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For WHO's birders

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Nurse Ratched
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For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"I thought you might like this video.



It's a compilation of different birds singing. Beautiful photography. If you expand the 'title' under the video it gives a list of species and the times they pop up in the video. Most of the species are familiar to us in the UK, but there are some 'exotics' (the cranes - wow, what a noise!) It was filmed in Belarus. The guy has a channel you can subscribe to. Anyway, I hope you enjoy it and maybe it'll take your mind off you-know-what for a few blessed minutes."
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Yes, song thrushes were really common in the 1970s, even in urban areas. 
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One Sunny Day
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post One Sunny Day »

See red kites, daily, above my house. Shame I've only ever had one land once though they do hover really low over my garden. Huge fuckers! 
I did have a song thrush in my garden, the other day, for the first time since I lived here. Used to be really common when I was a kid but hardly ever see them anymore. 
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Splodder wrote: 26 Jan 2025, 15:48
Nurse Ratched" wrote: 26 Jan 2025, 13:57 And today, for the first time, two flittery chiffchaffs. 😍
I presume they followed the blackcap: 'warbler see, warbler do'. Can't stop grinning. Truly fantastic birding lately.

Also watched a red kite flying after a pigeon in the air with great determination. I don't know whether it was hunting it on the wing, or just got fed up of being harried and turned the tables. Do they hunt pigeons on the wing?? Also saw my great spotted woodpecker bully a parakeet off a feeder. The woody never behaves like that towards other birds, so I suspect there is aggro between them. Maybe competition for resources, nesting sites, etc. 
Get a lot of kites up here in The Chilterns near High Wycombe. From what I've heard to call them birds of prey is a bit of a misnomer.  They're mostly scavengers and picnic raiders. Easily bullied by crows etc.
Indeed. Scavengers, roadkill, small mammals, etc. But also baby birds, which is why red kites get mobbed and driven away by other species. Pigeons breed all year round, so I imagine their nests get targeted a lot by kites. I've seen small groups of pigeons, gulls, etc harrying red kites, but I have never seen a kite chasing down an adult pigeon before. I don't know if he caught it, they flew beyond view. Believe it or not, red kites are now very common in London. 
Splodder
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Splodder »

Nurse Ratched" wrote: 26 Jan 2025, 13:57 And today, for the first time, two flittery chiffchaffs. 😍
I presume they followed the blackcap: 'warbler see, warbler do'. Can't stop grinning. Truly fantastic birding lately.

Also watched a red kite flying after a pigeon in the air with great determination. I don't know whether it was hunting it on the wing, or just got fed up of being harried and turned the tables. Do they hunt pigeons on the wing?? Also saw my great spotted woodpecker bully a parakeet off a feeder. The woody never behaves like that towards other birds, so I suspect there is aggro between them. Maybe competition for resources, nesting sites, etc. 
Get a lot of kites up here in The Chilterns near High Wycombe. From what I've heard to call them birds of prey is a bit of a misnomer.  They're mostly scavengers and picnic raiders. Easily bullied by crows etc.
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

And today, for the first time, two flittery chiffchaffs. 😍
I presume they followed the blackcap: 'warbler see, warbler do'. Can't stop grinning. Truly fantastic birding lately.

Also watched a red kite flying after a pigeon in the air with great determination. I don't know whether it was hunting it on the wing, or just got fed up of being harried and turned the tables. Do they hunt pigeons on the wing?? Also saw my great spotted woodpecker bully a parakeet off a feeder. The woody never behaves like that towards other birds, so I suspect there is aggro between them. Maybe competition for resources, nesting sites, etc. 
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Mr Anon" wrote: 25 Jan 2025, 15:05
Nurse Ratched" wrote: 19 Jan 2025, 11:38 I just weighed a monkey nut: 3 grams. 

A bluetit weighs 11 grams.

So that money nut was about a quarter of the bluetit's bodyweight. 
That's nothing, African swallows have been observed carrying coconuts
😂😂😂
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Mr Anon »

Nurse Ratched" wrote: 19 Jan 2025, 11:38 I just weighed a monkey nut: 3 grams. 

A bluetit weighs 11 grams.

So that money nut was about a quarter of the bluetit's bodyweight. 
That's nothing, African swallows have been observed carrying coconuts
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Blackcap ♀️

First one ever in my garden 😀
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

I just weighed a monkey nut: 3 grams. 

A bluetit weighs 11 grams.

So that money nut was about a quarter of the bluetit's bodyweight. 
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

I just watched a bluetit peck into a monkey nut on the ground, then fly off with it! WTF??
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »




This woman's channel is good fun.
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

I've seen videos on YouTube of kookaburras turning up each morning in people's gardens to be social with the humans. 
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One Sunny Day
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post One Sunny Day »

Nurse Ratched" wrote: 18 Jan 2025, 19:00 I've never seen a kingfisher. Would love to. 
 
