What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostOn the Fylde Coast, seabirds aside, as a child (around 45 years ago) I rememember many sparrows, thrushes and starlings in the garden, fieds and woods. Now I see very few of those and see group upon group of crow faily members but I'm not sure if they are crows, ravens, jackdaws, rooks? I guess they might be jackdaws!
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostWell this really is a sign of global warming. In East Devon at Seaton Marshes, observed from the Black Hole Hide, 2 glossy ibises (ibi?) have been around for a day or so. Just off to see if I can spot them before dark...but it's foggy.....
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostWell this really is a sign of global warming. In East Devon at Seaton Marshes, observed from the Black Hole Hide, 2 glossy ibises (ibi?) have been around for a day or so. Just off to see if I can spot them before dark...but it's foggy.....
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Being rather keen on North American birds, I shall regularly be visiting this webcam in Northern Ontario that has just returned online (it only functions during the winter). It's normally very good for Evening and Pine Grosbeaks and, in some years, Redpolls (including Hoary). Ruffed Grouse may drop in briefly at dusk too. Today I have only seen a couple of Blue Jays, two Black-capped Chickadees and a flock of up to nine Evening Grosbeaks, but the winter's still early.
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I'm not much of a bird-watcher so please excuse my stumbling onto this thread.
Mrs LMP reported an odd sighting in Looe harbour a week or so ago: a seagull apparently trying to drown a buzzard. Alas, she didn't see the beginning of the combat, just the gull with a firm grip of the buzzard and forcing it under the water. The buzzard fought the good fight and escaped. It didn't however leg it as fast as possible but continued to swoop over Looe harbour/ river estuary.
I was a bit surprised that a sodden buzzard would be able to fly at all, but online there is a report of a very well-soaked buzzard escaping from the Port of London river police by the aerial route. There are also a good few reports and videos of gulls attacking buzzards in the air, but none so far spotted of attempted total-immersion baptisms(Fundamentalist seagulls???
)
Any comparable sightings please???I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostBeing rather keen on North American birds, I shall regularly be visiting this webcam in Northern Ontario that has just returned online (it only functions during the winter). It's normally very good for Evening and Pine Grosbeaks and, in some years, Redpolls (including Hoary). Ruffed Grouse may drop in briefly at dusk too. Today I have only seen a couple of Blue Jays, two Black-capped Chickadees and a flock of up to nine Evening Grosbeaks, but the winter's still early.
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostI'm not much of a bird-watcher so please excuse my stumbling onto this thread.
Mrs LMP reported an odd sighting in Looe harbour a week or so ago: a seagull apparently trying to drown a buzzard. Alas, she didn't see the beginning of the combat, just the gull with a firm grip of the buzzard and forcing it under the water. The buzzard fought the good fight and escaped. It didn't however leg it as fast as possible but continued to swoop over Looe harbour/ river estuary.
I was a bit surprised that a sodden buzzard would be able to fly at all, but online there is a report of a very well-soaked buzzard escaping from the Port of London river police by the aerial route. There are also a good few reports and videos of gulls attacking buzzards in the air, but none so far spotted of attempted total-immersion baptisms(Fundamentalist seagulls???
)
Any comparable sightings please???
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThere was a bird on the tray when I first looked at the webcam, but now it's a bit boring. Maybe there's a way of keeping an eye on it while doing other things. Actually the blue bird with the strange white marks on its back does come back from time to time, and there was, very briefly what looked like a small grey bird a bit further out.
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That's really interesting! I've never seen a gull down a Buzzard.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThere was a bird on the tray when I first looked at the webcam, but now it's a bit boring. Maybe there's a way of keeping an eye on it while doing other things. Actually the blue bird with the strange white marks on its back does come back from time to time, and there was, very briefly what looked like a small grey bird a bit further out.
And we have live Autumnwatch cam from Scotland this week
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[QUOTE=Lento;517336]Cornell is also quite fun: Ithaca NY
This one's good, isn't it? I have just dipped in for a quarter of an hour and seen 2 Blue Jays, 2 Tufted Titmice, a Black-capped Chickadee, 3 American Goldfinches, Mourning Dove, Downy Woodpecker and 2 Red-winged Blackbirds. Oh, and some Canada Geese.
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