Subject: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 05 Jan 13 - 06:40 PM Had hoped Raptor would start this, since that ain't happened yet, I'll go ahead and do it. Paraphrasing the historical parameters set by Raptor - Starting 1/1/2013, count species that you see (or hear and can conclusively identify from their call) at your house or yard. See how many you get in 2012. Only from your house or a 100 foot radius from your property. Who's in? I know Facebook and other networking sites have really diluted participation in threads such as this on Mudcat, but for those of us who still spend a lot of time on Mudcat, I'd love to keep this going. I, for one, get a lot of enjoyment and information from reading your posts over the course of the year. Would also love to see more of your bird lists for 2012 posted to Birdwatching 2012 |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 05 Jan 13 - 06:59 PM While there are the usual common suspects visiting my feeders, I note today a phenomena which happens for a couple of months every late winter, for reasons unknown to me. Both Turkey and Black Vultures are common here and I see them overhead throughout the year. Sometimes, however, Black Vultures will tend to congregate for a few weeks at a time in and over the small wooded area across the street from my house. They will move in and out of the trees all day long and as evening approaches, more and more of them will glide in. Often, they will congregate directly across the road in two or three trees. From all appearances, they are roosting for the night. Then, just before dark, they begin to stir and move and over the course of 10-15 minutes, will relocate within 100 yards of the first place they appeared to settle. I see this happen sporadically from January until the trees begin to leaf out in April. Never see them roost here or congregate here in large numbers except for winter to very early spring. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: gnu Date: 05 Jan 13 - 07:05 PM I saw a crow try to catch a sparrow today. Never saw that ever! Never saw a sparrow fly out of a maple and bury itself halfway in snow, either. That is what caught my eye... what a strange thing for the sparrow to do??? It seemed to be having a hard time to get out of the snow. It was odd because it was 3" off fluffy snow... it's like the sparrow was goading the crow into thinking it could catch it but it lifted with ease when the crow came after it. A game? I fed a whack of birds today with suet from a smoked ham as I was making a boiled dinner. Didn't put out any cabbage from the pot... do sparrows fart? I have never heard a sparrow fart. Maybe they only fart during the dark hours? Maybe my hearing is on the wane. Maybe if I fed them cabbage. Maybe I could ask Environment Canada for a grant to study this? If it got published, I could apply for a grant to assess chickadee farts but I assune that would require VERY sensitive equipment. Happy birding in 2013. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,Yvonne Date: 06 Jan 13 - 06:47 AM Greenfinches, Goldfinches, Blackbird, Robin. Magpie, Starlings, Tufted Ducks on the Manchester Ship canal that is situated at the bottom of the garden and a Buzzard in Cheshire this morning. In truth the Buzzard flew very low along the edge of my garden..but still counts I hope. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 06 Jan 13 - 09:07 AM I just finished googling those birds, Yvonne, to see what they looked like. Wow, what colors and patterns! In the USA we refer to various vulture species as buzzards, but I'm thinking in the UK the term is often applied to buteos/hawks. A google search led me to a buteo species whose comon name is Common Buzzard. Was that the buzzard you saw? |
Subject: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Raptor Date: 17 Jan 13 - 07:09 PM I'm just at 13 spiecies yet. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 17 Jan 13 - 09:06 PM Hurray, Raptor! Would it be OK with you if a clone combines the the two threads? (I was impatient.) |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 19 Jan 13 - 02:09 PM A color treat on this chilly sunny day - Cardinals and Bluebirds at the same time. (still hoping a mud elf will combine threads.) |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Arkie Date: 19 Jan 13 - 02:38 PM I usually see about 15 different birds during the day, but since the first of the year have been regularly spotting a red breasted nuthatch and a brown headed nuthatch. These little birds fly in, grab something and fly away so you have to be at the window at just the right time to see them. Have also had regular visits from Carolina Wrens. One day there were three at the feeder at the same time. The Tufted Titmouse, Goldfinch, White Breasted Nuthatch, and Juncos are daily visitors. Dark greenish blue: Threads combined - mod |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 25 Jan 13 - 03:56 PM Home very early due to sleet and freezing rain. With the cold nasty weather the birds are hard at the feeders, plus I scatter seed on the ground when the weather is bad. No new species but am getting better and longer looks at a few species I see occasionally but only fleetingly. I may have seen my first sparrow/junco hybrid, but dark-eyed juncos are pretty variable, so I'm not entirely sure. