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BS: Backyard Bird List 2017

08 Jan 17 - 12:30 PM (#3831176)
Subject: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

Although most of the interested parties no longer post to Mudcat, this traditionalist will keep it going.

All bird observations welcomed. Rules for your actual backyard list, as originally established by Raptor, are as follows:

You can list any birds you can see while standing on your own property/lot, including fly-overs, or birds you can with surety identify by their call that you hear from you yard, even if you can't sight them. If you have a favorite birdwatching spot elsewhere or an office window, can have a list for them also, but the idea is what birds do you see/hear in a specific location/habitat.

Last year was the first time in several years I have not kept a backyard list, so nothing to report for 2016. I had to take a hiatus from filling the birdfeeders for several months due to being in a wheelchair, then a walker, then a cane, and simply got out of the habit after that. So for over a year the feeders were empty.

Just started filling them again when I retired in December. Started a new list Jan. 1 for 2017.


08 Jan 17 - 12:34 PM (#3831177)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

Good for you, Janie. I no longer feel at all comfortable posting to MC, but may try this with you.


08 Jan 17 - 12:55 PM (#3831185)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

This morning here in SW Florida off my lanai which backs up to a stand of cypress:
Red Shouldered Hawk
5 or 6 Blue Jays


08 Jan 17 - 01:43 PM (#3831205)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

Been stuck indoors with winterly poorliness since New Year's Day so haven't seen much, but my back garden feeding zone has been kept stocked. So here, so far, four miles from Bude, half a mile from the coast:

Blackbirds a-plenty
Blue tits ditto
Great tits
One coal tit
Robins including one exceptionally friendly one
Sparrows
Dunnocks
Chaffinches
Greater spotted woodpecker
Magpies
Common crows
Jackdaws
Fieldfares

We are bemoaning the absence this winter of long-tailed tits. There will be more little dinosaurs out there but I haven't had much chance to see them yet as my kitchen window on the world seems permanently steamed up!


08 Jan 17 - 02:23 PM (#3831219)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Jim Carroll

Saw a goldfinch yesterday - hope the feckin' Sparrowhawk stays away
Jim Carroll


08 Jan 17 - 08:25 PM (#3831282)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

I know sparrowhawks can be a bit of a bugger but they are beautiful birds and they're only being sparrowhawks. Forgot to mention our overwintering blackcap. Until recently you'd never see them staying the winter. Global warming!


09 Jan 17 - 02:43 AM (#3831308)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

I am expecting our count to reduce this year as we now have two cats.
Having a one acre garden set amongst sheep grazed fields with views for several miles does mean that the area I observe will exceed their territory but I probably won' t see the small brown jobs!
Not much to see so far this year:
Blackbirds
Robins
Field fairs
Black-headed gulls
Common gulls
Carrion crows
Rooks
Starlings
Grey Heron

Robin


09 Jan 17 - 03:17 AM (#3831315)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Rusty Dobro

Not much yet:

Blackbirds
House Sparrows
Blue Tits
Great Tits
Dunnock
Collared Dove
Wood Pigeon
Robins
Chaffinch
Rooks
Various gulls (after working in a dockyard for 32 years I tend not to notice them!)

My full garden list staggered past the 40 species mark in November with the arrival of a goldcrest.


09 Jan 17 - 03:42 AM (#3831322)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

I forgot the Magpies. Perhaps because we usually hear them thumping about on the bedroom roof first thing in the morning and they clear off after breakfast time.

We do have foxes in the next field and rabbits and the occasional badger, all seen already this year, it's not all birds!

Robin


13 Jan 17 - 09:39 AM (#3832326)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

I'll give it a go, Janie.

January 2017 22 species to date:

Bluebirds- usually 5-6, but yesterday an amazing flock of 50+
Bluejays
Cardinals, Northern
Chickadees, Black-capped
Crows, American
Doves, Mourning
Eagles, Bald - At least three individuals
Gulls, various
Hawk, Coopers
Hawk, Red-tailed
Hawk, Sharp-shinned
Goldfinches, American
Geese, Canada
Juncoes, Dark-eyed
Nuthatches, Common
Nuthatches, Red-breasted
Owl, Barred
Owl, Great-horned
Ravens
Robins, American
Sparrows, Chipping
Sparrows, Tree
Starlings, European
Titmice, Tufted
Woodpeckers, Downy
Woodpeckers, Hairy
Woodpeckers, Pileated


13 Jan 17 - 11:19 AM (#3832344)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

Drat- forgot to add Turkey, Wild.


