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Do the birds know bird watch thread

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Tecwyn

Tecwyn Report 21 Feb 2009 22:57

Dormouse,
Came past yesterday - Bird Rock was sticking up through the sea mist we had all day - it looked really spooky then.
Frightened the life out of my little grand daughter, told her the Trolls live in Bird Rock - eyes like saucers

Tec

Dormouse

Dormouse Report 21 Feb 2009 22:50

Oh, I knew what you meant. I would've been rather surprised to see choughs at Broadwater...................... Have seen a pair of peregrines at Bird Rock. Ravens too. It's a strange spot - quite weird to see a cliff in the middle of a valley!!

DM x

Tecwyn

Tecwyn Report 21 Feb 2009 22:43

HI Dormouse


Have'nt seen choughs at Bird Rock either - silly me!

Tec

Tecwyn

Tecwyn Report 21 Feb 2009 22:38

Hi Dormouse,
I haven't actually seen the chough at Broadwater, but I have seen them up on the mountain behind me - however, I have seen curlew, and lapwing at Broadwater - good place for bird watching

Dormouse

Dormouse Report 21 Feb 2009 22:33

I'm just a keen birder, Tec. Was over at Broad Water not so long back. Have seen choughs at Bird Rock :)

Tecwyn

Tecwyn Report 21 Feb 2009 22:25

Hi Dormouse,
Sounds like you know your geography - yes - know as Bird Rock.......or Graig y Deryn in Welsh

Tec

Dormouse

Dormouse Report 21 Feb 2009 22:17

Parakeets!? It's a long shot this BC, but I'm guessing you don't live in Shropshire?
DM x

ButtercupFields

ButtercupFields Report 21 Feb 2009 22:14

Well I have nothing much to relate except the birds seem to have deserted me! Except for the pigeons of course..lol.... But the park was buzzing with parakeets this morning...such a beautiful sight! BC XX

Dormouse

Dormouse Report 21 Feb 2009 22:05

Tec - is that Bird Rock?

~`*`Jude`*`~

~`*`Jude`*`~ Report 21 Feb 2009 21:53

Hello Tec

Aww l'll take that as fact then:o))

jude:o)

Tecwyn

Tecwyn Report 21 Feb 2009 21:40

Hi Jude,
Like your story about the cormorants. They fly past me every day. There is a huge rock near here - about three miles inland.
The cormorants roost there every night in their hundreds, flying in from their fishing expeditions. It is said locally that the rock was once beneath the sea, and that the cormorants have roosted there for thousands of years - fact or myth? - I don't know

Regards Tec

Tecwyn

Tecwyn Report 21 Feb 2009 21:29

Hi Dormouse,
Nice to meet you too
That firecrest just visited the once - it stayed only long enough for me to identify it, then was gone.
We have a lot of gorse bushes on the clifftops and hills, I think that might be their habitat - or possibly the conifer plantations?

Regards Tec

~`*`Jude`*`~

~`*`Jude`*`~ Report 21 Feb 2009 21:24

Hello Tec and welcome :o)
lWow how lucky are you?.....so many birds:o))
Great to know you see loads of Oyster Catchers,l think their numbers were dwindling not so long ago??

l told a story on here about our Cormorants.....l thought they had been culled 3 or 4 yrs ago and l was darn shaw my Vic had told ne,well today we were chatting about them and l mentioned the cull...."what cull" says Vic, "the one you told me about", says me....."don't know where you got that from, they would'nt need culling, not enough of them"....so ignore that silly story of mine!! lol

It thanks to Ann that we have this brilliant thread:o))
l wonder how many more people are out there looking in on this thread and thinking about posting??

jude :o)

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 21 Feb 2009 21:18

Ooh it sounds beautiful, not likely to see one here I think, we got excited at having a song thrush in the garden.

Ann
Glos

Dormouse

Dormouse Report 21 Feb 2009 21:17

Hi Tec,

Nice to meet you. I dream of seeing a firecrest.................. I see goldcrests fairly often but the firecrest continues to elude me : (

Tecwyn

Tecwyn Report 21 Feb 2009 20:55

Hi Ann,
I am in North West Wales.
The jackdaws will eat from any feeder the can get their beaks into. They swing on the feeders, causing them them sway about madly, fill their beaks then fly away to a flat surface, ie chimney stack, empty the seed and eat it at their leisure - then come back for more. I have one flat feeder that I use for the collared doves - that's the jackdaws favourite because it's easy access.
The firecrest is a very small wren like bird - very timid - had a bright red/orange stripe on crown of head, with a distinct black and white strip beneath. Very similar to a goldcrest - a little gem of a bird.

Regards Tec

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 21 Feb 2009 20:27

Hi Tec, good to see you on here. I didn't think jackdaws ate from feeders. Would it keep them off your seed if you put out bread and fat pieces for them in another part of the garden? You have an interesting selection of birds. which part of UK are you in? I have never seen a firecrest, in fact i don't know what they look like so will have to look them up.

Keep posting now you have started.

Ann
Glos

Tecwyn

Tecwyn Report 21 Feb 2009 20:19

Hi everyone - hope you will excuse this intrusion. I have read this thread from the beginning, but being more of a reader than a poster, have been rather shy of stepping in. Being a lifelong bird lover I have read all your postings with interest. and have gained some useful tips re feeding.

I am fortunate to live in a rural/coastal area where the mountains come down to the coast. Consequently, I get a variety of bird life here.
The daily visitors to my garden are the usual - sparrows - chaffinches - blackbirds - greenfinches - robin - a lonely wren, and a so far lonely song thrush - blue, coal, great, and long tailed tits. Occassionally goldfinches,less often a blackcap, and a nuthatch.
Have only once spotted a firecrest.
We have a barn owl living at the adjacent farm - I usually see him at twilight, and also just before dawn, (if I'm up)
Buzzards are common here, coming down off the mountain more often in hard weather. One sat forlornly on a post in my garden during the recent bad weather. My wife took pity on it, defrosted stewing steak out of the freezer, placed the steak prominately near the post - this was totally ignored for two days, and was eventually eaten by the jackdaws when the buzzard flew away.
We have a pair of red kites that nest on the mountain, and their numbers seem to be growing, as I spot them more often.
Today I took my dog to the beach - mostly rocks and shingle - the oyster catchers were there in strength, and cormerants just off shore.
The jackdaws are a bit of a menace - they sit in the trees and on my roof waiting for me to appear every morning to fill the feeders, then swoop down like hooligans, causing chaos and scattering seed everywhere.
I don't know how to solve this problem.
I will continue to read your postings with interest

regards to all.........Tec

~`*`Jude`*`~

~`*`Jude`*`~ Report 21 Feb 2009 16:31

Mmm me thinks l will !!

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 21 Feb 2009 16:28

don't know about sponsoring blogs Jude, be careful though. Put a general query up on the board.