swifts/housemartins has made a nest on the (outside!) air vent of my study. They're chirruping at me quite contentedly as I write and seem to be enjoying the HM Lumieres box quite as much as I do. The very real joy their sound brings is slightly tempered by my concern that, if they bung up the air vent completely (which they haven't so far) will this create problems for the house? (They don't seem to be coming into the vent, just using the ridges as a platform to build their nest.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Anna
Probably house martins ferney? I've just found that it's seen as a lucky bird perhaps because the martin has been viewed in the Christian faith as serving God, being God's 'bow and arrow'. Not so lucky if it does bung up your vents!
The other evening, after a heavy downpour, a woodpecker methodically going along the grass pecking and feeding, (actually quite a good thing I suppose as it aerates the grass as it goes?) Also, I notice a rare visitor (to my garden, not to others) of a bullfinch, so lovely and bright. The colony of sparrows are still very active nest building up under the tiles of the roof
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Anna View PostThe other evening, after a heavy downpour, a woodpecker methodically going along the grass pecking and feeding
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