13 Jan 17 - 11:51 AM (#3832352)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

I much prefer Turkey, Wild to Crow, Old.

At CREW Bird Rookery in North Naples, FL on 1/9/17:

several Pied-billed Grebes
Blue Heron
Blue Heron (white morph)
Little Blue Heron
Least Bittern
Green Heron
Anhinga (male)
Double-Crested Cormorant
Yellow-Crowned Night Heron
Large flock of Ibis with a few Limpkins
Turkey Vultures
Red Shouldered Hawk
Red Shouldered Hawk (Florida Race)
Snowy Egret
Great Egret
several Mallard Ducks


13 Jan 17 - 12:08 PM (#3832360)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Thompson

Sparrows and various kinds of finches and pigeons in the garden, and blackbirds and magpies and the odd crow, and one happy day a sparrowhawk. Wrens and seagulls of various kinds and herons and occasionally an egret when I cycle down the river most days; my ambition is to see a kingfisher, but I've only ever seen one once, though this river is said to have lots of them. And otters, but I haven't seen them either. If anyone has any handy trick for catching sight of the little blue evanescences, I'd be grateful.


13 Jan 17 - 04:57 PM (#3832421)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Jon Freeman

So far: Robin, blue tit, great tit, wren, magpie, goldfinch, greenfinch, chaffinch, blackbird, wood pigeon and I spotted one party of long tailed tits. I have seen a carrion crow on the field behind the house.

I did see a goldcrest fairly recently but I can't be sure whether that was the tail end of 2016 rather than the start of this year.

Heard is the tawny owl.


13 Jan 17 - 06:17 PM (#3832432)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

If you know a patch of water where kingfishers are known, get yourself down there on a dry day that isn't windy. Don't bother with binoculars but sit somewhere and keep fairly still and focus on the middle distance with that relaxed feeling you get after making love. Kingfishers sit on quite low branches when they're in fishing mode and make sudden dives when they spot a fish, then back up to the bush. They also dart across the water in very straight lines very low down, very characteristic. In both cases you'll see that unmistakable flash of electric blue. If you're lucky you'll see where they land, then you can get a good view through your bins. They won't let you get too close but they're middlingly bold with people. All this is based on my many experiences of seeing them on Bude canal. I had to simulate the love-making bit in my head. I'm thinking of having it lowered.


14 Jan 17 - 12:08 AM (#3832464)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Thompson

Thanks, Steve, I'll try that. When spring comes in and the dawn is earlier, I'll hop off the bike and have a sit for a while, watching dreamily as instructed.


14 Jan 17 - 01:48 AM (#3832468)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: mrdux

since the first of the year, in a very cold Pacific Northwest urban garden (this week there's been more than a foot of snow on the ground, really unusual for these parts, so lots of action at the feeders):

Bushtit
Black-capped Chicadee
Chestnut-backed chickadee
Fox, song, golden- and white-crowned sparrows
Lesser goldfinch
Scrub jay
Crow
Hermit thrush
Varied thrush
Spotted towhee (used to be called rufous-sided)
Northern flicker
Anna's hummingbird
Oregon junco
Golden-crowned kinglet
Ruby-crowned kinglet
Hutton's vireo
and flying overhead
Cooper's hawk
Red-tailed hawk
and a whole mess of Canada geese.


14 Jan 17 - 05:35 AM (#3832491)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Thompson

Oh, yeah, geese - a skein of them passed me as I cycled the other day, going by far above, chatting sociably, apparently heading for the Booterstown bird sanctuary.


14 Jan 17 - 01:01 PM (#3832576)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

As of today. (And I probably won't see more than a few more species other than these from my yard for the rest of the year.)

2017 Backyard Bird List
American Crow
American Goldfinch
Bluejay
Carolina Chickadee
Carolina Wren
Chipping Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
Downy Woodpecker
Eastern Bluebird
European Starling
Fox Sparrow
House Finch
Mourning Dove
Northern Flicker
Northern Mockingbird
Red-Bellied Woodpecker
Red-tailed Hawk
Rufus Sided Tohee
Song Sparrow
Tufted Titmouse
Turkey Vulture
White Breasted Nuthatch
White Throated Sparrow


15 Jan 17 - 01:18 AM (#3832676)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: mrdux

. . .and today, a downy woodpecker at the suet feeder and a couple house finches on some dried flower heads.


