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BS: Birdwatching 2021?

27 Jan 21 - 08:55 PM (#4090279)
Subject: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: keberoxu

Maybe this year --
and this year's bald eagles --
merit their own birdwatching thread?   

It's been a long time, I would guess,
since Maeve lived in a yurt ...


28 Jan 21 - 02:24 PM (#4090378)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: EBarnacle

As I mentioned in the other thread, there is a Bald Eagle nest about 15 or so miles from here. It was a shock, though to see one flying low above my local supermarket with prey in tow. I guess there is more than one way to shop.


28 Jan 21 - 07:57 PM (#4090414)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: gillymor

Two eagle encounters in the last 3 weeks. Driving east on a local road here in the burbs I stopped for a red light and saw one circle overhead and disappear behind the palms on the median. I started up and suddenly the bird was coming straight at me, talons down, getting read to snatch some road kill. He decided not to chance it with my truck and was gone in the blink of an eye.
Hiking along a canal Sunday morning I saw a big one in a tree across the water. Got some good pix of it perched but as soon as I lowered my camera it took off after a red shouldered hawk that was tearing down the canal.


28 Jan 21 - 08:57 PM (#4090424)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Joe Offer

Last Saturday, we went looking for Sandhill Cranes on Staten Island in the Sacramento River Delta. It was an amazing experience. I got photos of huge flocks flying up at sunset in front of Mount Diablo. More later.
-Joe-


29 Jan 21 - 11:54 PM (#4090608)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Donuel

Maybe this is not the most appropriate place to discuss the birds and the bees
but they are disappearing at an alarming rate :^/


30 Jan 21 - 02:49 PM (#4090719)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Stilly River Sage

The several-hundred acre wood across the road from me has been reduced to about 50, and along with that reduction came a "clean-up" that removed a lot of undergrowth habitat. I don't see or hear nearly as many birds as I used to. That said, I resolved earlier this year on a walk through that area with the dogs that I need to make a few camera expeditions over there, especially early and late in the day, to see what is moving around and singing.

I have a friend from the neighborhood whose daughters are modern young women, on the surface seemed fairly self-centered, mostly interested in cosmetics and fashion, and I never really had much in common with them on our rare visits at their mother's house. But one of them has become a break-out bird photographer in the last year or so, and I'm impressed with her dedication to traveling around the region to various parks and sanctuaries to get more photos. It shows an appreciation for the world and conditions around her, and I am hoping that I simply misread the young women's behavior and they're all going to blossom into acute observers of the world. Birds are a fabulous first step. :)


30 Jan 21 - 05:52 PM (#4090752)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

I have done my RSPB count and sent it in.

One or two more than normal this year, I think it is to do with an uncommon wind direction meaning that the field below us is more attractive a feeding ground than usual.

Robin


31 Jan 21 - 07:47 PM (#4090900)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Tattie Bogle

As usual, the birds in our garden all go into hiding on the Big Garden Birdwatch weekend! Did better than last year though when I only got one.....robin!


02 Feb 21 - 11:45 PM (#4091197)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: TIA

Conowingo Dam is lousy with bald eagles this year.


03 Feb 21 - 02:16 AM (#4091202)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Joe Offer

SRS, it seems like there should be areas around Fort Worth that would be good for birding
Any waterfowl around? Sandhill cranes?


03 Feb 21 - 01:43 PM (#4091299)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: DonMeixner

Here in Central New York to my little feeders I have birds returning that I haven't seen in years. Grosbeaks, Flickers, and Blue Birds most specifically. In the spring we have had an increasing supply of Orioles. My home is on the Erie Canal and just south of the Barge Canal so Bald Eagles as increasingly common, usually flying west to the big Montezuma bird sanctuary. As I type this at 1:41 we are pretty clear of birds except for one Red Bellied Woodpecker. When the weather warms my Maples will be riddled by Pileated Woodpeckers.

Don


05 Feb 21 - 04:42 PM (#4091667)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

I always do the RSPB big garden count but several regulars were absent. No Robin, no Blue, Great or Coal Tits. Robins or Tits had been about on previous days. Yet 5 Blackbirds. (4M & 1F all squabbling). Beats me how the counts add up to useful information.


