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For WHO's birders

Posted: 27 Mar 2020, 12:27
by 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."

Re: For WHO's birders

Posted: 09 May 2020, 01:15
by gph
"Amazing the number of hits for corvid ""alcohol consumption"" that are down to misspelling covid corvid!"

Re: For WHO's birders

Posted: 09 May 2020, 01:00
by WHU(Exeter)
If you have a pair of magpies put grapes out for them.

Re: For WHO's birders

Posted: 08 May 2020, 14:36
by Worst Case Ontario
"This is lovely, thanks Nurse"

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 08 May 2020, 11:48
by Hammer and Pickle
"Coal tits - that's what they are. I'd forgotten and couldn't work out why they were too small to be great tits and not blue enough to be, well, blue."

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 08 May 2020, 11:38
by Nurse Ratched
"Arf! Good job. My garden this morning is TIT CITY. Frequent stand-off between coal tits, blue tits, robins and great tits over the mealworms. To be fair the mealworms been soaked for 48 hours so are extra succulent."

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 08 May 2020, 11:37
by ray winstone
Big birds in the sky today.... https://www.essexlive.news/news/essex-news/raf-red-arrows-flight-path-4115886

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 08 May 2020, 11:22
by Hammer and Pickle
They strutted. It scarpered.

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 08 May 2020, 11:18
by Nurse Ratched
Oh no. What happened?

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 08 May 2020, 11:13
by Hammer and Pickle
Neighbour’s cat just tried to off it with a nesting magpie pair. That went well.

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 29 Apr 2020, 14:26
by Coffee
"In recent days, I've taken to walking the dog on the roof of our building. It's a flat roof, in case you're wondering, and offers a panoramic view of other roofs and tree tops. But this post is not about the skyline, but a question about parakeets. There have been solo flights as well as squadrons of the things overflying our roof -- but always on the same flight path: from northwest to southeast and vice versa. I can see no obvious reason why they choose that route. There's a river a couple of miles away and not much of interest in the other direction. Other birds don't seem to follow any route and the parrots always, without exception, take this route. Any theories why?"

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 29 Apr 2020, 13:59
by zebthecat
The Jackdaws who were nesting in my chimney fledged this morning. All the Jackdaws in the area got together for a mass fly around (there were upwards of 50) and eventually all flew to the oak woods up the hill from me.

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 29 Apr 2020, 13:41
by Hammer and Pickle
Feeding time is really dramatic - has all the pathos of a proper cup tie.

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 28 Apr 2020, 12:51
by blueeyed.handsomeman
cHARLIE DOVE

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 27 Apr 2020, 19:23
by Nurse Ratched
"Good lord, yes! Thanks."

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 27 Apr 2020, 19:12
by Hammer and Pickle
How about a live stream to a roosting peregrine falcon pair at Warsaw's Palace of Culture? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdezYfZdYT4&fbclid=IwAR2wCDlfEpmqI13Bv8P6A5az5ezOzhskUjynHmNAopvaPi5DD4dQ1j69sAk

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 26 Apr 2020, 13:49
by only1billybonds
"Loads of red kites where i work (Caversham), could watch them all day as they glide around effortlessly without using their wings. Also we have a couple of very industrious woodpeckers at the back of our garden,the racket they make is a wonderful sound as is the tuneful whistling of a yet unidentified bird. We have rewarded him for keeping us entertained by naming him Otis. And our mob of hedghogs have swelled their numbers,we now have ten regular spikey friends who get fed every night."

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 23:38
by simon.s
Red Kite right over my garden this afternoon. Got chased away by a couple of other birds.

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 23:17
by zebthecat
Also had the the jackdaws in my chimney successfully fighting off a crow who was trying to pinch the chicks. Glad that they won that little battle.

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 23:16
by zebthecat
bruuuno 10:31 Sat Apr 25 I had four this evening at dusk. Love them.

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 22:43
by bruuuno
Haha

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 22:43
by bruuuno
Haha

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 22:41
by Far Cough
"bruuuuuno, don't eat that fucking bat"

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 22:31
by bruuuno
Bazil the bat is back in my garden

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 21:26
by WHU(Exeter)
"There is a lovely bird watching spot in the centre of Bristol near where I work. In a square mile of bland office after office, there is a waterway with a few canal boats, a little bridge and a terrace to sit and watch the world go by. Had been walking over there every working day, since working from home, could sit down there, see one or two swans taking half the afternoon to swim one way and then the other past, under a willow tree that droops right into the water....when the sun shines through the willow tree and the swans are right underneath, it's like you are thousands of miles away from a soulless block of office after office. To the right there's some trees that are home to a host of bluetits and a pair of blackbirds. Both the blue titis and the blackbirds ruling the roost and providing the entertainment and beautiful song, depending on what time of the afternoon it is, It's lovely down there and so quiet..was about half a dozen or so sat there each day, usually there are a hundred plus, but with everybody working from home... Dead quiet and in that could hear a pin drop for an hour, the few there could just watch the swans and the blackbirds and almost every day down there, could drift off and actually forget about this lockdown. One of the half dozen people there, I recognise from being one of the all day, everyday crowd from the nearby wetherspoons. bloke in his mid-sixties, sat on the 'ferry stop' seats with sandwiches and a bottle of cider, watching the bird life and the water flowing slowly by. Few days in you could tell that a kind of set of unwritten laws establishing themselves on the terrace, the swans would come really close to the side and nobody would break that silence then with some inane mobile call. It was unusual to hear a single telephone conversation at all after 3 weeks of it down there. Really beautiful spot and with hardly anybody around, what with most heading to more popular parks, a real oasis in all around it physically, and a real break from everything else happening. Went there on Thursday and the terrace has been taped off. There are some things in modern Britain that I fucking detest."

Re: For WHO's Birders

Posted: 25 Apr 2020, 18:03
by Tomshardware
Where do you live pickle? Toe rag I saw a weasel chasing another weasel the other day along a country lane.