15 Jan 17 - 05:44 AM (#3832702)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: ragdall

I'm in awe of most of you and the variety of birds you have at home.

My 2016 photo list of birds in my backyard is here: https://flic.kr/s/aHskrX12z9
Others I didn't photograph include, Red-breasted nuthatch and American Crow.

So far this year, I've seen:
Black-capped Chickadees
Black-eyed Juncos
House Sparrows
House Finches
Northern Flickers
Downy Woodpecker
Bohemian Waxwings
American Crows
European Starling

rags


15 Jan 17 - 12:29 PM (#3832787)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

On a walk through a marsh and a pine flatwood Estero, FL 1-15-2017:

3 Crested Cara Cara
Blue-gray Gnat Catchers
2 Red Shouldered Hawk
2 Pileated Woodpecker
Pine Warblers
Numerous Black and Turkey Vultures
Anghingas
Double Crested Cormorant
Red Bellied Wood pecker
Cattle Egrets
Great Egret
Snowy Egrets
Least Bittern
Tri-color Heron
Great BLue Herons
Little Blue Herons
Limpkins
Ibises
Osprey
Palm Warbler
American Kestrel
Carolina Wrens
Belted Kingfisher
Wood Stork
Pied-bill Grebes
3-4 Eastern Phoebes...


15 Jan 17 - 12:41 PM (#3832788)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

I should add that this was not a typical morning for me, the birds were out and active and I saw a lot of smaller ones that I couldn't positively ID.
Great thread BTW.


15 Jan 17 - 01:33 PM (#3832798)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Bee-dubya-ell

It seems like we have more pileated woodpeckers this year than in any of the previous 20+ years we've lived in this patch of woods. It's rare to go more than a few minutes without hearing them calling or drumming. Occasionally, we'll actually see one, but mostly we hear them.


16 Jan 17 - 06:49 AM (#3832935)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

I can add wren, song thrush and three big, fat wood pigeons to my list. The lack of greenfinches and long-tailed tits this winter is a bit worrying.


16 Jan 17 - 06:51 AM (#3832936)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

I keep forgetting to mention starlings.


16 Jan 17 - 09:43 PM (#3833058)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: ragdall

I forgot to add the Northern Shrike that was on the cedar hedge along my back fence, Jan. 5th. It appeared to be eating something it had caught. Whatever it had was hidden from my view. My backyard was uncharacteristically silent and birdless at the time.

How could I have forgotten that? It was only the second time I've seen a shrike in the yard in the almost 45 years I've lived in this house. It was late in the day, too little light to get a good photo.

rags


17 Jan 17 - 01:31 PM (#3833197)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

Adding Yellow Rumped Warbler and American Robin.

I wondered why I was seeing the Yellow Rumped Warbler - then changed my suet feeder out for a caged one. Still no pine warbler spotted - could be just because I have missed it or could be because I have had to take down a couple of tall white pines in the past year.

Robins are a mystery to me. Many of them stay here year-round according to what I read on local birding sites, but generally speaking, I don't see them from late November until mid January - not in my yard or anywhere else locally that I travel, and when I start seeing them in January, is on warm days when the soil is damp and probably some earthworms are stirring. Where are they lurking in the meantime?


17 Jan 17 - 01:39 PM (#3833199)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

Janie, robins need soft protein and fruit. If you'd like to try to cater to their needs, there are some good notions here: http://www.learner.org/jnorth/unpave/robinwinter.html


17 Jan 17 - 03:48 PM (#3833214)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

Down here in South Florida Robins show up in late winter/early spring and then are gone. You'll occasionally see them in flocks rooting around in yards but rarely solo or in pairs which is how we used to view them up north (MD, VA, DE).


17 Jan 17 - 04:06 PM (#3833222)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Jon Freeman

Probably been commented on most years but our European Robin is quite a different creature to the American Robin

Ours, where I am in the UK are an all year round bird. They can be associated with winter but also can for example be known later in the year keeping an eye on a gardener in case a nice morsel is dug up. I believe they can be quite territorial so while you might see a group after fledging you'd not expect to see a gang of invaders (like our long tailed tits) Individuals can become quite bold and develop some sort of "friendship" with people.