05 Feb 21 - 04:47 PM (#4091669)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Senoufou

Several cranes have been seen here in Norfolk over the past few days. (Hickling Broad for example) They're tall birds and rather stately.


12 Feb 21 - 05:11 AM (#4092736)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jon Freeman

I rescued a female blackbird yesterday, probably the one I’d watched earlier bossing other birds around. It’s not happened in a while but she hit the windows on the sliding doors and knocked herself out. So out with the recovery box (and old shoe box with holes in), put her safe for an hour and hope for the best. I’d heard shuffling in the box but I didn’t think she was going to go when I tried her outside. I was just about to put the lid back on and give here a bit longer when she surprised me by taking off and flying to the top of a tree.

I’ve been scattering an assortment of food on the snow on the front garden. Blackbirds, chaffinches and a robin seem to have appreciated this.


14 Feb 21 - 02:25 PM (#4093152)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Pamber

I regularly ring birds (band them in US parlance) being a ringing trainer and this month there have been so few in the garden that it was not worth the effort. I guess until the cold weather came there was plenty of natural food in the nearby woods. (We don't ring birds here when its very cold, they have enough problems without me)


14 Feb 21 - 02:51 PM (#4093155)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: The Sandman

i saw an oyster catcher today, it looked well turned out ready for dinner party


14 Feb 21 - 05:34 PM (#4093185)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: gillymor

Saw an American Kestrel (Florida race) hunting amongst the scrub in a seasonally dry lake bed on Thursday, east of Bonita Springs, FL


16 Feb 21 - 02:47 PM (#4093424)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

I picked up a Blackbird that had flown into the patio doors (previous house). Folded it's wings in and soon it perched on the top finger of my hand seemingly happy with it. Eventually I ran out of things to say to a Blackbird and had to encourage it to fly away.


16 Feb 21 - 04:15 PM (#4093439)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Senoufou

Saw a red kite again this morning soaring over Stibbard (Norfolk) There are always a few to be seen there.


16 Feb 21 - 08:37 PM (#4093480)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Malcolm Storey

We are not avid twitchers but we do enjoy watching them and actively encourage them to visit our garden, both by providing feeders and having planted shrubs and berry bearing bushes to help them through the winter.

We are not usually here at this time of year as we much prefer the bush fires and temperate climate of the southern antipodes.

That said we are enjoying seeing the last version of the dinosaurs going about their winter routines and find it an unexpected interesting if somewhat chilly substitute to what we have been used to at this time.

Things we have noticed:

Up to the recent really cold spell most of the berries, seedheads and the feeders have not been overused.
We feel that numbers are probably down which, combined with relatively mild weather would explain this.
We do notice that one feeder in particular tends to get emptied first - we suspect it is its position as we rotate the positions of the various feeders.

We already have the blue tits investigating the nesting boxes and have noted the usual visitors - blue tit, coal tit, great tit, robin, house and hedge sparrow, blackbirds, lots of randy pigeons, magpies, starlings, goldfinch and the occasional rook. A new visitor in recent times has been a crow and sometimes two.

We have a resident wood mouse in the garage and have caught him a couple of times in a safe trap to have a good look at him. He seems to enjoy the peanut butter we have in the trap and is slowly working his way through the grass seed he liberated from its box! We rescued some of the seed into glass jars because we would like to use it.

Better not mention the grey squirrel that likes the berries nearest the kitchen window. Going to have to arrange his demise shortly - sad but necessary.


17 Feb 21 - 06:00 AM (#4093529)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

I thought I'd fooled the squirrel with an upturned tub on the bird table stem but saw him/her up there again. Don't mind the squirrel as such but it deters the birds.
Beats me how birds can stand the terrible cold we had a few days ago. Minus 10c (near Teeside Airport).


17 Feb 21 - 08:05 AM (#4093554)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Raggytash

A couple of weeks ago we had a white pheasant in our back garden.


17 Feb 21 - 09:15 AM (#4093560)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jos

"Going to have to arrange his demise shortly"

If the squirrels were nesting in your roof and chewing the electricity cables, that might be justified as it could risk your life, but for discouraging a few birds? Really?