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: JennieG Date: 26 Jan 13 - 06:37 AM Apart form the usual eastern rosellas, rainbow lorikeets, galahs, sulphur crested cockatoos, noisy miners, magpies (Aussie magpies are different to northern hemisphere magpies), peewees, willy wagtails, apostle birds, noisy friar birds, kookaburras, crested pigeons, brown treecreepers and the occasional wedge-tailed eagle - all Aussie natives - we have of late been visited by a flock of blue-faced honeyeaters. Cheers JennieG |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Pete Jennings Date: 26 Jan 13 - 10:30 AM Blue-faced honeyeaters sure beats the song thrushes I saw earlier this week here in Staffordshire. We get the usual in the garden every day: hedge sparrows, blue tits, great tits, goldfinches, blackbirds, the robin, pigeons and doves. Planty of seagulls patrolling the canal at this time of year (there's fish in there). Haven't seen any of the herons for a while but Judi says she saw a sparrowhawk take a small bird (unidentified) off the honeysuckle above the feeder two weeks ago. We're in Penkridge, which is surrounded by open countryside, so plenty of buzzards wheeling high over the houses, calling to each other. The two song thrushes were here for two days, never seen them before and now they've gone. Probably attracted by the food we put out (fat balls and seed). |
Subject: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Raptor Date: 01 Feb 13 - 04:37 PM Here we go again. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Raptor Date: 01 Feb 13 - 04:38 PM Good birding |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,JHW Date: 01 Feb 13 - 04:56 PM Yesterday beside the River Tees a tiny spherical bird I've never seen before. Algae green top, pale green to buff below. Size of a golf ball, no real head, just a beak with a strong red stripe above, bouncing around on mud and leaves and pecking stuff too small to see what. Very tame but didn't fancy my 9 seed organic bar. Goldcrest I reckon. Wonderful. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 01 Feb 13 - 05:20 PM We have 2 threads again. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 01 Feb 13 - 07:33 PM I just sent a pm to Raptor to ask if he minds if the thread he just started is also combined. I expect he just didn't realize....but it really should be his honor as he is who started this tradition. In the event it does matter to him I will request this thread be closed so that we can continue to share our observations together through the year without confusion or perhaps missing the observations and comments of bird watchers and birders. In the meantime, I think I finally found out why the finches have been ignoring the nyjer feeder for lo these many moons. It seems that nyjer seed goes bad and rather quickly. I bought an unusally large bag of it quite some time ago, and the birds have ignored it from the start. I suspect it was old and bad from the gitgo, but I also won't make the mistake again of buying it large bags. I thought it was generally sold in smaller bags because it was so expensive, but that may not be the case. Gonna chuck out what I have and try again this weekend. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 01 Feb 13 - 08:51 PM Nyjer seed is apparently irradiated before being imported to decrease the odds it (and other stray seed) will germinate and invade. Some websites talk about it "going bad" but I suspect that means the high heat exposure means it goes stale more quickly than, say, sunflower seed. And birds do not like stale seed. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 02 Feb 13 - 01:59 PM Whoa, talk about close encounters! Just went out to fill the feeders. When I stepped out onto the carport a goldfinch flew up off the concrete. It could fly, but obviously with difficulty, unable to gain more than 5 feet of altitude, swooping up and down. It literally followed me to the feeders and as I was filling one feeder, it landed on a second feeder only 2 1/2 feet away ate a few seeds then fluttered down to ground within 3 feet of me. The bird didn't look injured, but obviously was. A sharp-shinned hawk must have been on a near branch (and was probably responsible for injuring the other bird to begin with.) It swooped down, grabbed the finch, and wheeled away, so close to my face I felt the wind from his wingbeats. I almost could have kissed it's butt! |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 02 Feb 13 - 02:44 PM Nice experience, Janie! We recently watched a Sharpie circling around and through the cherry tree just outside our south windows... with American goldfinches and Redpolls vanishing in seconds but Black-capped chickadees jeering, teasing, and hopping from branch to branch the whole time. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 02 Feb 13 - 08:56 PM Was interesting to observe the feeders stayed vacant for quite some time after that, and the numerous gray squirrels that are usually under and attempting to get at the feeders stayed away also. At least 20 minutes. Until then they had been so busy (yesterday and today were quite cold by our standards,) that I was actually filling them for a second time. Usually they hold enough among them to last at least 24 hours, and I had filled them last night after dark. The wrens were the first back, soon followed by the chickadees and tufted titmouses (titmice?) After 45 minutes all the usual suspects were back. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: JHW Date: 03 Feb 13 - 07:22 AM I've spotted two Birdwatching threads |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 03 Feb 13 - 10:04 AM Yes; we're hoping Raptor is agreeable to having them combined..again. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 03 Feb 13 - 10:06 AM Titmice is generally accepted, although the root isn't English the meaning carries. "I just sent a pm to Raptor to ask if he minds if the thread he just started is also combined. I expect he just didn't realize....but it really should be his honor as he is who started this tradition. In the event it does matter to him I will request this thread be closed so that we can continue to share our observations together through the year without confusion or perhaps missing the observations and comments of bird watchers and birders. " (Janie) Hey, Raptor; Do you mind having the 2 threads combined? |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,999 Date: 03 Feb 13 - 10:12 AM Just saw four chickadees, one male cardinal, the usual sparrows (about a dozen) one red-bellied woodpecker and a hairy woodpecker. I'm in Ormstown, Quebec, Canada. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Ed T Date: 03 Feb 13 - 10:33 AM Why don't birds fall off their perches when they sleep? Now that this question is answered, the next one: Why does Rap open a parallel thread. I suspect he is up to something, possibly intending a different meaning to birding:? :) Deep inside of a parallel universe It's getting harder and harder To tell what came first Under water where thoughts can breathe Easily Far away you were made in a sea Just like me Chorus Christ I'm a sidewinder I'm a California King I swear it's everywhere It's everything Staring straight up into the sky Oh my my a solar system that fits In your eye Microcosm (Red Hot Chili Peppers - Parallel Universe) |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: ragdall Date: 04 Feb 13 - 05:17 AM I've been mesmerized by flocks of hundreds of Bohemian Waxwings that swirl overhead, land in the tall trees in my backyard and take off again with little warning. Photographing them can be challenging. I think this is the best photo I've taken of B. waxwings this year. rags |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: ragdall Date: 04 Feb 13 - 05:18 AM Sorry, I messed up the link. Try this: http://www.flickr.com/photos/diffuse/8440642344/ rags |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,Arkie Date: 04 Feb 13 - 11:49 AM Great photo. Thanks. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST Date: 04 Feb 13 - 04:13 PM Bohemian rhapsody |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 04 Feb 13 - 08:53 PM I don't think Raptor is on Mudcat frequently. Have pm'd someone who I understand is a personal friend and asked them if they can easily call him and as him to check in. If no response with the next 48 hours, I propose we shut the earlier thread, which had already been combined, down and go with this thread. Would that suit folks? Be nice to keep the conversation and observations on one thread without having to do a lot of chasing. I'll make a similar post to the other thread by the same title.
