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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: birding

Gwas y gog

21 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

'servant of the cuckoo', Anthus pratensis, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Butty lark, Cardiff Bay, Cuckoo's sandie, Cuckoo's titling, Gwas y gog, Meadow pipit, pipit

While sitting watching some water birds at Cardiff Bay the other day, I heard the familiar call of a wagtail and turned to see two Pied wagtails bobbing about on the gravel path behind me but then was delighted to also see that they had a friend with them, a lovely little Meadow pipit (Anthus pratensis). I had seen a pair of Meadow pipits nearby the previous week but not been able to get close enough for good photos. This time I was in luck, probably because I was sitting down so there was no movement to catch its eye. I was able to slowly pivot round far enough to catch a few shots of the bird foraging for insects in the short grass.

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The Meadow pipit looks a bit like a song thrush but is smaller, about the same size as the wagtails this one was feeding near. Once very common, their numbers have been in decline over the last 40 years so they have now been added to the amber list, reflecting an increasing level of concern for their conservation. They tend to nest in moorland and heathland, habitats that have declined significantly in extent in recent years, which is likely to be the most significant factor in their decline.

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The Meadow pipit has long been associated with the Cuckoo, which often lays its eggs in the nests of these little pipits, and the association is reflected in the Meadow pipit’s many common names. In Hampshire it’s known as the Butty lark – Butty meaning friend or companion; in Durham it’s the Cuckoo’s sandie and the Cuckoo’s titling; and in the Welsh language it’s Gwas y gog which translates as ‘servant of the cuckoo’.

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Permission to land

20 Monday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff, Cardiff Bay, Mute swan, swan landing on water

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‘Cardiff Bay approach, Swan 1702, level two hundred.”
‘Swan 1702, Cardiff Bay approach, descend and maintain one hundred.’

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‘Down to one hundred, Swan 1702.’
‘Swan 1702, Cardiff Bay Tower, cleared to land.’
‘Swan 1702, roger, cleared to land.’

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‘Cardiff Bay Ground (er, Water), Swan 1702, off runway 28T at alpha five.’
‘Swan 1702, roger, alpha five.’

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‘Swan 1702, swim straight ahead to gate bravo five.’
‘Straight ahead to bravo five, roger, Swan 1702.’

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From disappointment to delight

16 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, dunnock, Prunella modularis

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‘I wonder if there’s anything up there to eat. Humans do sometimes leave food for us birds on these posts.’

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Disappointment, and a rather accusatory glare at me, perhaps hoping that I might remedy the lack of seeds but I didn’t have any.

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What a difference a week makes! The sun is shining, the dunnock stretches as high as it can to see if there’s any food and, joy, a kind human has left a huge pile of seeds!

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Ooooops!

13 Monday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, fish for lunch, gull with fish, Herring gull

Lunch! Yum! Still twitching and a bit of a slippery treat but this will certainly fill a gap.

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Intruder alert! Someone’s noticed the tasty snack and tries to grab it.

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Oh no! It’s too slippery to hold. Going … going …

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This young Herring gull did well to catch itself such a substantial fish for its lunch but, unfortunately, couldn’t hold on when bullied by another gull. I’m fairly sure the fish fell on to the metal surface about 20 feet below and this youngster did fly down there to look but couldn’t find its fish and soon flew off to try again.

I apologise for the poor quality of these images. Sometimes I find my desire to show the story outweighs my desire to get perfect photos.

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Nuthatch seedy limits

11 Saturday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, parks

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, nuthatch

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Twenty-five was the seed limit
Other birds not allowed in it
Buy more seed on Friday
Go to Cosmeston on Sunday
They call it Nuthatch
Oh, Nuthatch
They call it Nuthatch seedy limits

(with apologies to Tina Turner)

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Shoreditch Bobby vs the Kingsland Roarer

09 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, parks

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Avicultural Magazine, bird singing competition, bird singing contest, birding, birdwatching, British birds, chaffinch, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Fringilla coelebs

Though I found these Chaffinches (Fringilla coelebs) in a woodland setting in Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, they are equally at home in urban gardens, as long as there are trees around. Mr Chaffinch’s multi-hued plumage is particularly dapper, and is the reason why the expression ‘as gay as a chaffinch’ was used for a well-dressed and vivacious person, in the days before ‘gay’ acquired a rather different meaning. I think Mrs Chaffinch looks every inch the stylish tweed-wearing countrywoman as well.

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Chaffinches are prolific singers, so much so that Brits used to hold contests to determine which bird could sing best and longest. The Avicultural Magazine of 1896 (vol.2, pp.115-17) has a wonderful story about the contest between ‘Shoreditch Bobby’ of Bricklane and the ‘Kingsland Roarer’, organised by the landlord of the ‘Cock and Bottle’ pub in London and, though it makes for a rather long post, I have reproduced most of the article here for those who, as I do, love a good story:

In the parlour all the gas-jets are lighted, but have some trouble to penetrate the fumes of tobacco, beer, etc. At last the contesting parties enter, each dressed in his Sunday best. …The two markers take their places, and as the clock strikes the two cages are uncovered and hung up. The battlers look around for a moment, shake their plumage, whet their beaks and one may take a grain of seed, but before it is cracked he hears a familiar sound uttered by his opponent. Immediately he replies by a full strophe of his song, to which the other answers with fuller power. Before each marker is already a stroke of his chalk, and now the combat is fairly ‘started’. The chalks are busily employed to mark each properly delivered strophe, and keep pace with each other for a time, until ‘Bobby’ takes it into his head to betake himself to the food trough.

