Originally posted by Don Petter
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What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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hedgehog
Late this afternoon amazed at a little pied bird I spied under a car. It then flew up to my small front garden and I saw it was a very young magpie! This bird must have hatched early December, quite extraordinary. Very healthy looking.
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Richard Tarleton
Thanks for that Padraig - it looks as if you're getting the weather! The Glenshane Pass made the national news. My last black swans were on the Fleet, near Abbotsbury in Dorset - escapees of course but they liven up a dull day.
This is a typical scene on our nut feeder these days - there are 23 birds in this picture, including cut-off or partly obscured birds, and blurs - 14 blue tits, 8 long-tailed tits and a chaffinch. The long-tailed tits are likely to be a family group, not just a flock - they are a different family from the rest of the tits. There are 10 altogether in this group, I just haven't been able to capture them all at once.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThanks for that Padraig - it looks as if you're getting the weather! The Glenshane Pass made the national news. My last black swans were on the Fleet, near Abbotsbury in Dorset - escapees of course but they liven up a dull day.
This is a typical scene on our nut feeder these days - there are 23 birds in this picture, including cut-off or partly obscured birds, and blurs - 14 blue tits, 8 long-tailed tits and a chaffinch. The long-tailed tits are likely to be a family group, not just a flock - they are a different family from the rest of the tits. There are 10 altogether in this group, I just haven't been able to capture them all at once.
My grey squirrel has reappeared after - I can't remember how long ago, last Spring? and in spite of what you said, I enjoyed watching his antics this morning. One is fun.
Since I've already strayed from the bird table, here's another little leap from a furry friend.
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Here in central London nightingales are vocal in January dusks & through the wee small hours - problematical for insomniacs fortunate enough to have one warbling away outside the bedroom window. These, plus the blood-curdling screams of mating foxes, enliven our winter nights. Daytime in Regent's Park we spotted goldcrests in the yew trees at the Rose Wheel, tipped off by the local birder-posts, & a solitary Little Grebe plying his trade among the Tufties, herons and Greater Cresteds infesting the boating-lake...On Christmas Day a Greater-Spotted Woodpecker on Hampstead Heath...
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Maclintick View PostHere in central London nightingales are vocal in January dusks & through the wee small hours - ..
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Anna
I thought, from his post, that Maclintick must live in Berkeley square!
Not much to report here but I see a report on the dearth of sparrows in some places is linked to loft insulation, thereby denying them nesting places under the eaves (they are still the most numerous birds around here though) and a decline in greenfinches is thought to be connected with bird feeders not being properly cleaned. Think it was by British Ornithology Assoc (cannot find link now)
A date for your diary. The annual RSPB birdwatch is this coming weekend: https://www.rspb.org.uk/birdwatch/
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Anna View PostA date for your diary. The annual RSPB birdwatch is this coming weekend: https://www.rspb.org.uk/birdwatch/
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Saw a pair of Purple Sandpipers yesterday. They were perching then flying on a rocky coast on the Devon/Dorset border. We didn't know what they were at first because they looked a bit like knot or dunlin but the habitat and behaviour was all wrong. Luckily a local bird expert came to our aid. They are quite round little chaps, white below and dark on top, with orange-ish legs and a long bill that curves down very slightly. Very much at home dodging the waves.
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Richard Tarleton
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostHi Maclintick....erm....I think it's blackbirds that are keeping you awake! Any self-respecting nightingale is wintering in sub-Saharan Africa as we speak. Bill Oddie wrote about this problem - see here, The Phantom Nightingale, in his Introduction to Birdwatching. I blame Vera Lynn
I haven't seen a Purple Sandpiper for ages. I agree that they're cracking birds.
I have taken to throwing whole peanuts onto the lawn within easy reach of our hawthorn hedge. They tend to get gobbled up by the Magpies, but nevertheless they have attracted a flock of Chaffinches. Better than that, though, we have had several quick raids from a Jay. Being notoriously shy, it tends to be straight in and out within two or three seconds, but once it stayed long enough for me to get a photo through the window.
Away from the garden, I had a super half-hour session on Saturday with a Snow Bunting on the Exe Estuary. It's one of my favourite birds.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostYes, Nightingale is exclusively a summer visitor. For a winter night-time singer, Robin is even more likely than Blackbird, at least in my more southerly neck of the woods.
Away from the garden, I had a super half-hour session on Saturday with a Snow Bunting on the Exe Estuary. It's one of my favourite birds.
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