17 Jan 17 - 04:24 PM (#3833227)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

We used to identify our general geographical location for that reason, Jon. Janie and I are talking about the same critter. I do also enjoy the wee European robins when I'm in their territory.

I should add not only turkeys, but also American robins (thrush family) to my list. One of the mature eagles cruised around over the orchard this afternoon.


17 Jan 17 - 04:32 PM (#3833229)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

And one of the immature bald eagles just cruised down low over the orchard. Mourning doves had gathered and now have scattered.


18 Jan 17 - 05:14 AM (#3833312)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Roger the Skiffler

We rarely (here in Ascot UK) see a thrush, except in very cold winter but there have been a pair here this week taking advantage of our extra food. Although we can nearly always see a red kite or two soaring overhead we haven't been able to add them to our BTO survey data as they haven't been in the garden. We were please yesterday when one, mobbed by jackdaws, settled in one of our trees for a few seconds, so counted as a Garden Birdwatch sighting.
RtS


18 Jan 17 - 05:53 AM (#3833318)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

The UK gets a considerable influx of robins from colder eastern European areas in winter which could explain their association with Christmassy times.


18 Jan 17 - 05:56 AM (#3833319)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

A few months ago I spotted a red kite whilst stuck in the M62 roadworks near Manchester. When I checked on it, I found that it doesn't often turn up in that area. Maybe it's spreading.


19 Jan 17 - 03:51 AM (#3833508)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Rusty Dobro

Definitely spreading, Steve. They're now a regular sight in Suffolk, joining the buzzards which have become widespread in the last few years. The rooftops of my semi-suburban village are currently being visited by a grey heron, which adds an exotic touch and sometimes brings traffic to a standstill.


19 Jan 17 - 05:01 AM (#3833528)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler

My neighbour spotted a red kite up here in Rossendale last year so they are heading north as well.

Robin


20 Jan 17 - 06:35 PM (#3833782)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

Ah, I'll look out for kites next time I take me mum for a drive through Greenmount (stopping at the Red Lion for a bite, as we do) up over Owd Betts!

Got our first long-tailed tit today. They usually pile in as a little mob so maybe the others will show up soon. A huge great pheasant was scoffing all the bird food I'd thrown out too. He tried to hide behind a bush when he saw me coming but forgot to hide about a foot of his tail, silly bugger. Don't you just love 'em!


21 Jan 17 - 05:45 AM (#3833835)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Roger the Skiffler

No redpolls or siskins yet this year.
RTS


21 Jan 17 - 06:19 AM (#3833840)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

Male Saw-whet owl has returned to claim his breeding territory.


21 Jan 17 - 08:23 AM (#3833855)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

On a bike ride around King's Lake on Thursday:
3-4 eastern bluebirds (not a common siting for me)
white-eyed vireo
pine warblers
Numerous herons, American coots, mallards, gallinules
anhinga
white pelicans
osprey


21 Jan 17 - 12:16 PM (#3833894)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

Long-tailed tits are back in numbers at last today.


21 Jan 17 - 12:30 PM (#3833899)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

Our first House sparrows at this location- not welcome here.


21 Jan 17 - 01:19 PM (#3833903)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

House sparrows are extremely vulnerable in the UK. They are now absent from many urban areas. Up close they are very attractive birds and are interesting to study. We call them "the mob" when they show up in numbers, about once or twice a day, and we love 'em. We wouldn't let the builder seal off our eaves as we wanted them to carry on nesting in our roof. This afternoon a great fit swooped in on a peanut feeder and physically knocked a coal tit clean off it. Bully!


21 Jan 17 - 01:20 PM (#3833904)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

Great tit!


21 Jan 17 - 02:14 PM (#3833914)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

I know, Steve, and I wish we could send you those that were released and have reproduced like the proverbial rabbits over here. They kill bluebirds, and that we won't allow.


21 Jan 17 - 02:31 PM (#3833919)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

Behind our village shop is a small garden where the lady has lots of bird-feeders hanging from a long line. A huge privet hedge runs beside it and it's absolutely awash with house sparrows. Lovely to see!

Do birds flying OVER the garden count? If so, we saw four beautiful swans with their long necks outstretched, followed by a large group of geese honking away, heading for our string of lakes. Then at the back was a large, tatty-looking heron with its legs dangling down. They always look like worn-out umbrellas. Norfolk people call them 'harnsers'. And leaving the village across the bridge we noticed a little egret (white thing like a small heron) down by the river.

