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earthstar

~ a celebration of nature

earthstar

Tag Archives: British birds

Four and twenty blackbirds

23 Saturday Dec 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding birdwatching, birds in culture, birds in society, blackbird, British birds, Turdus merula

This is not a pie recipe! This is a visual celebration of one of our most common birds; one that almost every person can recognise and name; one that loves to sing its happy tune in our gardens and parks. There have been songs entitled ‘Blackbird’ (the Beatles, 1968 song, for example); films and plays, books, poems and short stories (too numerous to mention); people with the Blackbird surname; places named Blackbird (in England and the United States); planes, yachts and locomotives with the Blackbird name; even sports teams and personal computers (Hewlett Packard’s Blackbird 002). What a contribution this humble bird has made to the world!

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Watching me, watching you

21 Thursday Dec 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Canada goose

171221 Canada goose

Watching me, watching you (ah-haa)
There is nothing you can do
Watching me, watching you (ah-haa)
You just have to face it, it’s time you flew
Waking up is never easy, I know, but you have to go
Watching me, watching you
It’s really time you flew.
(with apologies to Benny, Björn, Stig and Abba)

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Oyks, for short

18 Monday Dec 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Dickie bird, Gilliebride, Oyks, Oystercatchers, Sea nanpie, Seapie

The Oystercatcher is one of the few British waders that I knew well, and whose call I could already easily recognise, before I came to live in this country because we also have Oystercatchers in New Zealand and, indeed, they can be found on coastlines around much of the world. They are not all the same species though – the most common New Zealand species is Haematopus unicolor and the British bird is Haematopus ostralegus.

171218 oystercatchers (3)
171218 oystercatchers (2)

Those Latin names are a bit of a mouthful so let’s stick with Oystercatcher, though whoever gave them that name wasn’t very observant – they don’t actually ‘catch’ anything and, while I’m sure they enjoy breaking open the odd oyster when they find one, they eat all types of shellfish.

171218 oystercatchers (4)

I particularly like some of their vernacular names (listed in Stefan Buczacki’s Fauna Britannica): in Norfolk they’re known as Dickie birds; in Scotland Gilliebrides (the word ‘bride’ is a reference to St Bridget of Ireland who was said to be the patron saint of birds and carried an Oystercatcher in each hand); in Yorkshire they’re known as Sea nanpies; and as Seapies (‘pie’, meaning black and white, just as in the name Magpie), in Lancashire, Norfolk, Gloucestershire and Cornwall; and in northern England, appropriately enough, they’re called Mussel crackers. But, if all those names are too much to remember, we could just call them Oyks, for short.

171218 oystercatchers (1)

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Off on holiday

17 Sunday Dec 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cormorant

Going …

171217 Cormorant (1)

Going …

171217 Cormorant (2)

Gone!
Like the Cormorant in these photos, I’m off. I’ll be away from now until late December, staying with a friend for the Christmas holidays. My blog posts will continue but I won’t be replying to comments until I return. See you soon and happy holidays!

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A bird’s eye view

16 Saturday Dec 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

bird vision, bird's eye, birding, birds' eyes, birdwatching, British birds, eyes, eyes of birds

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When I was searching out photos for my post on animals’ eyes back in November,  I became fascinated with the variety of eye shapes and colours. Then I began to look more closely at birds’ eyes. Did you know …

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Birds have the largest eyes relative to their size in the animal kingdom.

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Excellent vision is essential to birds so that they can avoid collisions and capture their prey.

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Birds don’t have as many eye muscles as humans so they can’t roll their eyes around as much as we can. That, plus the fact that the eyes of many birds are set at the sides of their heads, means they have to turn their heads to one side or the other, or bob their heads up and down, to see close things better.

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Birds have an extra set of photo receptors within their eyes, called double cones, which, scientists speculate, probably means they have much better colour vision that most animals.

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Birds have three eyelids: the third eyelid is a nictitating membrane that moves horizontally across the eye both to lubricate it and to protect it from injury.

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A walk in Nant Fawr

12 Tuesday Dec 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, walks, winter

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, blackbird, Brambling, British birds, Carrion crow, dunnock, Great spotted woodpecker, house sparrow, Nant Fawr, Nant Fawr Woodlands, Song thrush, walk in the woods

There was snow on the hills north of Cardiff on Saturday morning so I thought I’d try to get closer to take some photos but also combine that with a good walk. So, I jumped on a train and went a’stomping. Unfortunately, by the time I got closer, the snow had mostly melted away, which wasn’t helped by the fact that the footpath I had intended to follow, along the eastern side of the Llanishen and Lisvane reservoirs, was closed. So, I contented myself with a wander through the Nant Fawr woodlands and, afterwards, a circuit of Roath Park Lake.

171212 Nant Fawr (1)

I was rewarded with the sight, albeit distant, of my very first Brambling – my shots are heavily cropped so you’ll just have to take my word for it!

171212 Nant Fawr (2) Brambling
171212 Nant Fawr (3) Brambling

A small group of House sparrows was dotting about in bushes at the woodland edge.

171212 Nant Fawr (4) Sparrow
171212 Nant Fawr (5) Sparrow
171212 Nant Fawr (6) Sparrow
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I always thought Carrion crows were mostly solitary birds but this flock of about 20 proved me wrong.

171212 Nant Fawr (8) Crow171212 Nant Fawr (9) Crow

The wood-tapping of this Great spotted woodpecker helped direct my lens in its direction, as did the singing of this little Dunnock.

171212 Nant Fawr (10) Great spotted woodpecker
171212 Nant Fawr (11) Dunnock

And Song thrushes and Blackbirds were enjoying a hearty lunch of berries along the hedgerows.