17 Feb 21 - 09:25 AM (#4093562)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Malcolm Storey

Unfortunately we have had the scenario of squirrels in the loft.
At the time the area was overrun with them and it took a determined effort by a number of nieghbours to deal with the problem.
We would not worry too much about them discouraging the birds. The problem is that they are legally vermin. It is not so long ago that it was the law that if you saw a grey squirrel you had to notify the police.
It is still illegal to trap them humanely and release them in, say. woodland.


17 Feb 21 - 09:30 AM (#4093563)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

I regard grey squirrels as arch-vermin. They have decimated red squirrel populations in most of the UK and they carry a disease that infects the reds. They are not natives, they rob birds' nests and they are damaging to ecosystems. I'm absolutely with Malcolm on this.

You won't stop them from getting your bird food. They can climb even greasy poles, they defeat squirrel baffles, they can leap several metres up, down and across and they can tightrope-walk. Our native birds are under threat from bad farming practices and feeding them in the garden is very beneficial. I regard eradicating grey squirrels as fully justified. The law on this is very strict, though if you stick to the rules it isn't illegal to trap and kill them.


17 Feb 21 - 09:32 AM (#4093564)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

True, Malcolm. If you trap a squirrel you have to kill it, or take it to be killed by someone else.


17 Feb 21 - 09:52 AM (#4093572)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Malcolm Storey

I am not really up to killing anything but was able to purchase a trap that does the job for you.
I'm pleased to report that the trap has only ever been activated by squirrels.
Just got some photos and a couple of video clips of the condemned eating berries.
Steve is right they are incredibly agile and uncanny at moving through and between trees.


17 Feb 21 - 02:43 PM (#4093601)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

We have skylarks around but they are not doing the ascending thing as yet.

Robin


17 Feb 21 - 03:00 PM (#4093604)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Sure red squirrels are much cuter and I know the grey ones carry a pox. Some places with reds have posters up 'Have you seen a grey'

Several Blackbirds chasing each other again, new feature this year, maybe last year's brood?


18 Feb 21 - 05:18 PM (#4093717)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: DonMeixner

WE had enough Cardinals in the yard today I expected a puff of white smoke and a new Pope.

Don


19 Feb 21 - 05:45 AM (#4093777)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Not seen any butterflies yet but a lot of pigeons this morning, proper woodpigeons.
Time to get out the 'More Pigeons No Thanks' sign.


19 Feb 21 - 12:12 PM (#4093836)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: DonMeixner

Cardinals and Doves along with the usual finches, Titmice, Slate Juncos and Chickadees at the feeder today. If it runs true to form I will have Downys, Red Bellies, nuthatches, and Squirrels before the afternoon is up.

Don


19 Feb 21 - 01:29 PM (#4093858)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Malcolm Storey

A pheasant in the garden this morning!
Lots of randy pigeons. The usual blackbirds, sparrows, robins, magpies etc.
There seem to be more visits from the crows and a great tit had a look at one of the nest boxes - here's hoping.


19 Feb 21 - 03:06 PM (#4093867)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Senoufou

Great tits are very nice Malcolm, but we have one or two around our garden and the incessant "Teacher! Teacher!" sometimes drives us crazy! (I'm a retired teacher hee hee!)
During the terrible wintry weather, deep snow and minus 8 degrees of frost, I swept the back lawn free of snow as best I could, then put out as much food for the poor birds as possible. It was gobbled up by so many species that we just kept putting more and more out there.
Most of our neighbours in this village did the same, and I like to think we saved many birds' lives.
The generous sploshes of bird poo down all our windows was, I reckon, their way of saying 'thank you'. Or... maybe not...


20 Feb 21 - 06:19 AM (#4093958)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

I've just repaired my walking boot 'snow chains' using electric terminal crimper.(less than ideal) There's an ad above for a crimper kit, how on earth did the robots work that out?


22 Feb 21 - 10:32 AM (#4094281)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: The Sandman

i saw two tits mating


22 Feb 21 - 02:16 PM (#4094308)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

They'll never get pregnant that way.


24 Feb 21 - 03:46 PM (#4094654)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Still have surplus blackbirds squabbling about territory. It's not their garden anyway.


24 Feb 21 - 07:15 PM (#4094706)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Malcolm Storey

A mild day and we did not see a single bird in the garden.
The randy pigeons spent most of the day in a nearby large tree.
Still songbird noises but suspect there may be a sparrow hawk about.
Not seen the tree rat for few days so maybe been dealt with by somebody else.