(Steve, sorry to hear you've been poorly. Hope you get better soon. Eliza.)


21 Jan 17 - 02:56 PM (#3833928)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

Thanks, Eliza. Mrs Steve and I have both been afflicted by this chesty bronchitis job. I'm a lot better now but still headachy (could explain why I'm so nasty to guests and Teribus 😂) Mrs Steve drowns out the telly when she has a coughing bout - completely RUINED my enjoyment of Graham Norton last night...NOT!

Sparrows killing other birds?? Blimey, I'm just off to look that up. All they do on my patch is eat seeds me cost me money!


21 Jan 17 - 02:58 PM (#3833929)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

...and cost me money!


21 Jan 17 - 03:13 PM (#3833937)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

Oooh, I had that a few weeks ago. I called it The Haunted Lung Disease. Only one side was affected, but the wheezing all night sounded like a cartoon ghost.
(Sorry about thread drift)


21 Jan 17 - 03:18 PM (#3833938)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

Cor, you do seem to have a problem with our house sparrows. They are not native to the US and that's the source of the problem. This end, they are in balance with our other birdlife. Thanks for prompting me to educate myself, maeve.


21 Jan 17 - 04:00 PM (#3833953)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: keberoxu

Yes, whenever I think of English sparrows coming across the Atlantic in the rigging of the ships, it reminds me of Captain Jack Sparrow and the fact that he won't stop making films.


21 Jan 17 - 04:15 PM (#3833961)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: maeve

No rigging involved: House sparrow history in North America

Steve - Thanks for looking into the House sparrow conundrum. Yes, they are invaders, deliberately introduced- to our loss. They are not related to any native North American sparrow species.

Senoufou - Welcome. As Janie stated in the first post, "You can list any birds you can see while standing on your own property/lot, including fly-overs, or birds you can with surety identify by their call that you hear from your yard, even if you can't sight them. If you have a favorite birdwatching spot elsewhere or an office window, can have a list for them also, but the idea is what birds do you see/hear in a specific location/habitat." First post for 2017


22 Jan 17 - 10:34 AM (#3834090)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: punkfolkrocker

I just looked out the back kitchen window at what at first glance I thought was a mouse
climbing inside a dead wall clinging bush..

it was a wren.

Seldom ever see any birds in our back yard because this part of town centre is infested with cats
and dominated in the air by seagulls and crows.


04 Feb 17 - 11:04 AM (#3836701)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

Pine Siskins!


04 Feb 17 - 01:12 PM (#3836740)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

Saw a solitary goldfinch this morning on our birdbath. Hope its mates are around somewhere, as we had a nice group of them last summer.

We always chuck out scraps for the birds on to our back lawn, and are getting all the wrong birds coming down. Today it was about twenty huge and rather dominant seagulls. They aren't used to gardens at all, but hovered like drones until they plucked up the courage to land and grab stuff to swallow whole. They fiercely chased off some tatty-looking crows and three skinny starlings. After they'd gone, a robin and a male blackbird hoovered up the remaining scraps.

Our conservatory windows are now covered in huge blobs of seagull poo, as is our car. Thanks guys!


04 Feb 17 - 08:46 PM (#3836799)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

Bought a bag of "finch seed" from Wilko. Hey presto, it worked a treat. Within two minutes of throwing a handful on the ground we saw the first goldfinches we've seen in our garden for years. Our chaffinch count zoomed too. No sign of any greenfinches so far though. 😟 On the day of the RSPB garden bird count we had a visit from a bullfinch. That's just the third time in thirty years!


05 Feb 17 - 04:38 AM (#3836834)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Rusty Dobro

Apparently Japanese scientists have discovered that great tits can converse in joined-up sentences. This came as no surprise to me - every year at Great Garden Birdwatch time, they say, 'Right lads, off to the woods for a couple of days until it's all over.'


05 Feb 17 - 06:41 AM (#3836860)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

Rusty, I've heard that birds have 'local accents' and their sounds vary from one region to another. I wonder if Norfolk birds say, "Are yew oroit bwoy?" to each other?

I often smile when I chuck food out for the birds. There's a group of crows hanging around and they seem to shout "Food! Food!" It's quite distinctive. My husband says I'm mad.


06 Feb 17 - 06:33 AM (#3837051)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Thompson

Lots of Brent geese around here at the moment; they flew in with all the latest gossip from Canada and Scandinavia.

