No Goldfinches on the Nyger here now. Left uneaten - like last year post-breeding season. But there are very few Goldfinches here at all, and the occasional visitor tends to choose the larger sunflower dispensers, probably because of the lack of other finches to compete with. Any bird feeding from a variety of sources will pick the easiest, and it is easier to extract the sunflower. In July and August there is an abundance of natural food too. The weather this year has been fairly kind to insects, grass seedheads are ripe and numerous (I left the orchard grasses wild save for a path cut through).
Out in the country now, and in the scrubby dunes near the estuary, flocks of finches gather to feed on such sources. They'll come back to us, and the Goldfinches to the Nyger too, when the cold starts to bite.
A slow, quiet time in the garden. The dawn chorus is over.
Jackdaws are almost silent now, just a few family groups come once or twice daily for bread and seed, with a brief flurry of calls. Our resident, semi-tame Carrion Crow ("Corby") remains, and the loyal, friendly ferals, around 20, of which 3 pairs live on the house. The only regular activity comes from Tits: Blue, Great, Coal and Long-tailed, family groups of 7 or 8, calling as they move from station to station, feeding as they go.
Out in the country now, and in the scrubby dunes near the estuary, flocks of finches gather to feed on such sources. They'll come back to us, and the Goldfinches to the Nyger too, when the cold starts to bite.
A slow, quiet time in the garden. The dawn chorus is over.
Jackdaws are almost silent now, just a few family groups come once or twice daily for bread and seed, with a brief flurry of calls. Our resident, semi-tame Carrion Crow ("Corby") remains, and the loyal, friendly ferals, around 20, of which 3 pairs live on the house. The only regular activity comes from Tits: Blue, Great, Coal and Long-tailed, family groups of 7 or 8, calling as they move from station to station, feeding as they go.
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