Meanwhile, the ‘Roarer’ continues steadily to pour out his heart, and gains considerably in chalk marks. ‘Costermonger Joe’ is getting very uneasy and cannot understand this ‘trick’ of his much-renowned bird. Never before did he think of food while in the presence of an opponent. In order to draw his bird’s attention upon himself and from the food trough, he moves uneasily in his seat and ventures at last to cough aloud.

It must be understood, that while a match is proceeding no words of encouragement are allowed; no whistling or other means may be resorted to, to recall a truant to his duty. Fair play is rigorously enforced. Coughing cannot be stopped.

At last, Joe can stand it no longer: accidentally his beer glass gets knocked over and falls on the floor with much clatter. Bobby peers across the room to ascertain the cause of the unusual disturbance and catches sight of his master, and immediately he resumes his battle-cry. The ruse has succeeded, although there is a tumbler to pay for.

The chalk marks on the tables are getting very numerous. The Roarer has challenged without a fault for thirteen minutes and is forty points ahead of Bobby, but now he feels rather ‘dry’. He stops working, takes a drink of water and hops to the food box. But ‘Kingsland Bill’ does not give his bird time to lose ground by feeding like the other. In a moment he whips out the brightly-coloured handkerchief the Roarer knows so well, and pretends to wipe the perspiration from his anxious brow. His finch takes the hint, and gallops through the remaining two minutes of the appointed fifteen in grand style. Bobby also had tried hard to make up for the precious time he had lost so wantonly, but could not recover all of it. Although credited with 212 marks, the Roarer beat him by 28 strokes.

Immediately protest is entered by Costermonger Joe, fair play having been violated by the use of the coloured cloth. Bill retorts by calling into question the fairness of the beer glass episode. One word leads to another, the spectators mingle in the strife, expressions of opinion and sympathy with either party are getting more and more select, and battle of another kind seems imminent. Joseph declares he has won, but William insists on ‘fighting’ him for the stakes. This mode of settling the question being declined by Joe, the landlord is called upon to exercise his functions of umpire. With characteristic disinterestedness he declares the whole match null and void, and orders a fresh match to be sung for the same stakes that day week and on the same spot.

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Bring out the Bunting!

07 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, parks

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, bodkin, bog sparrow, British birds, chink, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Emberiza schoeniclus, pit sparrow, Reed bunting

As its name implies, the Reed Bunting (Emberiza schoeniclus) is most at home in the reed beds and rush-filled pastures that surround many of Britain’s freshwater lakes and ponds, though it has been encroaching on farmlands and into woodlands during the last 80-odd years, perhaps in response to a reduction in its preferred wetland habitats. Luckily, it’s flourishing in the expanses of reed beds that fringe the conservation lake at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, which is where I photographed these little beauties last Sunday.

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I particularly like some of their common names (as supplied by Buczacki’s Fauna Britannica): black bonnet, coaly hood, bog sparrow and chink (Scotland); bodkin (Lancashire); pit sparrow (Cheshire; Colin blackhead (Renfrewshire); seave cap and toad snatcher (Yorkshire); ring bird and ring fowl (Aberdeenshire). I also particularly like the male bird’s large white and very stylish moustache.

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Incoming

06 Monday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

birding, birds landing on lake, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Tufted duck

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‘Cosmeston Lakes West Lake is pleased to announce the safe arrival of Tufted duck flight 0502 from Cosmeston Lakes East Lake.’

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‘Little Trotty Wagtail’

04 Saturday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, John Clare, Motacilla alba, Pied wagtail, poem about pied wagtail

Little trotty wagtail, he went in the rain
And, tittering tottering sideways, he ne’er got straight again.
He stooped to get a worm and look’d up to catch a fly
And then he flew away ere his feathers they were dry.

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Little trotty wagtail, he waddled in the mud
And left his little foot marks, trample where he would.
He waddled in the water pudge and waggle went his tail
And chirrupt up his wings to dry upon the garden rail.

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Little trotty wagtail, you nimble all about
And in the dimpling water pudge you waddle in and out.
Your home is nigh at hand and in the warm pigsty,
So little Master Wagtail I’ll bid you a ‘Good bye’.

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~ John Clare (1793 – 1864), the ‘Northamptonshire Peasant Poet’ who is often regarded as one of the most important poets of the natural world.

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Cardiff Bay birds

02 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Anthus petrosus, Arenaria interpres, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay, Common redshank, Rock pipit, Tringa totanus, Turnstone

My move closer to the seaside is already paying off with more and different bird sightings. Meet large, the Common redshank (Tringa totanus); medium, the Turnstone (Arenaria interpres); and small, the Rock pipit (Anthus petrosus). (Apologies for the poor images – it’s been a very grey week in Cardiff!)

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As they enjoy very similar diets of insects, crustaceans and molluscs, these birds were all foraging together, hipping and hopping, stalking and walking, stumbling and grumbling their way along the water’s edge of the artificial stony seawall where the River Ely now flows into the equally artificial Cardiff Bay. Though some of these birds may be residents, many also come from foreign parts to over-winter in Britain: up to half the winter population of Redshanks comes from Iceland; Turnstones can come from such countries as Canada and Greenland; and some Rock pipits come from Norway. I guess the British winters aren’t so bad after all.

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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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