Unfortunately our neighbours in France and Britain are suffering a severe outbreak of avian flu; a few cases have been found in Ireland in whooper swans, which migrate from Iceland.

Was watching the English (and increasingly British-nationalist) programme Countryfile last night; a lot of domestic fowl are now having to be reared under cover to keep them from wild birds, and they were theorising that bird flu might be becoming endemic in Britain, and that vaccination, which they said was currently forbidden in stocks reared to provide food to the public (not sure if they meant eggs or meat or both) might be a solution.


06 Feb 17 - 07:10 AM (#3837058)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

On an early morning walk through the fog yesterday at Corkscrew Swamp, Immokalee, FL I snapped both an adult and a juvenile Black Crowned Night Heron and a couple of large Pileated Woodpeckers along with lots of the usual subjects.


06 Feb 17 - 07:23 AM (#3837062)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Steve Shaw

A male pheasant, who we've named Phil, seems to have taken up semi-permanent residence outside the back door (where all our bird feeders are). Every time I go outside he affects to dash off into the bushes to hide, but most of his arse end is still sticking out! As soon as I chuck a few peanuts on the ground he's perfectly happy to come right up to my feet. Very endearing, and after all he's a very handsome chap. He can eat peanuts like they're going out of fashion though, and they're not cheap!


06 Feb 17 - 08:39 AM (#3837073)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

In our last house (open fields and quite isolated) we had a phemale pheasant called Phergie. She too was tame and came up to our feet (should that be pheet?) in spite of our three cats sitting watching. We also had Mr Magniphicent, a superb male pheasant with shining copper/golden plumage, but he never seemed to phancy Phergie.

I turned Countryfile over Thompson, as it upset me to see the poultry squashed together in cages and pens. I try to source local free-range eggs from our neighbours, but I suppose they too will need to watch out for avian flu. Sad state of affairs isn't it?


19 Apr 17 - 02:23 PM (#3851270)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

The Gray Catbirds are back. No common grackles yet but have seen a few Cowbirds. The Juncos headed north a few weeks ago as well as most of the White-throated sparrows, though a few of them stay year-round. That FB feature that shows posts from the past displayed a photo from 2 years ago of a red-headed woodpecker at my feeder. A rare sight. Had a juvenile who wintered here that one season and caught a picture of it just after it molted to mature red head and just before it moved on.

For a couple of years a lone Rose-breasted grosbeak stopped over for a week about this time of year to load up on sunflower seed before continuing on it's way. No joy so far this year.


26 Apr 17 - 07:54 PM (#3852604)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

Interesting. Still no grackles. Maybe because I have changed the suet feeders I use such that they can't get to the suet.

The starling have apparently moved on to greener pastures. Hurray.

My hummingbird feeder is lonely, but I really don't have other flowers planted or blooming in the yard that might attract them. Also moved it this year and the location may not be good.


26 Apr 17 - 09:18 PM (#3852614)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: punkfolkrocker

No penguins as of yet...

But did see a black bird on the wall outside our kitchen window a couple of times last week..
which is a particularly exotic sighting in this part of the town centre...


26 Apr 17 - 09:18 PM (#3852615)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Donuel

Today I noticed sparrows, cardinals and robins all band together to attack a Blue Jay that notoriously lays its egg in another bird's nest where the blue Jay chick murders the other chicks in that foreign nest.
It was a
multi species alliance against a common foe.


20 Jul 17 - 08:46 PM (#3867404)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Jon Freeman

Pied wagtail round the back the other day.

Also a blue tit in the living room.


21 Jul 17 - 02:50 AM (#3867425)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

I was surprised and pleased to see about six tree sparrows in our front garden yesterday evening. And even more in a large privet hedge near the village shop. They're getting almost rare now, but here in Norfolk, they seem to be on the up and up!
Jon, however did a blue tit get into your living room?


21 Jul 17 - 03:18 AM (#3867430)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Jon Freeman

Trough the patio door, Sen. We have had it wide open for hours on some of the warmer days. This one decided the way back out was through a skylight so we opened that for it.


21 Jul 17 - 07:02 AM (#3867464)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

Glad it got safely out again Jon.

Our neighbour over-the-road has a 'tame' and cheeky blackbird. She offers it all sorts of good things, and it boldly comes into her kitchen and demands more. Now a robin has followed suit. Luckily she has no cats! But they do leave a bit of a mess sometimes (maybe a 'thank you' message?)