25 Feb 21 - 11:53 AM (#4094814)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

Had a walk to the top of the hill the other day and saw lots of lapwings, 4 snipe, a curlew and several skylarks that were in the mood for a bit of "ascending".

Robin


25 Feb 21 - 12:51 PM (#4094826)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Donuel

That reminds the Robins are here along with a red headed woodpecker just 3 feet from my window.


25 Feb 21 - 03:12 PM (#4094839)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Woman taking me walkies one day spotted a curlew by the track. 'Why do they have those curved bills?'
"so you can tell what they are" I said.


25 Feb 21 - 07:50 PM (#4094883)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

If you can imagine me back garden, which we can see out of the kitchen window, our feeding station is about 8 feet from the window and the fence is another 10 feet beyond that with fields behind. It's a rickety old post and wire fence. A frequent visitor is a gorgeous male sparrowhawk, scourge of the songbirds. He strikes in surprise attacks at enormous speed, swooping round the side of the house to the feeding station. He's nearly knocked me head off dozens of times as I go out of the back door, not realising I'm there. Yesterday he was sitting on the fence post, looking glumly towards the feeders, presumably hoping that a songbird or two would be tempted to take the risk. He's done this an awful lot, and they never do, and he never learns. So he's a superb athlete who's a bit thick. I went to school with a good few lads like that...

Beautiful pair of bullfinches yesterday as well, on the bird table. I love to see 'em - as long as they stay off my apple trees...


26 Feb 21 - 06:11 AM (#4094949)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jon Freeman

We had loads of blackbirds when the snow was on the ground and I was scattering food out but we seem to be down to one pair now.


26 Feb 21 - 06:36 AM (#4094952)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Couple of years ago I had a sparrowhawk on back fence post, flew through the bird table but the little birds scattered. I fitted a slim upright on the back side of the birdtable but never seen sparrowhawk again.
(similar config of table, back fence and fields beyond as SS above)


26 Feb 21 - 06:45 AM (#4094956)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jon Freeman

We had a sparrowhawk hit the sliding doors and stun itself. It recovered and flew off just as I approached it.

I saw one taking a collard dove here and have had a couple of other sightings but that it. There have been a couple of other occasions when I've wondered whether one is around though, when the bird table and feeders have been having regular visitors then one day they pretty well all disappear, I've guessed mostly looking for somewhere safer.


26 Feb 21 - 07:07 AM (#4094960)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

Tawny owls hooting all night in the clear moonlight. It reminded me of that true story about a bloke who practised imitating their call in order to get a response. Eventually, he stood outside at night and made the hooting noises. To his delight, he got the hoped-for response. He'd got the call down to a tee and convinced another owl to respond.


So he thought.


It took a few nights for the realisation to set in that a bird-loving neighbour, a couple of hundred yards away, had been doing the exact same thing....


26 Feb 21 - 07:23 AM (#4094963)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jon Freeman

I've managed that in the past with tawny owls

A few times walking home when I lived in N Wales, I played a hooting game and the owl seemed to stick with me.

Earlier days here in N Norfolk, I tried it when I heard an owl hooting outside. One came on the pole for the power cables to the house so I think it worked.


27 Feb 21 - 01:17 PM (#4095172)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: DonMeixner

I watched a Sparrow Hawk (American Kestrel) take a finch off our bird feeders a bout Thanksgiving time, maybe earlier in the month. I was not so damn pleased until I remembered if they aren't bird feeders for all they shouldn't be in the yard.

Don


28 Feb 21 - 12:14 PM (#4095321)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: WalkaboutsVerse

I'm sure I just saw a swift fly by my Manchester flat on what has been a lovely sunny day; a couple of years ago, one got trapped in my small juliet balcony, as has a pigeon, both of which I had to help out. I was worried about handling the swift but no need - it was a muscular little thing and once above the balustrade didn't waste any time taking off!

Thus, I now have a plastic peregrine falcon on one side, and a wooden duck on the other (if an English pub, it might be called The Duck and Falcon), which seems to have done the trick.


28 Feb 21 - 12:30 PM (#4095326)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

Not a swift. 99.99999% not a swift.