You'd be surprised at how regularly they can be around but hard to spot. Get one in the pond in my town park in winter and people walk past oblivious to it. They fly fast and normally you just see a blink of bright blue flashing past. They are also much smaller than people imagine, probably not much bigger than a sparrow. Also, when they are perched, they often face you and their orange breat is really good camouflage in the reeds of embankment vegetation.
My kingfisher highlight was in Australia. The kookaburra is the world's largest kingfisher and unlike here gets very tame and shows up.anywhere, even not near water. I was in the bunya mountains and one.landed on my table at a bench outside a cafe. I was able to hand feed it chips.
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

I've never seen a kingfisher. Would love to. 
John Coffey
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post John Coffey »

I’ve developed a bit of a fascination for Kingfishers. Bloody gorgeous little things. 
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Chaffinch ♀️ ! In my garden 😍

I know that generally they are common, but not where I live. This has been a very good week.
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zebthecat
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post zebthecat »

I love firecrests. Mwrlin pick them up but have never seen in the garden but there are a few nearby woods that have lots of them. They are as close as you get to a humming bird in the UK.
There was starling who used to park himself on the roof of my old office at dusk and go through its impression routines on top the usual starling beatboxing. It did blackbird, wren, tawny owl, robin, grey wagtail, the default android ring tone with others and, best of all, truck reverse. We had a Scania garage on the next unit in the industrial estate and that one made me laugh.
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Re: For WHO's birders

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Lee Trundle" wrote: 16 Jan 2025, 15:31 Speaking of lovely coloured birds, I saw my first YellowHAMMER of the year at the weekend.
What a brilliant spot. Jel.
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Lee Trundle
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Lee Trundle »

Speaking of lovely coloured birds, I saw my first YellowHAMMER of the year at the weekend.
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Nurse Ratched
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Post Nurse Ratched »

Clever cat!

My firecrest spot, in my scruffy urban neighbourhood, will not be bettered this year, I think. First one I have ever seen. I heard it calling in a tree on my street and whipped round to look for it because I wasn't familiar with the call. I knew it was something 'different'. Then I saw how tiny it was. It hung around for a while, flitting from branch to branch, still calling. I realised it was either a goldcrest or firecrest. I whipped out my Merlin app and it confirmed 'firecrest'. Just before it flew off I caught the bright head streak and eye stripe. I've had a spring in my step all day.
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WHU(Exeter)
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post WHU(Exeter) »

Just googled, what a lovely coloured little bird

Most exotic it gets in my garden is jays, I do love their colours.

That cat, no word of a lie has now twice mimicked nearby magpies. The first time I heard him doing it, I initially thought he had something stuck in his throat, but the second time he did directly after two magpies had been noisy. I googled cats mimicking magpies and apparently it's not unknown and there's some youtube footage of their efforts.
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Nurse Ratched
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Post Nurse Ratched »

Firecrest!
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Hammer and Pickle
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Hammer and Pickle »

Been to the East Grinstead Rudlof Steiner Emerson College place. Not exactly a cult but they manufacture beigeness there on a industrial scale - I shall never go there again and couldn't resist calling their man Adolf.
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Nurse Ratched
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Post Nurse Ratched »

Arf! Sounds like a nutty place.
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zebthecat
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post zebthecat »

Nurse Ratched" wrote: 02 Jan 2025, 20:40
zebthecat wrote: 02 Jan 2025, 20:34 There was bird a fight in my garden this afternoon for the perching spots on the apple trees in my garden8-10 Herring Gulls appeared out of nowhere a couple of months ago - not seen a single one before in the 12 years I've lived here.
The Gulls were sunnign themselves in the upper branches of the trees this afternoon and a whole load of Javkdaws arrived. Have had Jackdaws nesting in a disused chimney for years and they all move on once the chicks have fledged but they are back to start nesting and breeding now.
After a lot of harassing and chasing the Jackdaws drove the Gulls out of trees and elsewhere. Interestingly a few Magpies joined in on the Jackdaws side.
The East Grinstead Corvid Massive ftw.



 
East Grinstead? Is that the place where all the cults plot up? I've been reading a bit about cults again over the last few days. You know how something sets you off and you go down the rabbit hole? I keep coming back to 'cults', for some reason. That and MK Ultra. 
Yes it is.
We have, pretty much, the cult full house here and in the small surrounding area from the Scientology HQ to Wiccans in Forest Row as you, no doubt, have found out. When I joined Factset in Forest Row I sat next to our office manager and she was, literally, a witch but a lovely human being as well which is more than you can say about about some of the loons.
The Church of Scientology pay for the town's Christmas lights.
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