Originally posted by Vox Humana
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What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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Richard Tarleton
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Change of tack. When Tom Service starts up I usually shut down. But in a R3 trailer just now [I switched on for the Finzi] I heard him blurt that the number of puffins in Iceland is between 8 - 10 million. Oh. I thought they were in serious decline.
There are signs that the puffin stock in Iceland is at great risk again this year. According to biologist Erpur Snær Hansen, who recently returned from a research trip around the country, studying the condition of puffins and other sea birds, there is a collapse of the puffin stock in Iceland. “This is the twelfth year in a row that breeding does not go well in Vestmannaeyjar (the Westman Islands),” he said.
There were an estimated eight million puffins in Iceland in 2003 but that number has dropped to around five million, a 37 percent decrease. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) compiles a list of threatened species known as the Red List using criteria such as a decrease in a species’ stock of 30 percent or more within a decade. “The young birds, which are the birds people catch when puffin hunting, are virtually gone in three quarters of the population,” Erpur added.
Erpur continued by saying that there are periods of warm weather at 70-year intervals. During the warmer periods, the baitfish stock, which puffins feed on, collapses. “Now such a period is ongoing but there is also a change in the temperature of the ocean, which is caused by humans.”
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostMaybe Birding Pals have someone local to you who would be wiling to help. This network was set up with international travellers in mind, but there's no harm in asking.
I wasn't aware of that website.
It's very good but unfortunately there is no one near to me.
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBecause people no longer hitch lifts? - I've no idea if that's true, not having motorwayed my way for quite a few years, btw.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostThey probably don't hitch. I have never hitched.
The second car that came along stopped - it was a beat-up van, driven by a young shepherd with his dog - an itinerant shepherd who minded flocks in the high mountains during the summer. He was collecting a sheepdog pup in the village where I was headed. For the length of the drive, I had the most fascinating insight into the life of the shepherd, the history of the brébis sheep, etc., testing my French, and when we arrived at St Etienne sur Tinée we had a coffee in the square with the person he was meeting. One of those perfect encounters.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI hitched loads in the 1970s, and to ensure good karma gave lifts when in a position to do so - and had lots of positive encounters. I haven't done either in a long time - except in 2003, on one of my Alpine walking trips - when I had some bad blisters (before I definitively cracked this problem) - I hitched a lift over the Col de la Bonette, the highest road pass in Europe, meeting up with my companions in the next valley.
The second car that came along stopped - it was a beat-up van, driven by a young shepherd with his dog - an itinerant shepherd who minded flocks in the high mountains during the summer. He was collecting a sheepdog pup in the village where I was headed. For the length of the drive, I had the most fascinating insight into the life of the shepherd, the history of the brébis sheep, etc., testing my French, and when we arrived at St Etienne sur Tinée we had a coffee in the square with the person he was meeting. One of those perfect encounters.
Thank you very much.
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I'm tempted to post "I caught this morning morning's mini-PARROT !" -- cheered by a solitary goldfinch nibbling doggedly at the edges of the lawn & brightening a dull dawn, an almost-tropical mirage resplendent with red crest & yellow wing flashes -- vibrant splashes of colour, a harbinger of warmer days, one hopes. By the time I'd fished out the bins, he'd scarpered.
A recent news item reporting the successful reintroduction of cranes to East Anglia made us itch to head eastwards.We've seen these magnificent birds on their Swedish migratory stopover Lake Hornbörga, where the wardens seed tons of potatoes in the squishy margins of the lake to revive them after the punishing flight from Spain, where they overwinter -- on our last visit there were 14,000. It's worth keeping an eye on the webcams in March -- offline currently.
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Having problems with the local garden bird population in this Arctic weather.
The local Sainsbury quickly sold out of Wild Bird seed food, so I had to buy more expensive high energy seed. However, touring the garden this morning, there had been few takers for this bionic stuff. My conclusion is they had turned their noses up and would rather freeze and starve!
How's that for a come-uppance?
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Richard Tarleton
Better value to order it in bulk from the RSPB or as I do from CJ Wildlife - the latter's Hi energy Seed and peanuts are disappearing from our feeders at an alarming rate.
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This morning a large group of what I took to be oystercatchers feeding on the large expanse of grass close to the road, which I have never seen them do previously, rather than the marsh. They were nearly all black (couldn't see any white) with orange beaks. I'm not sure what else they could be.Last edited by Stanfordian; 02-03-18, 16:52.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI hitched loads in the 1970s, and to ensure good karma gave lifts when in a position to do so - and had lots of positive encounters. I haven't done either in a long time - except in 2003, on one of my Alpine walking trips - when I had some bad blisters (before I definitively cracked this problem) - I hitched a lift over the Col de la Bonette, the highest road pass in Europe, meeting up with my companions in the next valley.
The second car that came along stopped - it was a beat-up van, driven by a young shepherd with his dog - an itinerant shepherd who minded flocks in the high mountains during the summer. He was collecting a sheepdog pup in the village where I was headed. For the length of the drive, I had the most fascinating insight into the life of the shepherd, the history of the brébis sheep, etc., testing my French, and when we arrived at St Etienne sur Tinée we had a coffee in the square with the person he was meeting. One of those perfect encounters.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostBetter value to order it in bulk from the RSPB or as I do from CJ Wildlife - the latter's Hi energy Seed and peanuts are disappearing from our feeders at an alarming rate.
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