28 Feb 21 - 12:36 PM (#4095328)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: WalkaboutsVerse

...I have a photo of the one that got trapped but, as I posted a few days ago, am not sure how/if we can show pics here on MudCat..?

Are you thinking it's too early of swifts, Steve?


28 Feb 21 - 12:45 PM (#4095330)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: WalkaboutsVerse

...I just checked - the date on my photo is 30/5/2018; and google says they normally arrive at the start of April.


28 Feb 21 - 02:42 PM (#4095352)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

I was talking about the one you thought you saw flying by. They are strictly summer visitors and you won't see them before about mid-April. They usually vacate the country by early August. We were in Lecce in Puglia for a week in June 2016. We marvelled on the roof terrace of our hotel at the big flocks of screaming swifts which we imagined were mopping up the mozzies that might have been eating us instead.


01 Mar 21 - 05:44 AM (#4095462)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

If 2018 is ok in 2021 thread how about the three note cuckoo I heard near Barningham (Co.Durham though it's south of the Tees) Cuck-uck-oo. Three notes perfectly musically spaced. First and last note the normal two. Heard one thereabouts again in 2019 but just a regular two note cuckoo.


01 Mar 21 - 06:23 AM (#4095467)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jon Freeman

Are you sure it wasn't a collard dove call?


01 Mar 21 - 06:41 AM (#4095475)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

Wot Jon said. It's a common confusion. Once you hear a cuckoo there's no mistaking it.


01 Mar 21 - 06:57 AM (#4095479)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jos

JHW - what time of year was it?

There are numerous rhymes about cuckoos along the lines of

"The cuckoo comes in April. She sings her song in May. In June she changes her tune. In July she prepares to fly. In August go she must."

That is to say, in June the cuckoo's call changes from cuckoo to cuck-cuckoo.


03 Mar 21 - 06:15 AM (#4095800)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Dug out old diaries, always record walks. 3 note cuckoo was 2nd May 2019. Moorland road W of Barningam nr flooded quarry with trees round. Same place May 13th 2020 normal 2 note cuckoo. (walk after Grab & Go groceries - Lockdown rule was a walk longer than the journey was ok, near all day walk)
Have listened to collared dove, get them most mornings and often on the bird table - thanks, sure it was a cuckoo but I've not heard one doing more than the two notes before (or since) Didn't see cuckoo either time.


03 Mar 21 - 09:10 AM (#4095834)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jos

JHW - I can think of three possible explanations:

1. The traditional rhymes are wrong.
2. You heard a rather confused cuckoo.
3. There was somebody hiding in the bushes with a cuckoo bird whistle - a two note, one hole, whistle. I have one. It is very convincing.


03 Mar 21 - 09:58 AM (#4095839)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

Someone recorded a three-note cuckoo and posted it on the RSPB Community website. The third note is a repeat of the second (lower) note. It's been said that the interval is a minor third, but I think it's pushing toward a major third meself!


03 Mar 21 - 12:30 PM (#4095872)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Senoufou

The egret has been seen several times down by our river at the bridge. And quite a few 'twitchers' are stationed with their binoculars and cameras there to try and spot it.


03 Mar 21 - 01:09 PM (#4095875)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Steve Shaw

Is that a little egret? About 20 years ago I contacted the Wildlife Trust recorder to say that a little egret had flown over my garden...great excitement... These days, they are common in Cornwall and you almost expect to see them on our Bude Marshes nature reserve. Global warming!


04 Mar 21 - 03:54 AM (#4095961)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Senoufou

It's a Great White Egret (Ardea alba) Steve. Blooming enormous. Very long, elegant white neck,stands upright a bit like a stork.
Since I've been feeding the birds in our back garden, the inevitable seagulls have been descending to grab bits of bread which they try to swallow whole. But yesterday there was one among them which really stood out - a great black-backed gull (Larus marinus). He was the only one of his kind among the other common ones. We aren't all that near to the coast, but the gulls come inland to try and find food in the fields (worms etc)
The large crows still call out what sounds like "FOOD!!FOOD!" when I appear in the garden. Always makes me smile.


04 Mar 21 - 06:14 AM (#4095969)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

There were loads of egrets on the Axe estuary (near Sidmouth) not in some bird books but I guess they've moved with global warming.