The house martins are all over the place in our street and the close opposite. They zoom around at dusk hoovering up flying insects. Their young are now flying too. Hope they all make it safely back to Africa (in spite of the rotten 'sportsmen' with guns who pick them off en route!)


21 Jul 17 - 07:02 AM (#3867465)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Jon Freeman

Trying to think of other birds.

We had what I think must have been a juvenile magpie a few weeks ago. It certainly seemed inexperienced as it tried to fly onto our roof. There were 2 other magpies that appeared to be keeping watch from the trees and "chack chacking" away.


21 Jul 17 - 10:42 PM (#3867631)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

The Ruby-throated Hummingbirds have finally found the feeder.

Having lots of fun watching fledgings of assorted species in the birdbath these days.


22 Jul 17 - 03:09 AM (#3867639)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

Oh! Ruby-throated hummingbirds! I wish we had something exotic like that here in UK! I've just looked it up, and they're very bright and elegant.
My mother used to spit (just a token one, not really!) when she saw a magpie on its own. 'One for sorrow' and all that. If you spit, it neutralises the curse.


22 Jul 17 - 10:02 AM (#3867681)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

On an early morning walk through CREW Rookery swamp here in S.W. Florida saw a Barred Owl. A rare sighting for me. Also several Red Shouldered hawks, both adult and immature.


22 Jul 17 - 10:14 AM (#3867685)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: punkfolkrocker

I suspect that bloody ginger & white cat had our blackbird nest...

not heard them for weeks...


23 Jul 17 - 11:20 AM (#3867858)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Donuel

Late summer early fall we have gigantic buzzards sit at the crest of the roof. They are quite attention getting since they are 3 to 4 ft. tall. They don't choose our roof specifically but I noticed them here when a crowd formed in the front yard staring up. Further south I saw a huge white Crane who didn't mind me being just 10 feet away.

I once saw a small bird with a needle like beak that looked out of breath. It looked like gills opened on each side of its neck. I dismiss that a bird can not have gills but I swear I could see the neck feathers open and close like breathing.

Yesterday at noon I saw a 4 ft fox with a ball of white fur at the end of its tail saunter out of the backyard and cross the street from the side yard.


23 Jul 17 - 12:34 PM (#3867865)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: punkfolkrocker

all we have in this part of the UK is bloody cats and seagulls... 😣


23 Jul 17 - 12:41 PM (#3867867)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

I'm so jealous of all these folk from other countries who have such interesting and exotic birds. I'd love a massive vulture sitting on our roof hee hee.

On the way out of the village this morning in the car, I 'pretend spat'. (A lone magpie was pecking at a sad pigeon carcass in front of us) My husband always smiles. He thinks white people are bonkers anyway, and this merely confirms it.

Great honking overhead this evening as eight large geese flew past. Couldn't make out what type, as they were silhouetted against the evening sun.


23 Jul 17 - 12:50 PM (#3867871)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

I'm assuming by the way that a four-foot high buzzard is also called a black vulture, but I'm not terribly au fait with foreign bird species!


23 Jul 17 - 01:03 PM (#3867874)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

Down here in S.W. Florida, on the cusp of the Everglades, when you park at a trailhead the vultures sometimes light on your car hood and chew on your windshield gasket and occasionally your tires. The only remedy seems to be to stick plastic bags out your closed doors and hope it's windy enough to make them flap a bit and scare the birds off. Sometimes it works.


23 Jul 17 - 03:41 PM (#3867893)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Donuel

Its not just one black buzzard, I should have mentioned its a flock of 3 or 4 at a time. We have hawks and eagles here too. I saw a large hawk swoop down and while in flight pick up a six foot snake and fly off with it. Almost every yard has a bunny sitting in it. Birds of prey are their only predator since there are no wolves. I have only seen one coyote here which was one helluva one off.

I wish the beavers had right of way but park rangers move them once they start to change the forest to meadow.

For a regular suburban street I am merely yards away from Rock Creek Park which was developed by Theodore Roosevelt.


23 Jul 17 - 06:36 PM (#3867908)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

Better keep moving, Don, and showing signs of life so those big buzzards don't start getting ideas.☺️
I used to live in Kensington and bicycle through R.C. Park about 40 odd years ago. Lovely place.