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Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Ron Davies Date: 04 Feb 13 - 09:04 PM For some reason this year we have a yellow-bellied sapsucker as a regular feeder visitor. Could that be related to global warming--a northerly bird which is now ranging further south? |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 05 Feb 13 - 05:40 AM Janie- Yep! |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 05 Feb 13 - 06:46 AM You are right on the edge of their summer/winter range, which abut one another. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,999 Date: 05 Feb 13 - 07:00 AM Four chickadees, two cardinals (male and female), two blue jays, a gang of sparrows, hairy woodpecker, red-breasted/chested(?) woodpecker, two snow geese (they never left or they're real late leaving). Ormstown in southern Quebec. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Dave Hanson Date: 05 Feb 13 - 07:15 AM I saw a bird this morning. Dave H |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 10 Feb 13 - 12:16 PM Fresh nyjer seed did the trick. The finches are back on the thistle. Watching a Pine Warbler and Carolina Wren face off at one of the suet feeders. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 10 Feb 13 - 05:50 PM hmmmm. Post did not take. Although starlings are common in my yard during the day, big flocks are rare. It is still not quite twilight, so "everybody" might move on before dark, but right now, the woods across the road and the trees in my yard are full of vultures on the middle third of branches and a large flock of cacophonous starlings in the upper branches. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 12 Feb 13 - 01:04 AM Both flocks - the vultures and the starlings, were gone by dark. Could not have gone far, and I wonder where. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 17 Feb 13 - 05:42 PM Some who follow this thread are quite likely to find this New Hampshire Public Television Network program interesting: Saving Songbirds I also posted this in the "Gems" thread at the request of a friend. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 17 Feb 13 - 11:44 PM A gem it is indeed, maeve. Thanks so much for posting the link. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: JHW Date: 18 Feb 13 - 08:56 AM Help needed. Yet again a bird that's not in my books. Sat 17 Feb 2013 out walking in grass fields by the River Eden just upstream of Kirkby Stephen, Cumbria. A female mallard I'm thinking comes flying upstream though looking a bit slim for a mallard but flying like a duck or goose, head outstretched and wing beat like a duck rather than heron. But the head was too long and the bill even more so for a duck. Then it LANDED from flight on to the wooden fence rail of the footbridge next to me and perched there securely a few seconds turning its head round and looking at me perhaps to assess a sandwich opportunity then flew on upstream. When perched it was tall like a heron or cormorant but brown mallard duck colours. Never thought to look at its feet at the time. ? |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,999 Date: 18 Feb 13 - 07:23 PM Spoon-billed sandpiper? Give a look in Google images. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 18 Feb 13 - 08:02 PM JHW- Have you seen this UK Bird identifier? http://www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife/birdidentifier/form.aspx Using my understanding of your bird's description resulted in the following possibilities for your part of the world: Bar-tailed godwit (winter), Black-tailed godwit (winter), Curlew, Greenshank, Red-breasted merganser (female), Whimbrel You may want to give it a try to see if any of the results fit your sighting. Good luck! |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 18 Feb 13 - 08:29 PM Also, JHW- I wonder if the tiny bird you thought might be a Goldcrest might have been the endangered Firecrest? Have a look and see what you think:http://www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife/birdguide/name/f/firecrest/index.aspx Just a thought. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Jeri Date: 18 Feb 13 - 08:57 PM I had a pair of Red Bellied Woodpeckers show up last winter, and they're still around. Lovely large birds. Sometime last night when the wind was fierce, my dinner bell feeder blew off the hook and flipped upside down, in a way that made the seed land in the top. I put it back up tonight. It's still a little windy, but not nearly as bad. The birds were flying forward yesterday, and blowing sideways. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 18 Feb 13 - 11:20 PM Wish I could count the birds the I see on my drive to and from work. Large flock of wild turkey in a field of winter wheat? rye? on the way home this evening. (The field was sown about a month ago and now is a lush green of a grass/grain, standing about 6 inches tall. I think it is a dual cover/spring harvest crop of some grain. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: JHW Date: 20 Feb 13 - 07:57 AM 999 and maeve thanks for ideas. Not spotted that RSPB page before. Body of bird too vertical ie like heron, shag, cormorant when perched for suggestions. Cormorant nearest on that aspect; brown immature in flight in one book looks reasonable but Kirkby Stephen is smack halfway from E or W coast Goldcrest I reckoned from google images where some shown spherical as mine. Bird book pictures hopeless as shown bird shaped like a warbler. Firecrest should be out of area for River Tees acc to my books though I know things do get about more. (First Egret I saw was on the Axe, south coast but supposedly continental. Now they're regular at Saltholme by the Tees Estuary.) |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,Arkie Date: 20 Feb 13 - 07:15 PM Need some help identifying a bird that has been at my feeder for the past two days. Wish I had a better image, but hopefully this is good enough for one more experienced than I. Certain it is not a goldfinch and I have been to several sites in hope of finding a match but nothing certain yet. Mystery Bird |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,999 Date: 20 Feb 13 - 07:35 PM Arkie, we think it's a Flycatcher. Check out that group of birds. It looks like a Western Flycatcher. Check Google Images maybe. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 20 Feb 13 - 08:30 PM Another possibility |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,999 Date: 20 Feb 13 - 08:51 PM The adult male in Maeve's link sure looks like it, too. We were going from a book of birds done with paintings, so give Maeve's closer attention. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 20 Feb 13 - 08:54 PM Pine Warbler? |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,999 Date: 20 Feb 13 - 09:04 PM LOL. Or Janie's link. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,999 Date: 20 Feb 13 - 09:10 PM Got it! |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,Arkie Date: 20 Feb 13 - 09:26 PM Thanks all. I think the Pine Warbler is most likely correct. I had found a flycatcher that did resemble this bird, but it is at a feeder and eating seed and some of the Pine Warbler images are really close. This bird does have a quite yellow breast which I could not get in a picture. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,999 Date: 20 Feb 13 - 09:43 PM Good news, Arkie. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 24 Mar 13 - 04:19 PM Saw my first grasshopper sparrow. Glad it has been around a few days or I would not have been able to get enough looks and long enough looks to identify it. The goldfinches are molting. It is unseasonable cold with a cold rain falling. The feeders are as busy as if there were a January ice storm happening. Too many birds slam into my window this time of year. Must have to do with the angle of the sun. I don't like decals on the windows, but I like dead birds a lot less so I guess I'll break down and put some up. I had to kill a badly injured and beautiful female cardinal yesterday to stop her suffering. 4th bird to slam into the window while I have been sitting by it this month - and I am only home on weekends. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 24 Mar 13 - 04:22 PM And the cardinals are starting to pair off. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 24 Mar 13 - 05:49 PM Hi, Janie. The decals are effective when you apply one every 3-4 inches over the entire window. We fastened bird/deer netting over all of our big windows (a few galvanized staples work well and are unobtrusive). No more window kills here in two years of use. The fine netting seems to disappear- most visitors don't even see it until we point it out. I have some extra I would be happy to stuff into a mailer and send along. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 24 Mar 13 - 07:48 PM Thanks maeve, but vinyl siding and windows and staples don't mix well. Looks like it is decals. Thanks for the info. regarding them also. I supposed that 2 or 3 on the windows would do it but sounds like I'll need many more than that to be effective. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: gnu Date: 25 Mar 13 - 06:21 AM Tack sommat from side to side where the tacks will be hidden by the curtains? I have been watching all sorts of birds. Just got Adobe Photoshop and I am importing all my camcorder videos. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: maeve Date: 25 Mar 13 - 06:28 AM Great news, gnu! Janie- Fine. Tape on the window glass would also work, but you will find your own solution. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,JHW(cookie on old computer)again Date: 25 Mar 13 - 04:35 PM Hoping for joy. 2x magpies building nest 2 weeks now in tree at back fence so I'm seeing two each time not the usual one. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,Arkie Date: 25 Mar 13 - 09:25 PM First time I have ever seen this. Just wish it were a better picture. Robin at Feeder |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 25 Mar 13 - 10:14 PM Cool, Arkie! |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: gnu Date: 26 Mar 13 - 07:51 AM Crows have been nesting for several days and Mum's robin appears to have moved north. I had been putting out apples (none less than Royal Gala for the Royal Robin) for a month and he devours them. Hasn't touched the last one I put out five or six days ago. No Waxwings this year. No apples. We had heavy frosts and then a warm windstorm (when my 1960s hip roof squeaks, it's a WINDstorm) and there were hardly any apples left on the tree. I was very sad for Mum when it happened. But the robin has been a great source of entertainment, if only for a wee bit of time now and then through the day. I stick the apple "well" on a few cut suckers where he MUST sit on the branch facing her kitchen window so she can easily watch him with binoculars. Lots of types of birds singing "spring songs". Various types arriving from the south. All will be complete when The King of Birds arrives to nest... The Ruby Throated Hummingbird... but that will take the better part of two months. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: gnu Date: 26 Mar 13 - 08:31 AM The King was spotted in VA on Sunday so it'll be a while. >;-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,Arkie Date: 13 Apr 13 - 04:33 PM Have to crow a bit. Purple Martins arrive three days ago. A little late this year. Two days ago the first Indigo Bunting of the season was sighted. This morning a Rufus Throated Hummingbird was checking out the feeding station. He was back just a few minutes ago. I have his feeders cleaned and ready but need to pick up some nectar. Am making a special trip in just a few minutes. I am sure the little guy is tired and hungry after that long trip over the ocean. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST,Black belt caterpillar wrestler Date: 15 Apr 13 - 10:21 AM I've just seen the first swallows here in Rossendale this year, exactly the dame date as last year. With any luck we will soon have the first day since Christmas with no snow on the ground. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: gnu Date: 01 Jun 13 - 02:32 PM The King of Birds. What a GREAT site. Thanks, Beer! |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Llanfair Date: 01 Jun 13 - 04:16 PM Doing my birdwatching on facebook. The ospreys being filmed on their nest have now got two eggs, and both parents are taking turns to incubate them. Last year, the train, which runs nearby, slowed right down so that all the passengers could see the nest. No chicks survived last year because of the weather. Better luck this time. They can be seen on BBC springwatch. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 09 Nov 13 - 10:10 AM The Juncos are back for the winter. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: GUEST Date: 09 Nov 13 - 02:00 PM Saw about 4000 geese this morning, both Canadian and Snow. Good to see them back for a while as they top up the tanks for the trip south. |
Subject: RE: BS: Birdwatching 2013 From: Janie Date: 10 Jan 14 - 12:44 PM Here's my backyard bird list for 2013 34 species, mostly just the usual suspects. Only 1 new species for my yard - Ruby Crowned Kinglet American Crow American Goldfinch American Robin Black Vulture Blue Jay Brown-headed Cowbird Carolina Chickadee Carolina Wren Chipping Sparrow Common Grackle Dark-eyed Junco Downy Woodpecker Eastern Bluebird European Starling Grasshopper Sparrow Gray Catbird Hairy Woodpecker House Finch House Wren Morning Dove Norther Mockingbird Northern Cardinal Northern Flicker Pine Warbler Purple Finch Red-bellied Woodpecker Red-breasted Nuthatch Ruby Crowned Kinglet Tufted Titmouse White-breasted Nuthatch White-crowned Sparrow White-throated Sparrow Yellow-rumped Warbler While I realize there is not the same interest anymore, there may still be a few of us who like to communicate about our birdwatching on this forum and who have enjoyed Raptor's challenge to identify and keep a list of species seen basically from one spot, so now I'll go start a thread for 2014. Happy Birding, whether you talk about it here or not! Hope Raptor is doing well. |