As I was well into the wilds I was as sure as I could be my 3 note cuckoo was not an imposter. If I'd known it was rare at the time I could have recorded it. Just a curiosity. Three separate notes, top and bottom about the usual tone apart and a middle one like our semitone. Not a repeat. Terrain presumably suits cuckoos and their prey nests as there was another the next year. Lockdown says I stay at home this year.


07 Mar 21 - 12:35 PM (#4096503)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jos

We are used to seeing a couple of red kites over our house most days, but yesterday there were nine of them circling around each other. I haven't seen so many together since I was near the Chilterns just south of Towersey.


07 Mar 21 - 04:26 PM (#4096530)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: The Sandman

I saw a robin today, but i have not seen a song thrush here in rural ireland for a long time


10 Mar 21 - 07:45 PM (#4097091)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Tattie Bogle

Have had a lesser spotted woodpecker in our garden on several occasions recently. We have the usual range of tits too, blue, coal, great and occasional long-tailed, robins, blackbirds, starlings and my husband saw a couple of goldcrests.
Closest encounters with cuckoos have been in the Western Isles: one on Islay sitting on a fence just arm’s length away, and another unseen but heard loud and clear and very insistent, from 6am on Barra. Other “keep you awake” birds are corncrakes, first experienced on Cape Clear island off Co. Cork, and later on South Uist.


11 Mar 21 - 02:25 PM (#4097179)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jos

Only two red kites this time, but a couple of crows turned up and took on one kite each. After a minute or two of being dive-bombed the kites decided they'd had enough and flew away.


11 Mar 21 - 08:49 PM (#4097233)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Malcolm Storey

Funny old weather at the moment - how unusual for England!!
Wednesday was murky and cold and wet but the pigeons were perched high in the trees looking thoroughly miserable. Why not move down we thought with some shelter?
Thursday we had the really strong winds and not a pigeon to be seen in the trees but still one or two pottering around the garden.
The blue tits have been showing a lot of interest to the nest box and Thursday we had a magpie grab a chip (big helping from new management from fish and chip shop) and make off with it. Was struggling and got as far as the greenhouse where it managed to drop it in the rain gutter but was then unable to retrieve it.


12 Mar 21 - 07:30 AM (#4097282)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jon Freeman

Thinking magpies and "beakfulls", here's a blown up part of a picture of one I got a few years back on our bird table. It was carrying as many peanuts as it could each visit.


12 Mar 21 - 08:36 AM (#4097287)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Lucky seeing an actual cuckoo. I often got spotted woodpecker on peanut feeder but gave up the feeder last year as nothing was being eaten. Refilled several times with different peanuts including RSPB but no takers. Same place on pear tree as a long time. (Partridge free)


12 Mar 21 - 08:49 AM (#4097289)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jos

I gave up on peanuts a long time ago as they ended up going mouldy, but fat balls and fat blocks are popular - the long-tailed tits really like the blocks and they're big enough for several to feed at once.
And there is a tray of mixed seeds and mealworms, which are popular with blackbirds, robins, dunnocks, blue and great tits – and the sparrows eat anything there, they're not too fussy.


12 Mar 21 - 09:36 PM (#4097391)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Malcolm Storey

With others regards the peanuts - waste of time even the starlings don't go for them.
Some years ago the people opposite had a mature leylandii in their front garden which was a roost for starlings and we loved to watch them murmuring as we relaxed after dinner.
Those neighbours moved away and the new occupants almost immediately got rid of the tree. We had a couple of evenings of bittersweet pleasure watching the confused flock (well over a 1000 of them) before they realised their digs had gone.
Have noticed recently a small murmuration about 400 yards away so will keep an eye on that.
Glory be - a hedgehog in the garden as I was locking up - by the time I got the camera out he/she had disappeared.
We used to get them regularly at one time as well as toads but they have been scarce of late, as have both slugs which we don't miss and snails which we enjoy.


13 Mar 21 - 05:34 AM (#4097419)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Note peanut stories. Mine went well for years. Though I know the birds are not veggie they have to be if they come here as I am so I don't have fat balls nor mealworms. What a job that must be knocking little mealworms on the head. A store did bird quality peanut butter for a while which all went.