171212 Nant Fawr (12) Blackbird
171212 Nant Fawr (13) Song thrush
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Mr and Mrs Sprawk

09 Saturday Dec 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Accipiter nissus, bird of prey, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Forest Farm, Forest Farm Nature Reserve, Sparrowhawk

On Thursday I showed you many of the lovely birds I had seen at Forest Farm Nature Reserve the previous week but I left out two of them, the male and female Sparrowhawk I saw several times during my meanderings.

171209 sparrowhawk (3)

The Sparrowhawk (Accipiter nissus) is a bird of prey and it was easy to tell when this pair was near by as all the other birds froze, no movement, no sound. A hawker of sparrows it may be but, as Buczacki points out in Fauna Britannica, they could just as easily be called finchhawk, larkhawk or tithawk ‘because this bird really is a scourge of small feathered things’. That sounds like bad news for the smaller birds but, interestingly, the RSPB reports that ‘long term scientific studies have shown that sparrowhawks generally have no or little impact on songbird populations’. (Read more here.)

171209 sparrowhawk (1)
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I only managed to get distant fuzzy photos (above) of the male bird, with his distinctive blue-grey back and wings, but my shots of the female are a little better. I’ve seen Sparrowhawks many times before but have not had views as close as these, and they were magnificent to watch as they flew at high speed through the thick spreading branches in the woodland by the canal.

171209 sparrowhawk (4)

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Birds of Forest Farm

07 Thursday Dec 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, walks

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, bullfinch, dunnock, Forest Farm, Forest Farm Nature Reserve, Great spotted woodpecker, Great tit, Kingfisher, long-tailed tit, Moorhen, robin, treecreeper

I had a meeting at Forest Farm last Friday so, of course, I took the opportunity while I was there to have a wander around the trails and along the Glamorganshire Canal. And it was wonderful, though I did come away feeling a little guilty. We’d had a week of low temperatures, with overnight frosts, and there was a bitterly cold wind blowing. It was obvious the wee birds were cold and hungry but I hadn’t taken any seed with me. Here are a Long-tailed tit, a male Bullfinch, a Dunnock, a Robin and a Great tit.

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The water of the canal was sheltered from the breeze and very still, making for some stunning reflections (thank you little Moorhen). And I was treated to excellent views of a female Kingfisher, who sat for at least 15 minutes on her branch. From the way her feathers were fluffed up and she was hunched over her ‘toes’, I figure she was feeling the cold as well.

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The Great spotted woodpecker was a treat, as were the Treecreepers – at least four of them, perhaps a family group, were actively scuttling up the branches in one small area by the canal. It was a grand day – my meeting went well and the birding was even better than expected!

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November on the Ely embankment

30 Thursday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay, Coot, Ely embankment, Lesser black-backed gull, Linnet, long-tailed tit, Redshank, River Ely, Rock pipit, Turnstone

171130 9th Ely embankment

The 9th of November was a ‘5 Turnstone, 2 Rock pipit, 1 Grey wagtail’ kind of day at Cardiff Bay, with a cool wind blowing through huge banks of clouds and the odd rain shower. That didn’t deter the birds browsing along the embankment edge though.

171130 9th rock pipits (1)
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On the 15th, a beautifully marked Song thrush was feasting on berries in the small front garden of one of the apartments that sits on the edge of the embankment (see Berries and Birds a few days ago), and, as well as 2 Rock pipits and 6 Turnstones, there were 3 Redshank grazing along the water’s edge – a nice treat. Also, a Lesser black-backed gull was looking exceedingly pleased with itself for finding a huge dead fish and vociferously defending its prize with loud screeching.

171130 15th redshank (1)
171130 15th redshank (2)

171130 15th LBB and fish

On the 17th – a ‘3 turnstone’ day – the star of the show was a lovely little Linnet. I’d seen a family party of parents and two fledglings grazing amongst the rocks here back in August so perhaps this bird was one of those.

171130 17th Linnet and turnstone
171130 17th Linnet

My last November wander by the Ely was on the 25th, when 3 Turnstones, 2 Linnets (nice to see them again), 2 Pied and 2 Grey wagtails, and 1 Redshank were joined by a Dunnock and a small flock of Long-tailed tits passing through the shrubs edging the walkway. Also, something freaked out a group of Coots and, rather than ‘run’ rapidly across the top of the water as they usually do, they actually flew. I’d never seen coots fly before.

171130 25th Long-tailed tit171130 25th Flying coots

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Through a hedge, quietly

27 Monday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Green woodpecker, Picus viridis, woodpecker

171127 Green woodpecker (1)

My usual view of the Green woodpecker (Picus viridis) is a flash of its bright red Mohawk, bright green body and bright yellow rump as it rockets rapidly away from me. They are notoriously nervous birds and, as they usually feed on wide open expanses of grass – all the better to spot the dreaded photographer trying to creep up on them, they easily spot my clumsy attempts at stalking, and fly off at the drop of an ant. So, the few photos I’d managed to get were with my long lens on full zoom, with, invariably, the bird partly obscured by branches, twigs or long grass.

171127 Green woodpecker (3)

Until last Friday that is…. I was enjoying a wander at Cosmeston, when, having already unsuccessfully stalked one bird, I spotted another in a different field. This time, this woodpecker was completely occupied with poking in the damp soil for ants, and I was on a footpath behind a hedge. I moved to the grassy verge, took care not to step on anything that might crack or rustle, and kept my head down. If the bird looked up, I froze until it got back to its digging. There weren’t many gaps in the hedge so I still couldn’t get very clear or very close shots but I am still ridiculously pleased to have got these couple.

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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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