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earthstar

~ a celebration of nature

earthstar

Category Archives: birds

Another day, another Jay

06 Tuesday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, drawing of Jay, Jay, nature journal, nature journalling

I hesitated before deciding to share this but the truth is that the miserable weather means I’m struggling a little to find daily content for the blog so here we are. I’ve always kept a nature journal, recording my finds from my walks, but this year I’ve decided to challenge myself by illustrating my journal with at least one drawing each day. I initially thought I would draw flora and fauna but so far I’ve focused on birds, and I might just stick to birds this year, as there’s so much to learn – and this is certainly helping to hone my observation skills! As I’m a complete novice when it comes to drawing, I started out copying other people’s quite stylised drawings I found online, using just a black ballpoint. I’ve now progressed to drawing from photos, and using ballpoint and coloured pencils. I hope, eventually, to be able to sketch in the field, and perhaps use watercolours, but I’m just taking things slowly, not pushing myself too hard too soon.
All of which was to explain why today you are seeing my drawings of a Jay’s head! Apparently, you can teach an old dog new tricks.

240206 jay drawing

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A garrulous Jay?

05 Monday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Garrulus glandarius, Jay

Is it any wonder the Jay’s scientific name is Garrulus glandarius? Garrulus is from the Latin garrire which means chattering, babbling or noisy, and that is, of course, where the adjective garrulous (meaning excessively talkative) also comes from. (The epithet glandarius is from Latin meaning ‘of acorns’.) The Jay often announces its presence by screeching like a Banshee but the gorgeous Jay in my photo was making much more gentle sounds, chortling quietly to itself, as if it had just heard a good joke. Garrulous, yes, but It was also quite delightful!

240205 jay

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Waders little and large

03 Saturday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds, winter

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Dunlin, Ringed plover, Turnstone, waders, wading birds

Like a bird giant, a Curlew strides past this small grouping of Ringed plovers and Dunlins.

240203 waders (1)

At first glance, I thought there were only a couple of the smaller birds snoozing at the water’s edge but, as the tide was coming in, their slumbers kept being interrupted by waves splashing over them, so every few minutes they had to shuffle a bit further up the beach. And when that happened, more little heads would pop up from where they’d been tucked down amongst the rocks.

240203 waders (2)

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Whose feet, 2?

01 Thursday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

birding, birds feet, birdwatching, British birds, Roath Lake birding

This foreigner, which has made itself quite at home in Britain, approached me for food while I was walking around a Cardiff Lake yesterday. Any guesses?

240201 birds feet

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Siskins in the Alders

30 Tuesday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Forest Farm, Forest Farm Nature Reserve, Siskin, Siskin feeding on Alder cones

It was easy to hear their sibilant chatter (if you’ve never heard it, SoundCloud has a good recording). With their green, yellow and black colouring, they were well camouflaged so it was hard to pick them out among the Alder branches and cones. And, because of all those twigs, branches and cones, it was even harder to get photographs, which is my excuse for not getting better images of the noisy Siskins I found feeding near the Glamorgan Canal at Forest Farm Nature Reserve last week.

240130 siskin

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What a dude!

27 Saturday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Long-tailed duck

With the slicked-up feathers on top of his head, the dark ear muffs, the stylish plumage in 50 shades of grey, black and white, this juvenile Long-tailed duck is quite the sophisticated dude, don’t you think? He’s a first winter bird, born last summer, so hasn’t yet got the long tail his species is named for but that will soon grow in.

240127 long-tailed duck (1)

He’s been hanging out near the Barrage in Cardiff Bay for about a week, spending most of his time around the string of orange buoys in front of the sluices, diving frequently in and around those buoys then startling the perching Black-headed gulls when he pops up right next to them. The Coots don’t much like this foreigner in their patch either, but then Coots are ornery about most things.

240127 long-tailed duck (2)

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Another rare grebe

24 Wednesday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds, winter

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birding, birdwatching, Black-necked grebe, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Podiceps nigricollis

For the past week or thereabouts, a Black-necked grebe (Podiceps nigricollis) has been making its home in the middle of Cardiff Bay, visible to those well versed in identifying distant specks of black and white through their telescopes but not so easy for the likes of me, deficient in those skills and with old eyes and mere binoculars. However, I did wonder if perhaps the battering and raging of Storm Isha overnight last Sunday might have encouraged the grebe to shelter close to the western side of the Bay.

240124 black-necked grebe (3)

And I was right! There it was, with a large flock of Tufted ducks, a few Goosander, Coots, Mallards and a couple of Gadwall, and several of its grebe cousin the Great cresteds. With the Red-necked grebe still present on Cardiff’s northern reservoirs, it’s a real treat to have another rare grebe visitor this year already.

240124 black-necked grebe (2)

The BTO (British Trust for Ornithology) website says that, on average, just 115 birds overwinter in Britain, and some 50-odd pairs breed here, though they are both secretive and mostly kept secret, so as to prevent interference with this amber-listed beauty. I would certainly not want to disturb their breeding but I would love to see one of these grebes in its summer plumage – it’s a far cry from the smudgy black and white our local rare visitor is currently sporting. (The Bird Guides website has a page that provides excellent information and includes stunning images of all our local grebes in both winter and summer plumage).

240124 black-necked grebe (1)

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Pale-bellied Brent geese

22 Monday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds, winter

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birding, birdwatching, Branta bernicla hrota, Brent goose, British birds, Pale-bellied Brent goose, Sully Island birds

Four Pale-bellied Brent geese (also known as Light-bellied) (Branta bernicla hrota) have been present, mostly distant, in the waters around Sully Island on the Welsh south coast for a week or so and, during last Friday’s walk, I was very fortunate to find them feeding along the shore line in Swanbridge bay.

240122 pale-bellied brent geese (1)

There are four distinct races of Brent goose, depending on the colour of their bellies (some are dark-bellied – see my November 2022 post A rare visitor to Cardiff Bay) and where they breed (the Bird Guides website has a good article on the different sub-species). Pale-bellied Brents found on the western shores of Britain are almost certainly from the population that breeds in Canada, and they usually overwinter in Iceland.

240122 pale-bellied brent geese (2)

However, population expansion (the Canadian population doubled between the mid 1990s and mid 2000s, according to one article I found) has led the excess numbers to find other overwintering locations, including sites like Anglesey and Morecambe Bay. There has for some time been a very small population at Aberthaw approximately 10 miles west of Sully Island along the south Wales coast. Perhaps, if numbers continue to increase, more Pale-bellied Brents will move further east, and we will be lucky enough to see these beautiful birds in my neighbourhood more often.

240122 pale-bellied brent geese (3)

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Flashes of teal

20 Saturday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Forest Farm Country Park, Forest Farm Nature Reserve, Kingfisher

My most frequent views of Kingfishers are as passing piping flashes of teal, streaking around the edges of Cardiff Bay. So, it was a delight, on Thursday, to walk along the Glamorgan canal at Forest Farm Country Park and find one sitting on a branch, staring at the water, intensely focused on finding its next meal.

240120 kingfisher

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Whose feet?

19 Friday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

birding, birds feet, birdwatching, British birds

The owner of these feet approached me yesterday, looking for food. A bigger clue to its identity I could not give! So, whose feet are these?

240119 herring gulls feet

The big reveal …

240119 herring gull

Have you worked it out now? It’s a Herring gull.

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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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