Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 27 May 21 - 04:30 PM The goslings with their Canada Goose mother were in the exact same spot as I drove past today (at nearly the same hour as before, which makes good sense). The goslings are considerably larger now. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 09 May 21 - 04:01 AM I like Canada geese very much keberoxu. Pretty creatures. Goslings and cygnets will follow their parents on the roads even though the little ones can't fly. You must have felt concerned I'm sure. I learned yesterday from my neighbour-across-the-road that a lady who runs the caravan park near the Mad Swans' lake has erected a low wire fence around her plot, which is keeping the cygnets in, and off the road. The parents can fly in and out to attend to their babies, who will have to wait until they can fly before they 'escape'. This is actually illegal though, and neighbour (whose family owns the land) says, "Oi'll be gooing down thair termorra ter give her a piece o' moi moind. She hint gort ner roit ter dew tha!!" We await developments! |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 08 May 21 - 10:30 PM Driving up the road today, I was surprised at what I saw just to one side, although it was close to a large pond: a Canada Goose watchng closely over about half a dozen little grey goslings, so little I almost missed them: they were grazing in a stand of fresh green grass. But they were dangerously close to the road!! |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Jon Freeman Date: 06 May 21 - 10:50 AM Some angry birds in the Norfolk news lately. The Norwich Cathedral peregrenes having a run in with a red kite and Crows attacking a shop door in Dereham |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 06 May 21 - 03:05 AM Thank you keberoxu, we're all rather chuffed about Norwich City FC going up. Just hoping they don't go back down again as they did last time. Here the weather has been very very cold, with night frosts, tons of rain (much-needed, but enough is enough!) and high winds, so all the birds are behind with their nesting. So no swans tottering up and down the village street as yet. After the death of BamBam the deer, we don't need any more sorrow with lovely swans and/or cygnets getting squashed on the road by cattle-feed lorries. But there are lambs and calves in the fields, which are lovely to see. And my neighbour, the veterinary nurse, who has a flock of rescued sheep, took in another poor ewe, a 'culled' one (a farmer had decided to have her slaughtered as she was 'elderly and past lambing') When the poor old thing arrived, she promptly lambed and produced a sweet little baby! He's been named Bertie. (All her sheep have names. One of them, a very cheeky and pushy Shetland sheep, is called Shitland!!) |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: cnd Date: 06 May 21 - 01:26 AM I've been seeing a lot of Eastern Towhees and Orioles, but I did see a brown thrasher the other day |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 05 May 21 - 09:14 PM Eliza/Senoufou, how are things this spring? (Congrats about the Canaries.) |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 13 Apr 21 - 09:16 PM Swans? Frogs? Anybody? |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 10 Apr 21 - 11:56 PM ... and the black squirrels have ventured out again in the trimmed-lawn areas where we humans can see them. All winter long the black ones stayed out of sight, unlike the grey squirrels who never went away, even when the crows tried to chase the grey ones off. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 08 Apr 21 - 08:16 PM An acquaintance of mine passed a pond, recently thawed of winter ice, next to a roadside; and there was a turtle sunning itself. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 07 Apr 21 - 08:13 PM Spring should be in full flood over Eliza/Senoufou 's way. My part of Massachusetts is more springlike all the time, the ponds near the highway no longer have ice on them. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 02 Apr 21 - 05:14 PM I recall one spring where the swans had more drama than usual, because there were two males and they fought each other. Wonder what happened there ... |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 31 Mar 21 - 02:51 AM I forgot to add the BamBam the tame deer is dead. The whole village is in mourning, and a large sum of money (£2283) has been raised in order to put up a statue of him in front of the village hall, plus a plaque. He died after having fits at the Old Vicarage. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 31 Mar 21 - 02:44 AM We have had The Invasion of the Bees in our village. Many people here have beehives and the blooming things are now swarming (strange heat-wave this week, temperatures of 24 Degrees C!) They form large clusters in trees/shrubs/around telegraph poles etc. People dashing about carrying skeps to 'take the swarm'. I like bees and they don't scare me. The Frogs of Fustyweed are also on the march. Literally hundreds of 'em crossing the road and motorists kindly stopping to let them go by. (Or cruelly squashing them in their impatience) Fustyweed is the next village to ours, and is more-or-less adjoining) No Mad Swans (yet). |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 30 Mar 21 - 10:04 PM I wonder if Joe Offer in California is being plagued by the frogs courting each other again? |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Charmion Date: 22 Jun 20 - 10:07 AM A "municipal fashion accessory" -- well, that about sums it up. Thanks, Doug Chadwick, for ces mots justes. Mute swans are not native to Canada, although Wikipedia tells me that they have been introduced to North America and live in the wild in substantial numbers. Ontario cannot be particularly swan-friendly; our winters last a long, long time, even now. The Stratford swans normally have already hatched their cygnets when they are released in April, so I guess they nest before the snow and riverside ice are gone. I first saw wild swans in southwestern Germany, on ponds and creeks near the Rhine River. I remember standing in the middle of the road, gobsmacked at the sheer beauty of a swan family alighting in the reeds. Then a farmer towing a honey-wagon honked his horn at me ... Mood broken. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 22 Jun 20 - 04:11 AM BamBam the tame red deer has taken to having nice strolls around the entire village. He ended up at the riding stables, and wanted to cuddle up to the horses (much to their astonishment and alarm). His owner arrived in her 4X4, opened the boot, tapped it and BamBam leapt in, sat down and was transported back to the Old Vicarage. My friend, who rides every week, watched all this with much amusement. Red deer are quite large, and can be dangerous. But BamBam has been neutered, and has no horns, just bumps. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 21 Jun 20 - 06:24 PM Glad to hear that the Mad Swans have safely raised another brood of cygnets and no longer stop traffic on the roads. And, in California, hopefully Joe Offer is no longer plagued by mating frogs. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 19 Jun 20 - 08:29 AM Aw, what a lovely ending Jos! So glad it flew free after your kindly help. I've PM'd you about our village and street (hush hush of course!) |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Jos Date: 19 Jun 20 - 08:24 AM I just posted a message on the 'Fun with maps' thread but it really belongs here. It says: "Eliza, I found my way to a village on street view with a road named after a Pightle. I wandered about virtually and found a bungalow with a bench outside and a bird table, but there was no African to be seen, so I don't know if it is your house. I didn't see any mad swans or deer or errant sows or blackbirds. I might go for another virtual walk around later on and have a look at the older part of the village, maybe they will be there." Years ago we had a wild duckling. My son had found it wandering alone by the river. He had tried to find its family to return it but couldn't find them so he brought it home. It was only about a day old. At first we made it a little pen in the living room, where it settled happily when we gave it a mirror so it didn't feel lonely. It grew fast, and moved outside to the garden pond. It grew feathers and learned how to fly across the garden, then one day it flew up high, glimpsed water in the distance and flew away. I was happy to see it go off and find other ducks to be with. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 19 Jun 20 - 06:57 AM I agree Doug. Wild creatures should be free to live as they wish. We live in a village among a chain of streams, small lakes, ponds, a large watermill and the river Wensum. The number of wild water birds is amazing. When I sit on my garden bench in front of the house, flocks of swans, necks outstretched, pass overhead, not to mention geese, all kinds of ducks etc. They call and squawk as they fly, and it always brings tears to my eyes. Then there are crows, magpies, jackdaws, swifts and house martins, all making a lovely din (and depositing their gifts all down our window panes, but we have an excellent window cleaner called Andy) I should have written 'she' for the pig - it was a fat old sow! |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Doug Chadwick Date: 19 Jun 20 - 06:23 AM .The town also maintains a little flock of mute swans, about 20 at present, who spend the winter in a converted curling rink and march down to the river every spring. Their wings are clipped so they can't fly, .... The swans should be free to come and go. If the environment is right for swans, they will stay around. If not, then they shouldn't be kept in unsuitable conditions like some sort of municipal fashion accessory. Nothing is more glorious than seeing a flight of swans coming in to land on a lake. The townsfolk don't know what they're missing. DC |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 19 Jun 20 - 03:49 AM That's interesting keberoxu, because (as I think I have said on here a while back) out at Wroxham (on the Broads), the Canada geese and the swans sit around amicably together on the banks of the Broad looking as if they're having a nice chat. Our swans have raised their cygnets, and no longer waddle along the street because their young offspring can now fly (phew!) But the red deer BamBam is often seen strolling across the road and nearly getting hit by a car. He still swims with the village children in the river. The naughty pig was caught (but he'll be out again, as the pig farmer's fences are ramshackle) and yet more huge swarms of bees buzz overhead, with their owners frantically following with a smoker and a skep to try and capture them. At our village riding stables, due to the pandemic distancing rules, the staff tack up every horse in each stall, having sterilised the saddles and bridles, then smack their rumps. They trot outside to the waiting riders to be mounted (not the staff, the horses I mean). After the ride, the riders smack their rumps and they obediently trot back to the yard for unsaddling. Very weird but necessary I suppose. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 18 Jun 20 - 10:25 PM North America swans are particularly intolerant of Canada geese, I hear. Eliza/Senoufou, what's new with the Mad Swans and their cygnets? |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 09 Jun 20 - 12:49 PM Oh the poor geese Charmion! We get scores of Canada geese here in the Autumn, and they overwinter and leave in the Spring. They're really quite beautiful. I'm afraid there are Laws protecting all wildlife and migratory birds etc here, and farmers don't even cut their huge long hedges until the nesting season is well over. I have such happy memories of Ontario, and many other places in eastern Canada. Never have been to Vancouver or BC though. My uncle took me to Expo '67 in Montreal, then Ottawa and Toronto. Flew over Newfoundland in the old Boeing 707 during the night flight out from London Airport. (I was quite alone, and it was my first-ever flight). One of the air hostesses teased me and told me to look out for the North Pole. I was expecting a tall Pole sticking up in the air. (Didn't see it though) |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Charmion Date: 09 Jun 20 - 12:01 PM The "other" Avon River runs through Stratford, Ontario, where it is dammed to form a bit of lake on the north edge of downtown. On its banks, the town fathers created a most delightful park, with paths and benches and lovely overhanging trees. The only creatures who like it more than the humans are the Canada geese and the mallard ducks, who nest in their thousands every year and raise their families on the lake. The town also maintains a little flock of mute swans, about 20 at present, who spend the winter in a converted curling rink and march down to the river every spring. Their wings are clipped so they can't fly, so they hold up traffic when they leave the river to graze on the municipal golf course and on the soccer pitch behind the Festival Theatre. I have seen literally dozens of vehicles steaming in the summer heat while their drivers sit out the unhurried journey of a family of swans from one patch of grass to another. Here's the thing. The people of Stratford love the swans and like the ducks, but they hate the Canada geese. All three types of waterfowl crap all over the grass and the swans leave droppings nearly the size of meadow muffins, so goose poop can't be the issue. The ducks make plenty of noise, so disturbing the peace isn't it either. I have decided it's facial expression. The swans look like supermodels and the ducks have a kind of Gidget thing going on, but the goose demeanour looks like disdain verging on dislike. The geese also stand their ground, hissing and flapping their wings at encroaching dogs and humans, and march their large families back and forth across Lakeshore Drive, like teaching nuns escorting their pupils to the art gallery, heedless of the traffic. I once saw a gander (I assume it was a gander, it's hard to tell) with his wings outspread and his neck thrust out, hissing fiercely at a red Mazda Miata. I think the driver had honked his horn -- bad form. Anyway, so while our property taxes pay for swan maintenance and preservation of duck habitat, the town of Stratford employs a guy who roams around the lake with two border collies to hassle the geese. Also, when he finds a nest, he breaks the eggs or pours oil over them so they won't hatch. That's just cruel. It also doesn't do any good. After three years of "goose abatement operations", the goose population of Stratford is unaffected. Except now their disdain and dislike are fully justified. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 09 Jun 20 - 07:20 AM Well, a pig is on the loose again. Last seen trotting down a lane with her fat bottom wobbling. Half the village has been out trying to locate her. Her owner the pig farmer should repair his fences a bit more often! So now we have a tame red deer, a Christmas Carol-singing blackbird, two adult swans and their cygnets, a baby jackdaw rescued by our neighbour from the (gentle) mouth of a gun-dog spaniel, and now The Pig. Whatever next? |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Roger the Skiffler Date: 08 Jun 20 - 08:52 AM We often see a wren fossicking about in the pots on our patio and hear it more often. This morning we were visited by FOUR which is unusual as they are elusive (though apparently ubiquitous). RtS |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 08 Jun 20 - 08:41 AM I don't know how it turned out keberoxu, because my neighbour hasn't been down to the lakes/river/pools recently. But the eight cygnets are still being shepherded along the village street quite often by the cob and pen. We now have a male blackbird who sings a line from Jingle Bells: "Jingle all the way!" And the two fat pigeons who shout "Food! Food!" when I go into the garden with some scraps of bread for them. Crazy place, this village! Oh by the way, I really liked those funny 'failed photos' you posted. What a scream! |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 07 Jun 20 - 07:34 PM ... but how have things turned out between the two male swans who are fighting each other? |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: punkfolkrocker Date: 07 Jun 20 - 06:28 PM Earlier this evening I watched two magpies beating up a predatory cat in our back yard.. What a brilliant natural symbolic image for Black and White unity... |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 07 Jun 20 - 05:34 PM In our village we have a lady who lives in the Old Rectory. She has a horse, a dog and - a red deer! He's called BamBam, and the lady rescued it when it was a small fawn. She bottle-fed it and it grew quite large (red deer are huge!) She's had it neutered, and it's so tame and loves people. She lets it roam around the village, and especially down by the river. All the locals know it, and it swims about with the children, licks all the dogs and sits politely while people have their picnics. Now there is a new warning sign saying SLOW! DEER! added to the SLOW! SWANS! one. This village gets madder and madder. