The first yellowhammer has arrived.
What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostIn my garden on the west coast of Lancashire I saw a bird that I've never ever seen here before. I'm struggling to identify it but the
nearest I can get to an picture in my reference book of it is a female white wagtail. I was stuck by the length of the tail.
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... there were three trotty wagtails just outside our house in the street this morning.
Little trotty wagtail he went in the rain
And tittering tottering sideways he near got straight again
He stooped to get a worm and look’d up to catch a fly
And then he flew away e’re his feathers they were dry
Little trotty wagtail he waddled in the mud
And left his little foot marks trample where he would
He waddled in the water pudge and waggle went his tail
And chirrupt up his wings to dry upon the garden rail
Little trotty wagtail you nimble all about
And in the dimpling water pudge you waddle in and out
Your home is nigh at hand and in the warm pigsty
So little Master Wagtail I’ll bid you a ‘Good bye’
John Clare [1793-1864]
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostIf it had a long tail and wasn't a parakeet there's really nothing else it can be other than a wagtail or a Long-tailed Tit. White Wagtail (the continental race of our Pied Wagtail) would be unusual this early in the year (we tend to get them during migration), so I'd put my money on a female Pied Wagtail.
What was the call? Pied wagtais a pleasing "Chiswick, Chiswick"
Our pied wagtails Motacilla alba yarrellii but a subspieces of the nominate continental race M.a. alba - a member of another subspecies from central Asia/N India caused a bit of a stir hereabouts recently.
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Richard Tarleton
Indeed, a useful list. That, and the poem, underline how important what the bird was doing and where you saw it are to i/d - whereas people who have seen mystery birds normally start by trying to tell you what colour it was. As Bill Oddie says, it's usually a jay - unless it's on a vicarage lawn, when it might be a hoopoe. The older bird books partly to blame - illustrations in the old days usually limited to neat profiles, until bird artists like Peter Hayman (see his 1975 Mitchell Beazley guide) reminded us that birds are usually flying away from you when you see them, and illustrated them accordingly. And then artists like John Busby and Eric Ennion captured birds in a few dramatic brushstokes - catching that hard-to-define quality of jizz which birders talk about. Nowadays the Collins Bird Guide (Svenson, Zetterstrom and Mullarney) for Europe, and RSPB British birds (Holden and Cleeves) probably the best to have on your windowsill.
This was the scene in the field next to my house yesterday - 14 of them altogether, hanging out with the cattle. I saw my first little egret in Mallorca in 1982, before their invasion of the UK, now I can see them from my front door
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Everything appears to be later than last year here in London - temperatures have generally been a few degrees below seasonal norms. The first snowdrops have started to flower, but no signs of crocus, let alone daffs, and neither song thrush nor blackbirds yet heard. At one time the latter would have been the norm - we used to say that blackbirds and song thrushes start their singing in the second week of February, but lately this has been known to happen in January or even before Christmas!
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThey weren't cattle egrets by any chance? I can't tell from the picture (little egrets have yellow feet) but apparently cattle egrets are now appearing in S-England, just as little egrets did 25 years ago.
https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wi...c/cattleegret/
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Lovely thread.
I have been training my mind to listen to birdsong when I wake up and on any early morning walk. This is calming but it also feels a bit strange and slightly ill. Not sure where that connotation arose and it is nonsensical. I am leaving the madness of the morning news and aren't there a million members of the RSPB? It would probably feel regular if I could identify these birds from what I hear (I can't) and see them in the trees (which isn't always the case). But I do like pure sound that isn't hampered by anything like knowledge. And I do know some things. I know I've seen a blackbird in these the very outer suburbs and there is an extraordinary number of seagulls around here. They must be inland seagulls.
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Richard Tarleton
If you did feel like taking it further, lat, now is the time of year to get to grips with birdsong, when it's possible to catch a glimpse of the chanteurs - it's not hard to get on top of our resident birds, several species already singing well, before all the spring migrants arrive to confuse things, and the leaves come on the trees to hide them. There are a few useful mnemonics which help......
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostIf you did feel like taking it further, lat, now is the time of year to get to grips with birdsong, when it's possible to catch a glimpse of the chanteurs - it's not hard to get on top of our resident birds, several species already singing well, before all the spring migrants arrive to confuse things, and the leaves come on the trees to hide them. There are a few useful mnemonics which help......
Also, does a CD of birdsong help - I have one but have never absorbed it.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostI would like the useful mnemonics.
Also, does a CD of birdsong help - I have one but have never absorbed it.
Song thrush - lots of different phrases, but everything repeated 2-3 times
Robin - inconclusive thread of melody
Chaffinch - chirrup-chirrup-chirrup-chirrup-sowayyyooo (NB chaffinches have local accents)
Wren - trill ending in metallic buzz......
That sort of thing - there are plenty more
I like the BTO CD "Learning Bird Songs and Calls" but there are several others - BBC, British Library....CDs useful for checking something you've heard, rather than trying to learn them in advance.
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