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earthstar

~ a celebration of nature

earthstar

Tag Archives: birding

8/365 Beardies, at last!

08 Tuesday Jan 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, birds, nature, winter

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

#365DaysWild, Bearded tit, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay, Cardiff Bay wetlands

I’ve only ever seen Bearded tits once before, and those so distant that even using my bins I could barely see well enough to identify them. So, you can perhaps imagine my delight today at being able to linger, watching a male and female feeding in reeds at the pond edge at Cardiff Bay wetlands. Such exotic-looking birds, especially the male with his black-tear-stained face; they look like they belong in a tropical rainforest rather than in wintery Wales. Magic!

75 bearded tits

 

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4/365 Reeds and their buntings

04 Friday Jan 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, birds, nature, plants, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#365DaysWild, birding, birds in reed beds, birdwatching, British birds, common reed, Phragmites australis, Reed bunting

Today I was entertained for about two hours watching these little cuties, Reed buntings, swaying back and forth on bendy reeds, stuffing their beaks full of seeds and spitting out the fluff. When the sun finally peeked through the cloud layer, both the handsomely streaked buntings (this is a female) and the tall feather-plumed reeds shone golden, a feast for the eyes and welcome compensation for the hoped-for Bearded tits that failed to show today.

190104 reed bunting

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2/365 Feeling guilty

02 Wednesday Jan 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, birds, nature, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#365DaysWild, birding, birdwatching, British birds, British robin, robin, Robin Redbreast

Winter seems finally to have arrived and it was frosty when I arrived at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park early this morning, hoping for a nice long walk before the school holiday crowds arrived. Unfortunately, in my haste to leave home, I forgot to fill my seed container so had nothing to offer the hungry birds. This fluffed-up little Robin was not at all impressed.

190102 robin

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Along the Ely

28 Friday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, walks

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#7DaysofWildChristmas, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay, Ely embankment, Redshank, River Ely, Turnstone

Today, on day 4 of the #7DaysofWildChristmas challenge, my search for the wild took me down to the river – the River Ely, that is – where the river flows in to Cardiff Bay and where the embankment is now edged with tall apartment blocks and where one half of the river is a marina, home to millions of pounds of water craft. It’s a path I walk often but today I was particularly delighted to see my favourite dumpy little waterbirds, the Turnstones, had returned – eleven of them – and they’d brought a friend along, a handsome Redshank that was trying uneasily to snooze while the Turnstones prospected for food to and fro.

181228 turnstones (1)
181228 turnstones (2)181228 turnstone and redshank (1)

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Black-necked grebe

22 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

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

There are five species of grebe you can reasonably expect to see in Britain: the Great crested and the Little grebes are relatively common here in south Wales, while the Slavonian, the Red-necked and the Black-necked are rarer visitors. Yet, I’ve been lucky enough to see all five this year and all within 30 miles of home – in fact, except for the Slavonian at Kenfig National Nature Reserve, the other four were within walking distance of home, and one of these lovely rarities is currently visiting Cardiff Bay.

181222 CardiffBay (1)

This handsome little water bird is a Black-necked grebe (Podiceps nigricollis). Its generic name Podiceps is a combination of two Latin words, podicis, meaning vent or anus, and pes, meaning foot. This has nothing to do with the bird’s bottom – cute though that certainly is – but is, rather, a reference to the fact that its legs are attached to its body at the extreme back end. The epithet nigricollis is Latin for black-necked (niger means black and collis means neck).

181222 CardiffBay (2)

This is a bird that switches from freshwater to saline habitats throughout the year, favouring freshwater lakes throughout Europe in which to breed, then moving to saline waterways to undergo its moult, before migrating to winter in the coastal estuaries of the south-western Palearctic and eastern parts of Africa. According to the RSPB website, an average of 130 birds opt to spend their winter in Britain.

181222 CardiffBay (3)

This is the second Black-necked grebe to spend some time in Cardiff Bay in 2018: another – or perhaps the same – bird was here for a couple of weeks in September. Although I did see that grebe, I didn’t get very good views of it, whereas this latest visitor has been treating birders to relatively close views from the Cardiff Bay Barrage in recent days, usually in the company of Tufted ducks and Coots.

181222 CardiffBay (4)

It’s a small bird – only about 12 inches long and, from the way it appears to bob about on top of the water, it must be as light as a feather. In its searches for the aquatic insects, small fish and crustaceans that make up its diet, it dives frequently, staying underway for several minutes at a time and sometimes reappearing a considerable distance from where it originally disappeared.

181222 CardiffBay (5)

Some of the local birding community, me included, are hoping this little grebe will stay around until at least the dawn of 2019, as it would certainly be a treat to have this on our bird lists on the first day of the new year.

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Second time lucky

19 Wednesday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

1st-winter drake Scaup, Aythya marila, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Greater scaup, juvenile Scaup, Scaup

On Sunday I went to Cosmeston Lakes Country Park to look for the Scaup that has, since 13 December, been enjoying the delights of the lakes and the company of the huge number of Tufted ducks currently resident there. I had a wonderful mooch about but couldn’t find the Scaup (though I did spot a Hawfinch, a rare visitor, and was very pleased with that).