23 Jul 17 - 09:04 PM (#3867924)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Donuel

I use an electric bike I made. But I need a new one.


24 Jul 17 - 03:58 AM (#3867947)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

Oooh I'd love a vulture on my car too! Very cool! But I suppose one doesn't want the windscreen wipers or tyres pecked to bits.


24 Jul 17 - 07:20 AM (#3867976)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

Having a big Black Vulture perched on the hood of your car or truck is probably not as much fun as it sounds, Senoufou, especially when they use it for a latrine.


24 Jul 17 - 07:49 AM (#3867982)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

Yes gillymor, I suppose it could get a bit messy. But wouldn't it be beautifully intimidating for all those tailgaters and dangerous overtakers to see a humungous black vulture glaring at them from the bonnet of one's little Fiesta!


24 Jul 17 - 07:52 AM (#3867985)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Senoufou

By the way, when you mentioned Kensington, I thought, "My! Vultures in London!" When I looked it up, I saw there are several Kensingtons in USA.


24 Jul 17 - 07:56 AM (#3867986)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

I have to admit that I'd give a Fiesta, thusly appointed, a pretty wide berth.


24 Jul 17 - 07:57 AM (#3867987)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

That's Kensington, Maryland in Montgomery County, a suburb of Washington, D.C.


24 Jul 17 - 04:32 PM (#3868085)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Donuel

Kensington has a great reputation for reasons I do not understand .
Next is Bethesda then Chevy Chase and if you have well over 100 million dollars you have a place in Potomac. Where it is not gated, there is roaming security. If I were stopped I could tell them I was bird watching and ask "Have you seen any vultures here"?


24 Jul 17 - 06:26 PM (#3868104)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

Don, if you asked those security guys in Potomac "Have you seen any vultures here?" they probably thought you were talking about gun lobbyists.☺️
Kensington was a nice place to live but was nothing special, just a bunch of middle class neighborhoods and it's best feature was it's proximity to R.C. Park, IMO, but like I say that was almost 40 years ago. Maybe my departure sparked a gentrification movement.☺️
I was born in Bethesda at Suburban Hospital and grew up in Rockville and Wheaton and later spent a few years, on and off, in a communal house on a horse farm off River Road in Potomac before landing in Kensington.


24 Jul 17 - 08:57 PM (#3868134)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Donuel

I've done both Wheaton and Rockville. This post is coming from inside your house ! 8^|


24 Jul 17 - 09:59 PM (#3868141)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

Interesting, they turned the old homestead into a halfway house for public exhibitionists long ago.


25 Jul 17 - 06:13 PM (#3868293)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Donuel

That's revealing. Anyone know of these birds with neck gill like feathers?


25 Jul 17 - 07:10 PM (#3868304)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: gillymor

Funny, vultures closeup on a blustery day with wind-ruffled feathers do appear to have gills. I'm not sure if it's something they do voluntarily.


26 Sep 17 - 08:39 PM (#3878904)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Jon Freeman

Sparrowhawk spotted at bird tables by visitor on Sat 23 Sept. Not sure that is why its been so quiet the last few days or whether it is still around.

Have had a friendly robin with me on my little bits of occasional clearance round the back, I guess for example cutting some ivy back from a shed has exposed some things of interest...


02 Dec 17 - 08:31 AM (#3891832)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

The Dark-eyed Juncos appear to have arrived sometime in the night. 12/1 or 12/2. Pretty much on schedule. I start looking for them around Thanksgiving each year.

I wonder where they spent the summer.


01 Jan 18 - 11:38 AM (#3896774)
Subject: RE: BS: Backyard Bird List 2017
From: Janie

Here is my 2017 Backyard Birdlist

American Crow
American Goldfinch
American Robin
Barred Owl
Bluejay
Brown Thrasher
Canada goose
Carolina Chickadee
Carolina Wren
Chipping Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
Downy Woodpecker
Eastern Bluebird
European Starling
Fox Sparrow
Gray Catbird
Great Blue Heron
House Finch
Mourning Dove
Northern Flicker
Northern Mockingbird
Pine Siskin
Red-Bellied Woodpecker
Red-tailed Hawk
Ruby-Throated hummmingbird
Rufus Sided Tohee
Screech Owl
Sharp-Shinned Hawk
Song Sparrow
Tufted Titmouse
Turkey Vulture
White Breasted Nuthatch
White Throated Sparrow
Yellow-rumped Warbler