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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: birds

Mrs Crow

31 Wednesday Jul 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Carrion crow, crow

This is my beautiful female Carrion crow friend, the mate of the handsome male I’ve featured here before (The look, the glare, 26 October 2022). For some reason, they haven’t raised a family this year – perhaps they tried but were disturbed, or their chicks perished in our dreadful early Spring weather. Or, maybe, after successfully raising three youngsters last year (My crow family, 15 July 2023), they decided to give themselves a break this year (though I think that’s probably me anthropomorphising their decision-making process). Both Mr and Mrs Crow are moulting at the moment so looking a little bedraggled but they still look lovely to me.

240731 mrs crow

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Herring gull baby

19 Friday Jul 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Herring gull, Herring gull chick

Having picked up a bottle of milk, I was coming out of my local shop when I heard the plaintive calling: ‘Feed me! I’m starving! Feed me!’

240718 herring gull baby (1)

A pair of Herring gulls seems to breed on the shop rooftop every year; last year’s single chick fledged successfully, thanks in part to the titbits of food donated to its cause by both shoppers and the shop owners feeding the parents.

240718 herring gull baby (2)

This year’s chick is already well grown, though it looked to be suffering from the heat during our mini heat wave. Let’s hope it continues to thrive.

240718 herring gull baby (3)

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A juvenile Whitethroat

05 Friday Jul 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, juvenile Whitethroat, Whitethroat, Whitethroat fledglings

During recent walks I’ve often heard a distinctive buzzing sound coming from the trees and bushes as I’ve walked past. The sound comes from Whitethroats; at this time of year it’s usually a family of adults and their fledglings keeping in contact as they forage for food. With the vegetation now dense, almost impenetrable in places, I don’t often see the birds but, this day, I got lucky when a juvenile Whitethroat paused briefly in a gap in the foliage.

240705 whitethroat

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Fledgling Robin

01 Monday Jul 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, fledgling robin, fledglings, robin, young Robin

It looked nothing like you would expect a Robin to look – where’s the famous red breast? But as soon as this little fledgling began to hop along the lane in front of me I knew it was a young Robin from the way it moved, and bobbed, and turned its head. It’s the jizz, as we birders say.

240701 robin

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Chicks of Cardiff’s canals

27 Thursday Jun 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Coot, Coot chicks, Mallard, Mallard ducklings, Tufted ducklings

As well as the Red-eyed damselflies I wrote about yesterday, my wander around Cardiff’s inner city canals also produced sightings of some delightful young birds and I had a wonderful time watching their antics, and their interactions with each other and their parents.

240627 coots

Three tiny Coot chicks were having a little swim with their doting parents. The chicks looked very young, were still relying on their parents to feed them, and, after about 15 minutes, the parents took their little family back to the nearby nest to preen and rest.

240627 ducklings

There were also two broods of Mallards, both with their mothers supervising them as they whizzed along the canals, nibbling at the weed, wobbling across lily pads. One mother Mallard had a brood of four ducklings, the other just one surviving chick.

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Chicks of Cardiff Bay

22 Saturday Jun 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Canada geese, Canada goose goslings, Cardiff Bay birding, Lesser black-backed gull, Lesser black-backed gull chicks, Oystercatcher, Oystercatcher chick

For the first time in ages I walked a circuit of Cardiff Bay on Tuesday – I usually avoid the place in the summer as there are too many people for my liking, but I’d heard there were some chicks to be seen so I went looking. These are they …

240622 canada geese (1)

Canada goose (above and below): there were two broods of goslings, one of five and one of six, with their parents and a flock of 20-plus adult geese (as if they were all keeping an eye on the children) in one of the now-landlocked old docks. They’ll be stuck there until they learn to fly but I’ve heard people have been feeding them (perhaps that’s also why so many adults are present) so hopefully they’ll all develop to maturity.

240622 canada geese (2)

Lesser black-backed gull: one chick was still on the dolphin where their nest must have been (there is no other way the chick could have got there), squawking almost repeatedly at an adult gull that was perched higher up the dolphin structure. The other chick had either fallen or jumped from the dolphin and was nearby, at the water’s edge, washing and preening.

240622 lesser black-backed chicks

Oystercatcher: this was the main reason for my walk and definitely the highlight. A pair of Oystercatchers has been returning to the same spot, on another of the dolphin structures, for several years, to breed but they have always failed to raise a chick to adulthood. It is a very odd location for their nest – no other Oystercatchers breed locally so I wonder if this is where one of them was originally hatched. So far, this year’s breeding attempt is going well so let’s hope their good luck continues.

240622 oystercatchers

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Sad news, good news

13 Thursday Jun 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, breeding Lesser black-backed gulls, British birds, Lesser black-backed gull chicks, Lesser blacked gull, urban gulls

A pair of Lesser black-backed gulls is once again attempting to raise a family amongst the chimney pots of a house visible from the back of my flat.

Sadly, this process involves many hazards, one of which being the fact that, once they become more active, the chicks can easily fall from their precarious home. And that’s exactly what has happened to one of the local chicks. As I watched, and in spite of the slippery nature of the slate roofing tiles, it managed to climb up to the roof ridge but, of course, there was no way it could return to the nest. The parent gulls were very concerned and made a lot of noise when they discovered what had happened but, to be honest, that only made things worse as the little chick tried to reach them along the ridge but kept constantly slipping down the roof. I don’t know what eventually happened to the wee thing but I presume it fell off the roof and died.

The good news is that there is still one chick in the nest, and the parents are, so far, taking good care of it. Whether or not it survives to adulthood remains to be seen. Fingers crossed!

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Hungry noisy Blue tit babies

05 Wednesday Jun 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, Blue tit, Blue tit chicks, British birds, nesting Blue tits

I heard them before I saw their nest box, that loud insistent cheeping of hungry baby birds. In this case, they were hungry noisy Blue tit babies that were causing their parents to fly themselves ragged, hunting through trees and bushes for food for their young.

240605 blue tit babies

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Hope for Box growers

03 Monday Jun 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds, insects

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birding, birdwatching, Box tree moth caterpillars, Box tree moth larvae, Box tree moth pupa, British birds, jackdaw, Jackdaw eating Box tree moth larva

In this post I am pleased to bring some good news to those of you who grow Box trees, bushes and hedges (Buxus species) in your gardens.

240603 jackdaws munching box moth larvae (1)

Though many Box plants are being ravaged by the voracious larvae of the Box tree moth (Box tree moth cats, 2 May), it seems the local Jackdaws have developed a taste for the larvae – and pupae, I think, judging by what the Jackdaw in my photo below is eating. A local moth expert explained recently on Twitter/X that ‘the larvae are known to contain alkaloid toxins, so birds generally seem to avoid them.’ Presumably some birds are able to tolerate the toxins, which is good news for all you Box growers.

240603 jackdaws munching box moth pupa

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Coot eggs

31 Friday May 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Coot, Coot eggs, Coot nesting

Coots usually sit so tightly on their nests that you can’t see their eggs but I just happened to pass this one when s/he was standing up for a stretch and to move the eggs around.

240531 coot 8 eggs (1)

By the time I got my camera out, the bird was almost sitting down again but I was able to count the eight (!) eggs, and to get a closer look at them. Now to watch out for the chicks emerging.

240531 coot 8 eggs (2)

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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