181219 scaup (1)

So, I went back again on Monday, partly to look again for that Hawfinch but also for the Scaup. And I was lucky with both birds, with another very fleeting, distant view of the finch but superb close views of the Scaup, which came to feed on the seed I always carry with me in the winter.

181219 scaup (3)181219 scaup (5)

This is a drake Scaup – actually a Greater scaup (Aythya marila), which is usually just known as Scaup, as the Lesser scaup is so rarely seen, and a first-winter bird, as it doesn’t yet have its adult plumage – the brown colouring you can see on this bird will disappear as it develops into an adult.

181219 scaup (6)181219 scaup (7)

In south Wales, the Scaup is an uncommon winter visitor and passage migrant, which, according to the latest Glamorgan Bird Report, enjoyed a ‘welcome increase of records and numbers’ in the 2017 first winter period (i.e. between January and mid April). Let’s hope the increasing number of sightings of this handsome little duck continues.

181219 scaup (8)181219 scaup (9)

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The gammy-legged Rock pipit

15 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, seaside, winter

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Ely embankment, Rock pipit, Rock pipit with misshapen claw

Last Monday, during my stroll along the Ely embankment path, I enjoyed a close encounter with this Rock pipit. It had ventured across the pavement at the top of the stony embankment and was poking about in a pebble-filled ground-floor garden in front of one of the tall apartment blocks that border the path. I guess, to a Rock pipit, one group of stones is as good as another to explore for insects.

181215 rock pipit (3)

The Rock pipit saw me approaching and quickly hopped back across to the safety of the embankment, where it would be easier to fly away. So, I moved to stand next to a lamp post, kept completely still and waited.

181215 rock pipit (2)181215 rock pipit (1)

As I’d hoped, the pipit decided I presented no immediate threat and, though it continued to keep a wary eye on me, it soon hopped back across to the garden again. So I was able to spend a delightful 10 minutes getting some photos and watching it foraging. It always amazes me how much food small birds like this seem able to find – tiny titbits to be sure but, presumably, enough to keep them alive.

181215 rock pipit (4)181215 rock pipit (5)

It was only when I got home and checked my photos that I noticed the bird’s gammy right leg, with its twisted misshapen claw. This had not seemed to be causing the bird any difficulty while I was watching it. And then something stirred in my memory – I was certain I’d seen this bird before. And, sure enough, when I checked through my Rock pipit album, I had photos of this same bird in this general area taken on 27 January and 11 March 2017, and 11 and 31 January, and 14 March 2018. I’m not sure how long Rock pipits usually live but this little bird has obviously been coping remarkably well with its disability.

181215 rock pipit (6)

Same bird, 11 March 2017

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My little Welsh Robin

13 Thursday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, British robin, redbreast, robin, Robin Redbreast

181213 robin (1)

‘Art thou the bird whom Man loves best,
The pious bird with the scarlet breast,
Our little English Robin …’
~  from William Wordsworth, ‘The Redbreast Chasing the Butterfly’, 1806

181213 robin (2)
181213 robin (3)

Blogger’s note: This particular little cutie, with whom I shared some quality moments – me chatting and it peeping – at Penarth Heads beach on Monday, is actually a Welsh (not English) Robin. And its breast is really more orange than red but I’ve just this week found out why it was formerly known as Redbreast and described as having a red or scarlet rather than orange breast – it’s because orange as a colour (which originated from the fruit of the same name) was unknown in Britain prior to the mid 16th century.

181213 robin (4)
181213 robin (5)
181213 robin (6)
181213 robin (7)
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The marina sparrows

08 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, plants

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, house sparrow, pampas grass, Penarth marina, sparrow, toetoe

At one end of my regular walk along the embankment of the Ely River where it flows in to Cardiff Bay, near the entrance to Penarth Marina, is a huge stand of what I presume is a type of pampas grass. I always look at it, partly because it reminds me of my New Zealand home (where we would call this by the Maori name Toetoe) and partly because it is often covered in House sparrows.

181208 marina sparrows (1)

The birds seem to adore this grass. The sturdy stems provide convenient perches on which to sit and cheep their continuous sparrow conversations, and they pluck away at the fluffy plumes, presumably extracting edible seeds to munch on. And, when threatened by the local ginger-and-white cat, which is frequently to be seen staring hungrily in their direction, the sparrows can easily flit into the dense vegetation of the grass clump to escape the cat’s clutches.

181208 marina sparrows (2)
181208 marina sparrows (3a)
181208 marina sparrows (4)
181208 marina sparrows (5)
181208 marina sparrows (6)
181208 marina sparrows (7)
181208 marina sparrows (8)
181208 marina sparrows (9)
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Synchronised grebes

04 Tuesday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Great Crested Grebe, synchronised swimming

These two Great crested grebes put on a delightful display of synchronised swimming for me at Cardiff Bay Wetlands today, gliding first one way, then the other. I scored them a perfect 10. I almost applauded … but that would’ve scared them off. Gold to the grebes!

181204 great crested grebes (1)181204 great crested grebes (2)181204 great crested grebes (3)181204 great crested grebes (4)

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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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