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 12 May 20 - 03:34 PM Anyone for hilariously bad amateur photographs of various birds and beasties? |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Donuel Date: 11 May 20 - 02:38 PM We have such a bee shortage in the US we have to send trucks full of the same bees from farm to farm. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 11 May 20 - 11:44 AM Well now it's bees! Many people in our village keep bees, and some have several hives. Due to the unseasonably hot weather, there have been literally dozens of swarms zooming over our heads. One swarm clung to a tree in someone's garden, and it was two metres long! The lady tracked them down and she and her daughter managed to get the whole thing into a sack. On our Village Facebook, there are many helpful reports of swarm sightings, and successful taking of swarms. Our village honey is absolutely gorgeous. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Donuel Date: 11 May 20 - 10:24 AM oops, the picture link changes daily. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Donuel Date: 10 May 20 - 02:49 PM Hummingbird |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: gillymor Date: 10 May 20 - 12:05 PM I've been watching a pair of black necked stilts that are nesting near a local pond and am hoping to see some little ones running about soon. Stilts are not a real common sight here in SWFL. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 10 May 20 - 11:07 AM What about the other birdies out there? |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 08 May 20 - 04:07 PM Yes keberoxu, and my neighbour reckons one might kill the other. Her family for many generations back have owned the land there, and she says there have always been swans, and many fierce power-struggles for territory among the cobs. They fight to the death, sadly. She always carries a large stick when she's out in the fields, in case a heifer, bullock or swan comes at her! Personally, I think the rogue swan may be a grown-up son of the present cob. They often challenge their father for territory. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 08 May 20 - 03:29 PM Two male swans? Swans are infamous for being territorial. Sounds like serious problems. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Mrrzy Date: 08 May 20 - 01:41 PM Ah, yes, the wonderful O, where I learned about the cob and the cos. |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: Senoufou Date: 08 May 20 - 12:33 PM Well those silly swans are doing it again! This time they have EIGHT cygnets and lead them up the village street every morning, 'dad' in front and 'mum' at the back while all the poor babies struggle along in an orderly line. My neighbour owns 'The Pit' (a gravel pit filled with water on her land) and she told me a nasty male swan has decided to live there. He's been attacking the family, and 'dad' and he have had a terrible fight. She's tried to chase the squatter away, but it can be a bit dangerous provoking a large cob swan. Our lovely house martins are back from Africa and are building mud nests in everybody's eaves. And the huge kites (a pair, with a third 'hanger-on') soar above the village every evening. I do so love it here! |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 08 May 20 - 11:49 AM how's the birdwatching going across the pond? |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 18 Aug 19 - 03:05 PM Senoufou sent me an update. I can barely credit my eyes. The Mad Swans, after all these years, have altered their ways. They are still alive, and their little what-d'yer-call-it of cygnets is thriving. And they stay AWAY from the route to that lake/pond/river miles from their nest. No more royal progress down the main thoroughfare. But they returned to the same nest as before. wonders never cease ... |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 21 Jul 19 - 09:44 PM reprise of o where, o where, have the Mad Swans ... |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 04 Jul 19 - 02:45 PM miser, miser, modo niger et ustus fortiter ..... |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 01 Jul 19 - 05:21 PM . . . but then, I am partial to this quote from Theodore Roethke's poem, Root Cellar: "And what a congress of stinks!" which might be what the homeowner says after the feral chickens in their hundreds walk across the front lawn ... |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 01 Jul 19 - 05:20 PM These are nouns for other breeds of bird. What would work for marauding feral chickens on the island of Jersey? aerie ascension band bevy bouquet brace brood building bury cast chain charm chattering clamor clutch colony company congregation conspirancy convocation cote cover covey crèche deceit descent dissimulation dole dule episode exaltation fall flight flock flush gaggle hedge herd host huddle kettle lamentation mob murder murmuration muster mustering nest nide nye ostentation pack paddling parcel parliament party peep piteousness pitying plump raft rafter rookery scold sedge siege skein sord spring storytelling team tidings unkindness volery wake walk watch wedge wing wisdom wisp |
Subject: RE: BS: Mad Swans, blue tits, and others From: keberoxu Date: 30 Jun 19 - 05:43 PM What on earth is happening in the Channel Islands? What do you call one hundred feral chickens? |