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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: birds

Rafting Cormorants

06 Tuesday Dec 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Cormorant, feeding Cormorants, rafting Cormorants

I’ve seen this behaviour by the Cormorants in Cardiff Bay many times. A few birds gather on the water, then more and more fly in from their various roosting spots to join in. Moving forward together across the water, each bird dives repeatedly.

221206 rafting cormorants (1)

I assumed the Cormorants were either driving or following a school of fish below the water, and this would seem to be confirmed by a research paper I found online, which discusses a different species of Cormorant living around the Arabian peninsula. Here’s what they have reported:

… data suggest that the benefits of group foraging outweigh the costs of intense aggregation in this seabird. Prey detection and information transmission are facilitated in large groups. Once discovered, shoaling prey are concentrated under the effect of the multitude. Fish school cohesiveness is then disorganized by continuous attacks of diving birds to facilitate prey capture.

221206 rafting cormorants (2)

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Curlew calling

03 Saturday Dec 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Curlew, Sully birds

Any day is a good day when you hear a Curlew calling in the thick mist and see first one bird, distantly on the beach, and then another eight, grazing on the grass of the playing fields, all at the seaside town of Sully, just a short bus ride from home. Unfortunately, local dog walkers show little respect for these red-listed birds and frequently disturb them when they’re trying to feed, both on the beach and on the grass. That is how I managed to get a flight shot, but I’d much rather not have got the photo if that meant the birds were left in peace. I glared at a few people, I can tell you!

221203 curlew

If you’ve never heard a Curlew call, there’s a short video on John Lawton’s YouTube channel that shows Curlews sleeping and preening and occasionally calling.

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A bat’s demise

01 Thursday Dec 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds, mammal

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bat, birding, birdwatching, British bats, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Magpie, Magpie takes bat, Pipistrelle

This is the sad tale of a bat that ventured out during the daytime only to be snaffled by a Magpie. I initially noticed something tiny flying around low to the water in Cardiff Bay but wasn’t sure what it was until it flew up and clung to a nearby concrete wall. Bat!

221201 bat (1)

Sadly, at the very moment I was taking some photos of it, a Magpie swooped down from above and grabbed the tiny beastie, carrying it up to the ledge above. The Magpie shook its prize a little, perhaps confused by what it had captured, then carried the bat into the nearby bushes. A Carrion crow followed the Magpie very shortly afterwards and, judging by the Magpie’s subsequent shrieking, I suspect the crow carried off the prize.

221201 bat (2)

Speaking to Amy, a local bat expert, it seems this individual was a species of Pipistrelle, which Amy thought looked underweight. That, plus the fact that it was flying during the day, means the bat was probably ill or injured, so its demise, though very unfortunate, may well have been inevitable.

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A Kittiwake comes to town

29 Tuesday Nov 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Kittiwake

Though they can sometimes be seen by keen birders using ‘scopes to watch birds passing along the coast, Kittwakes only rarely visit Cardiff Bay. So, when I heard early last Thursday morning that this one was hanging out near the Barrage locks, I went for a look. And I was lucky – though the bird was sitting on one of the dolphins when I arrived, it flew off and disappeared soon afterwards. It was blowing a gale, which may be why the bird had come in to the Bay, for a rest from the fierce winds, and having to tackle those strong winds is also my excuse for my photos not being sharp – it was difficult keeping myself from being blown about, let alone the camera. Still, it was a beautiful little bird, a lovely sighting, and a late tick for my 2022 patch birding list.

221129 kittiwake

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Startling

26 Saturday Nov 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, starling

A little flock of Starlings was sitting on a wire fence, jamming a lively tune full of whistles and toots, like a small orchestra tuning up, or aliens singing a conversation that only they could understand. And not only were their songs snappy, but they also looked stunning, the sunshine sparkling on the star-like markings of their iridescent plumage.

221126 starling

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Two dives, two fish

24 Thursday Nov 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Great Crested Grebe, Great crested grebe with fish

This Great crested grebe was on a roll! As I watched it diving close to the walking trail around Cardiff Bay, it was successful two dives in a row, emerging with squirming small fish clamped firmly in its beak. With a success rate like that, it wouldn’t take long to fill your tummy.

221124 great crested grebe

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Common, not common

22 Tuesday Nov 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Common sandpiper

In the part of coastal south Wales where I live, Common sandpipers are not so common, though there has been at least one (the same one?) of these little bobbing beauties frequenting the shorelines of Cardiff Bay and the lower River Ely for many months now. These birds can be quite flighty, zipping away at the slightest noise or movement, but this little particular sandpiper was too busy searching for (and finding) tiny crustaceans to munch on to worry about the human clicking away on her camera from the pavement above, luckily.

221122 common sandpiper

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A rare visitor to Cardiff Bay

17 Thursday Nov 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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autumn bird migration, birding, birdwatching, Branta bernicla, Brent goose, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Dark-bellied Brent goose

Monday’s walk around part of Cardiff Bay was special. When I reached the eastern side of the Barrage, I noticed an unusual bird with a flock of the 20-plus Canada geese that were cruising close to shore. I wasn’t sure what it was but a quick photo post to the local WhatsApp group produced three rapid responses: ‘It’s a Brent goose, Annie!’

221117 brent goose (1)

I probably should have known that but I’ve only seen these geese a few times before and then only at a distance. It’s a rare occurrence for one to drop in to the Bay. There are four races of Brent goose (Branta bernicla) (if you’re interested, there’s a good article, with photos, on the Bird Guides website); this bird was one of the dark-bellied sub species that breed in the Russian Arctic. Good numbers of these birds over-winter on the Exe estuary in southern England, so it’s possible that this bird was heading in that direction.

221117 brent goose (2)

Perhaps it got a little lost en route, though I suspect it was simply hungry. It repeatedly came out of the water and up on to the grass to feed – I say repeatedly because dog owners often let their mutts run loose in that area and the Brent, and the Canada geese that followed its lead, kept getting chased, causing them to fly back to the safety of the water. The geese persevered though and, from reports I heard from other birders who came to see this local rarity, I know that it was still in the area in the late afternoon. Our Brent visitor disappeared overnight, hopefully with its energy restored for the flight south to find its kin.

221117 brent goose (3)

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The shield-bearing duck

15 Tuesday Nov 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Anas clypeata, birding, birdingwatching, British birds, shoveler

It’s always a pleasure to see a Shoveler, one species of duck that’s easy to identify because of its massive beak. This distinctive appendage is perfectly designed for sieving through water to find the tiny invertebrates and plant life that make up this bird’s balanced diet. Its scientific name is Anas clypeata, anas being the Latin for duck and clypeata, from the Latin clypeus for shield, here meaning shield-bearing, a reference to that massive shield-like bill.

221115 shoveler

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Dabchicks

12 Saturday Nov 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, little grebe, Tachybaptus ruficollis

The Little grebe (Tachybaptus ruficollis) is also commonly known as the Dabchick, though it has a wide variety of other vernacular names. Its scientific name, according to professor Wikipedia, is a combination of Ancient Greek and Latin: takhus means fast, bapto means ‘to sink under’, rufus is red and collis comes from the Latin for neck – so, fast diving red-neck. It’s aptly named. Although these cute little grebes are widespread and common, they are ‘seen infrequently as they live on waterways where there is dense aquatic vegetation’, according to Fauna Britannia, though I would modify that to read that they are seen infrequently close up because they dive rapidly as soon as they realise someone is near.

221112 little grebe

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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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