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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: birds

Meet Stumpy

20 Thursday Jan 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Pied wagtail

I first met Stumpy in early February 2020 – nicknamed Stumpy because of the damage to its left leg, which now ends in a stump, no claw.

220120 stumpy (1)

Almost two years and several sightings later, this charming little Pied wagtail is still going strong. In fact, it’s a friendly little thing and quite fearless: if I stand completely still, it will walk past within inches of my feet.

220120 stumpy (2)

These particular photos of Stumpy were taken a couple of weeks apart, the first on 22 December last year and the second, just a couple of weeks ago, on 6 January.

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Number 76

17 Monday Jan 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Common Gull, gulls, Larus canus, patch birding

I really enjoy the excitement of beginning each new year’s patch bird list, walking miles (I’ve clocked up my first hundred today), checking out locations I’ve come to know much more intimately during the last two years of enforced restrictions on movement (one of the few positives of this pandemic has been learning my local area more thoroughly), finding the less common birds that often elude me. And the latter includes this stunning Common gull (Larus canus), number 76 on my 2022 list.

220117 common gull (1)

It was on the lakeside boardwalk at Cosmeston Lakes, feeding with the Black-headed gulls on seed that had been sprinkled by an earlier passer-by. My approach caused the birds to move back to the water, but not far away. I took a few photos, then sprinkled some seed of my own to encourage the birds back to the boardwalk, which worked a treat.

220117 common gull (2)

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A fleeting Scaup

11 Tuesday Jan 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Greater scaup, Scaup

Catching up with December’s bird visitors again today, this time with a Greater scaup that spent a few days before Christmas at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park. Sadly, it didn’t hang around for us local patch birders to add it to our 2022 bird list. This handsome bird, pictured below with a male and female Tufted duck, is probably a first-winter male, which is why it doesn’t yet have the fully light grey back seen in adult males.

220111 scaup

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Brambling!

08 Saturday Jan 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, Brambling, British birds, winter birding

This was Tuesday’s magical moment – well, actually, about 30 minutes of moments grinning like a Cheshire Cat while standing in the bitter cold, but what better reason to get frost bite than a Brambling!

220108 brambling (1)

These beauties are rarely seen in my part of south Wales. Bramblings breed in the far north, in parts of Scandinavia and Russia, heading south to Britain during our winter, so are often seen passing through when the weather starts to turn cold here. And local birders did report seeing them and hearing their distinctive calls in November-December 2021 (I also had a flyover sighting of two birds in December). But then they disappeared, presumably flying further afield in search of their favourite food, Beech mast, which is sparse locally this winter.

220108 brambling (2)

Presumably, a combination of a lack of food elsewhere and the increasingly cold weather is why some birds are now returning and being seen, with their cousins the Chaffinches, coming for seed from garden feeders and in other locations where people put out food for small birds in the winter. This is one reason I always carry some seed with me on winter walks. You never know what you might be lucky enough to see.

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Three Black redstarts

05 Wednesday Jan 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, Black redstart, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Cardiff Bay birds

On 10 December the word went out to local birders that someone had spotted a Black redstart in the Porth Teigr area of Cardiff Bay, so the next morning I wasn’t the only person to head over to see if I could find it.

220105 black redstart male

Turns out, there are, in fact, three Black redstarts dotting around together, two males (one, above) and a female (below). I’ve been back to see them several times now and they are worth every strip of shoe leather I wear off my soles walking there and back. They are simply stunning little birds!

220105 black redstart female

p.s. I wrote this post yesterday and, amazingly, in the interim, one of my birding friends noticed that there are actually two females, meaning there are four Black redstarts. I walked across for another look this morning and, sure enough, there were two females. Amazing!

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Voiceless Raven

04 Tuesday Jan 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Raven, silent Raven, voiceless Raven

While my A-to-Z countdown to the end of 2021 was underway, I had a few wildlife encounters I want, belatedly, to share. First up is this gorgeous Raven, a juvenile I think, which was utterly voiceless. No matter how hard it tried – and it was straining, almost looking like it was trying to vomit, no sound came out, not even a squeak. I still find myself wondering how this inability to communicate vocally will affect its life.

220104 voiceless raven

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Let the birding begin

01 Saturday Jan 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

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

In what is becoming something of a tradition, I enjoyed a lovely long walk around Cardiff Bay today to kickstart my patch birding list for the year. I managed to spot 45 species, with the highlights being an overwintering Blackcap; a Common sandpiper (pictured below); the Yellow-legged gull I blogged about a couple of days ago; and one of three Black redstarts currently in the Bay – more on those in a forthcoming blog post. I also caught up with several friendly fellow birders, always a pleasure. Happy New Year, one and all!

220101 common sandpiper

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Y is for Yellow-legged gull

30 Thursday Dec 2021

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Yellow-legged gull

The Yellow-legged gull is my bogey bird, one I see reported by much more experienced birders than me but which I always have trouble identifying. So, imagine my delight when this 2cy bird (its age – this is the second calendar year since its birth) was mentioned on our local birders WhatsApp group. I recognised where it was standing and knew another (or the same?) Yellow-legged gull had favoured the same place last year. So, on my next walk around Cardiff Bay, I looked for and found it, and was very pleased to add a late new bird to my patch birding list for 2021, bringing the total to 119, one more than last year (though the mix of birds was different).

211230 yellow-legged gull (1)

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T is for Turnstone

25 Saturday Dec 2021

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birds, Turnstone

As I was walking along the edge of Cardiff Bay, I was mulling over what to feature for the letter T, and there they were, a little group of Turnstones, working their way along the water’s edge, one stopping to wash and preen, most poking to displace small pieces of vegetation for the insects beneath or prodding stones to scare out the tiny sea creatures lurking in their lee. And so my decision was made for me, and I am particularly delighted to share a photo of this particular Turnstone that came waddling right up to the top of the embankment as if to have its portrait taken.

211225 turnstone

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K is for Kestrel

16 Thursday Dec 2021

Posted by sconzani in birds

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birding, birdwatching, British birds, Kestrel

Though I’m lucky enough to see Kestrels quite frequently when I walk the footpaths along the coast and through local farmland, I don’t often manage to photograph them, and the Kestrel has only starred once in this year’s blogs, quite recently with a co-starring Buzzard in BoPs. A few days after that post however, I spotted this bird during a walk around Cardiff Bay and was pleased to get this image of a decidedly urban Kestrel.

211216 kestrel

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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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