13 Mar 21 - 05:42 AM (#4097420)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

We get a few Great Black Backed gulls up here in the Pennines every winter. We mostly have common gulls and an occasional group of Black-headed gulls. We have a reservoir about a mile away from us and a few more within 3 miles, about 30 miles to the sea.

Robin


06 Apr 21 - 11:51 AM (#4100996)
Subject: BS: Birdwatching
From: EBarnacle

Yesterday, Lady Hillary and I were scouting launch points along the Passaic River in Chatham, NJ. We heard an unusual bird call and, using herself's SmartPhone, we were able to identify the call as a red bellied woodpecker. The environment was right, with a lot of dead trees but we were well North of its usual range.
We never did eyeball the bird but the call was loud and distinctive.
I was able to verify it on line.
Do you think this is simply a bird that got off course or a function of global warming?


06 Apr 21 - 07:35 PM (#4101073)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching
From: EBarnacle

Lady Hillary and I stopped of at the local Audubon center and chatted with a couple of staff. It seems they are resident throughout the Northeast, especially since Hurricane Sandy killed a lot of the trees. They are resident year 'round. I guess I just never noticed them before. Surprising, considering how loud the call is.


07 Apr 21 - 11:37 AM (#4101175)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching
From: leeneia

Congratulations on your first siting of this bird. Like a lot of birds, it is increasing its range.

A few days ago, the DH got a fine photograph of a flicker calling at the top of a tall, bare tree. We had been hearing it for at least a couple of years, suspected it was a woodpecker of some sort, but didn't know which one. Now we know.

Its cry is a raucous rattle that sounds like something out of an old jungle movie. So out of place in my neighborhood of songbirds.


07 Apr 21 - 12:37 PM (#4101191)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching
From: Charmion

A Facebook friend of mine resident in the Ottawa area recently posted a photo she took of a Carolina wren at her back-yard bird table.

Carolina wrens are not supposed to hang out in sub-boreal climes like the Ottawa Valley.


07 Apr 21 - 09:30 PM (#4101296)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching
From: EBarnacle

We have several copies of Peterson's Eastern birds. They describe the range of the red belly as barely North of New Jersey. When I shared this with a friend in Maine, she said they are comman in her area [Freeport}. As I posited above, in the time since Peterson's was published,we may see this as an effect of climate change.


25 May 21 - 01:42 PM (#4107555)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: WalkaboutsVerse

Further to my mistaken ID above, now I definitely am seeing swifts darting around outside my 11th floor flat in Manchester.


26 May 21 - 03:38 PM (#4107680)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

Our swallows are depleted and weeks late this year, but the swifts seem to be on the usual schedule and in the usual numbers.

Robin


27 May 21 - 11:55 AM (#4107778)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: EBarnacle

We've been having various finches a other small guys coming to visit our drinking pan. During this dry spell there have been more than usual.
As far as squirrels, I put out unsalted pistachios as I believe we should feed the local red tailed hawks.
We were out several weeks ago, checking out local canoe launch sites, and we heard a red bellied woodpecker drumming. Identified with the help of a smartphone app. We never actually saw it. That bird was loud as I heard it without my hearing aids.
The other day, Lady Hillary and I happened to see a pair of Baltimore Orioles for the first time in our neighborhood [central NJ].


26 Jul 21 - 05:23 AM (#4114426)
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat crash Birdwatching 2015
From: JHW

Surely there was a recent Birdwatching thread but search doesn't find it.
I had a 'blackbird' I wanted to ask about. Build of a blackbird and habit of turning over leaves, wouldn't fly up to the birdtable but pecked on the ground (like a dunnock).
What I can't find is it's 'cape' a splendid rusty brown head and shouders then rest of the bird is black. I thought maybe a young Mrs. Blackbird but can't find online or in books. Here several days NE UK, July 2021.
Any ideas please?


26 Jul 21 - 05:44 AM (#4114429)
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat crash Birdwatching 2015
From: Jos

It will have been searching for food on the ground and under leaves because it wants worms and grubs, which are not usually on the bird table.


26 Jul 21 - 06:18 AM (#4114432)
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat crash Birdwatching 2015
From: Jon Freeman

Brown Headed Cowbird?


26 Jul 21 - 07:24 AM (#4114436)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jos

Is this the thread Jon Freeman was looking for?


