Local Patch Swallows
25 on the wires this morning.
While the point of the blog is to create a place to put my birding musings and finds... my mind frequently wanders.
15 today perched on the phone wires by the barn today... I'll try and get a nice photo at some point soon.
Just seen 15 Swallows flying around the barn. This is by far the most I've seen all summer (usually only one or 2)... so they could soon be off for the winter... already!
A new garden tick... Carrion Crow... 2 to be precise perched on top of our tallest tree. This tree seems to be a crafty of way of getting a good garden tick as it's more of less the highest point around and indeed worked to get me the Waxwing tick last winter. So not the most unusual bird in the world but a new tick is a new tick.
Just when we thought our new garden visitor couldn't be surpassed... there were two today, one on each peanut feeder!!!! The first one was a youngster (red crown), the second an adult male (black crown, red nape).
Well the pond is doing ever so well... we've popped a couple of snails in to try and keep the algae down a bit as it is getting a bit wild and the plants have certainly taken over... it's hard to believe it looks so established so quickly.
Did you know there's a great online bird quiz... it's not only good fun but I think a great way to expand your knowledge while you're sat at the PC (gives me something to do when I do a print run for example). There are 3 levels, and today I've been playing level 1 and got...
It's now official... we're getting a Great Spotted Woodpecker in the garden once or twice a day! He (and it is a he) is normally found hanging off the new peanut feeder but he's also hopped around the table and nibble of the table peanut feeder and even taken a drink from the bird bath today!!!
Doh! Seems I've missed a Little Egret in late July here... hey ho... it is one of those places you rarely see much but when you do!!!!
A nice reservoir walk providing Oystercatcher (2 in a nearby field), Cormorants (3 on an outcrop sticking out of the pitifully low water level), Kestrel and a Grey Wagtail which we flushed from the bridge between the 2 reservoirs.