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: 06 Aug 2021, 17:25
by Dandy Lyon
I saw a bald eagle just yesterday. A couple nest nearby
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 05 Aug 2021, 22:24
by Aalborg Hammer
Apparently there's a colony in the New Forest so maybe it's strayed..we're only 25 miles away
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 05 Aug 2021, 21:01
by Nurse Ratched
"Wow, you're really lucky then. Damn! ?üòÅ"
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 05 Aug 2021, 20:58
by Aalborg Hammer
Nurse..near Winchester
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 05 Aug 2021, 18:52
by Hammer and Pickle
"Saw a bee-eater, a hoopoe and gold finches. Flocks of gold finches and not one BIG NOSE."
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 05 Aug 2021, 18:43
by zebthecat
A young fox has taken to sleeping among the flowers in my back garden. He/she looks very healthy and has come to an understanding with my cat (after a couple of stare outs) that sharing space is OK.
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 05 Aug 2021, 17:48
by Nurse Ratched
A hawfinch?? Where do you live?
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 05 Aug 2021, 09:41
by Aalborg Hammer
Delighted to see a Hawfinch in our cherry tree yesterday - I thought it was a bullfinch at first but it's got a 'kin great bill and it's a bit bigger
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 03 Aug 2021, 21:46
by Nurse Ratched
He certainly doesn't.
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 03 Aug 2021, 21:46
by Nurse Ratched
He certainly doesn't.
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 03 Aug 2021, 21:08
by Crassus
"Good job nurse, apparently slugs are bad news for hogs, lung worm, consumed under sufferance of no better foodstuffs Not an issue your bloke has I'm sure"
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 03 Aug 2021, 20:53
by Nurse Ratched
"Birds cracking snail shells is a good shout, Pickle. My garden is currently full of gastropods. The HEDGEHOG is too busy munching his special hog bickies to attend to my SLUG problem* *not really a problem. I'm not a botanical eugenicist"
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 03 Aug 2021, 20:12
by Hammer and Pickle
"Could be a thrush, Toms. They crack snails open on rocks and mimic the sound, the beastly psychopaths."
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 03 Aug 2021, 19:35
by gph
I've been known to bash rocks together in my garden. (To shape them for my fish tank)
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 03 Aug 2021, 17:41
by WHU(Exeter)
Could be someone in their back garden actually banging two pebbles together! The lockdowns have done strange things to some people.
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 03 Aug 2021, 09:52
by Tomshardware
I kept hearing the warning call of a bird yesterday and it sounded like 2 pebbles being bashed together repeatedly. Long tailed tit maybe.
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 25 Jul 2021, 22:32
by Nurse Ratched
"Ooh, aren't YOU brave today. Did you forget to ask for your soy latte to be de-caff this morning?"
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 25 Jul 2021, 22:00
by the exile
Nurse - are your cornflowers withering away or getting munched?
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 25 Jul 2021, 17:04
by WHU(Exeter)
"I think they are brilliant, really subtle colours and even though they're slight flowers they,'re really hardy in winds and rain Except not in my garden"
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 25 Jul 2021, 16:44
by Nurse Ratched
"I'm fond of cornflowers too. Isn't it mad that they grow like weeds on roadside verges, but you're struggling to grow them purposely? I'm not a gardener, so can't help. Hopefully someone else will."
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 25 Jul 2021, 16:14
by WHU(Exeter)
"Nurse, that's lovely, love the little fellas. Got foxes living adjacent to my garden, I don't mind them at all, 3 of them 2 youngsters and their mother. They don't seem to make half as much noise as you'd expect from foxes and the two little ones tend to use the garden as a play area about an hour after dusk. Only concern is next doors kitten seems intent on climbing over, hasn't managed it yet but can see it finally getting over and then not being able to climb back....and if it coincides with rollicking fox time then there could be a 'situation'. Gardening question thrown out there... Why can I never grow corn flowers?...am Allright with practically everything else I've grown but every year struggle to get any to come through and if they do its just 3 or 4 that last only a matter of days. Bit more of a stretch but Himalayan blue poppies..anybody managed to grow these?...would love any tips, have looked at gardening sites but it all seems to descend in gobbledegook...I want to grow blue poppies, not attain a biology degree."
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 25 Jul 2021, 14:52
by Hammer and Pickle
"If you are feeling socially robust enough, you could try a local city farm for meadow hay. However, you could also be succumbing to the temptation to do too much - it is midsummer and a hay bedding will be more a hibernation requirement."
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 25 Jul 2021, 14:32
by Nurse Ratched
I've spent a good part of this morning searching through hedgehog houses on Amazon. I can't believe I am poised to buy a bag of fucking 'fresh meadow hay' for its bedding.
Re: For WHO's birders
Posted: 25 Jul 2021, 13:23
by gph
"Perhaps hedgehogs are like certain plants - if they are not killed, they keep on growing. You could be the artchitect of your own downfall..."