26 Jul 21 - 10:57 AM (#4114445)
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat crash Birdwatching 2015
From: Stilly River Sage

The American cowbird has characteristics a lot like cuckoo; I forget what the native species is here, but the the species it victimizes has a nest built, and the cowbird lays it's egg in the same nest. The original bird doesn't just toss the wrong egg, it literally abandons the first nest and builds a new one on top, and again lays eggs, to which the cowbird adds another. This cycle can happen several times before the host bird gives up and ends up raising a cowbird young. I remember this from decades ago in a university course; some details are missing.


26 Jul 21 - 12:29 PM (#4114454)
Subject: RE: BS: Mudcat crash Birdwatching 2015
From: Joe Offer

I've moved all the 2021 messages into this thread, and crosslinked all the birdwatching threads.
To find recent threads, use the Filter at the top of the list of threads. The Search depends on an index, and the Forum hasn't been indexed recently.
-Joe-


26 Jul 21 - 02:29 PM (#4114460)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Thanks Joe and Jos. Yes looking for grub like a Blackbird.
I found the cowbird on line but didn't expect one here in North East Old England. Unless someone knows better which is why I asked. 'My' similar coloured bird had a 'cape' which had feathered edges, not a neat line.
No tweet and I should have checked bill colour but was too impressed by the magnificent cape.


27 Jul 21 - 05:57 AM (#4114511)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jon Freeman

I found the cowbird on line but didn't expect one here in North East Old England. Unless someone knows better which is why I asked.

I'm not sure I'm understanding you there. The link I gave concerns a cowbird turning up in County Durham in 2010.


28 Jul 21 - 05:20 AM (#4114590)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Thanks. Been no queue of twitchers round here. Bird must have moved on. This is Co.Durham, just. Will try and take pic if it returns.


28 Jul 21 - 06:05 AM (#4114596)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Senoufou

Early yesterday morning (which was actually 'Norfolk Day'!) I saw Mr and Mrs Red Kite soaring overhead, plus their two young ones. The male was calling "Kwee! Kwee!". They circled around our end of the village then headed off towards the lake near Fustyweed. I was really pleased to see they had young. This bird used to be rare.


28 Jul 21 - 07:10 AM (#4114602)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jos

When I was growing up, my parents had a record of songs from "Oklahoma", which was played often.
Because of this, whenever I see red kites these song lines comes to me:

"Sit alone and talk,
Or watch a hawk
Making lazy circles in the sky ..."


28 Jul 21 - 07:39 AM (#4114607)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Jon Freeman

My parents also had the Oklahoma sound track, Jos although that one (the title track) is not one I remember well. We can sing "Oh What A Beautiful Morning" here though...

To get back to birds. Peanuts have been going down at a crazy rate (needing daily filling up - if I get round to it/feel inclined to do so) on a feeder round the back and the sunflower hearts are also going quickly there.

My camera that way shows some squirrel activity but a lot of it seems to be from a family (parents and 1 offspring?) of jays. There are also a few magpies around.


28 Jul 21 - 12:18 PM (#4114638)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

We had a red kite over our field 2 days ago. The first time I have seen one here, though a neighbour said that he saw one about 3 years ago.

I have seen them before down near Oxford, whenever we go down to Basingstoke, but our nearest ones are supposed to be in either Cumbria or Yorkshire.

Robin


29 Jul 21 - 05:28 AM (#4114694)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: JHW

Might have mentioned before I'm originally a Norfolker. Nee Norwich.


29 Jul 21 - 07:18 AM (#4114701)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: Senoufou

Oooooh JHW!!! Do you miss it?


29 Jul 21 - 11:02 PM (#4114757)
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2021?
From: keberoxu

I got a close-up look at something that is very common
but that I don't get to see often.

Amongst the crows hanging out at a shopping center parking lot,
not far from the dumpsters (where else?),
was a youngster.
Out of the nest, too big for the nest.
But this young crow's plumage was a fascinating mess to look at.
Only certain parts of the crow's anatomy were
properly, what, 'fledged'?
Wings had lovely glossy black feathers already, likewise much of the tail.
But the young crow's head, breast, and the back below the head
were all fuzzy and dull-looking with chick stuff.