I hope you enjoyed reading ‘Urban Birder’ David Lindo’s latest piece for Birds magazine on his encounters with bullfinches. If you haven’t read it yet, do turn to page 77 of the Spring 2012 issue.

We asked you to let us know about your own experiences with these chunky finches in the magazine, so I thought I’d share one of my experiences with bullfinches to help get things rolling.

It’s always nerve racking meeting your partner’s parents for the first time, but even more so when you make that first trip to go and stay at their house. Amidst desperately trying to avoid all those social faux pas and remembering my manners on that first weekend in Yorkshire, my eyes were drawn to the bird feeders hanging outside.

Remembering that it is probably quite rude to stare out of the window when I should be making that all important first impression, all hope went out the window (literally) when a rose-breasted vision of beauty dressed in a silver jacket dropped down onto one of the seed feeders: a bullfinch!

From that first encounter forth, it has always been a pleasure to go and visit my girlfriend’s parents, Sue and Graham, because up to two pairs of bullfinches are a near constant presence in both front and back gardens. I should also state that it is also a pleasure to visit Sue and Graham because they are sparkling company and excellent hosts. The finches are merely a bonus! Waking up to the finches’ soft ‘peeuh’ calls outside the window is a very pleasant experience indeed. They are often the first birds I see each day.

As David says in his feature, bullfinches are sadly so much rarer now, making sightings like these even more precious.


Does your home for nature, include a place for bullfinches?

What do your bullfinches do?
I’m not lucky enough to have bullfinches coming to my feeders in my garden, but it would be great to hear from anyone who does. Please let us know by posting a comment below (you’ll need to register on the RSPB Community first), or emailing Nature's Home magazine at natureshome@rspb.org.uk and I'll add your stories to the blog.

Parents
  • Hi, I have small garden in a rural location, handy to woodland and farmland. I regularly have up to 5 pairs of bullfinches all through the season, I love them. They also nest nearby but I've never located where, as they bring their young to the garden. I constantly hear their beeping noises to locate each other while I'm working in the garden so I know they are near. They come and go in a large flock with the chaffinches, greenfinches and lots of goldfinches. They come for the sunflower hearts that I put out for them - the supply of which will bankrupt me soon!!  Once I put the seed out they are down before I get back in the house and are round most of the time.  Sitting among the cherry blossom where the feeders are is wonderful. My garden is full of birds at the moment, blue tits, great tits, coal tits, wrens, dunnocks, a pair of robins, blackbirds, thrush, sparrows, woodpeckers and reed buntings. Of course they all dive for cover when the sparrow hawk comes to visit or they catch sight of the buzzard high above. My garden is a constant source of joy and entertainment.

Comment
  • Hi, I have small garden in a rural location, handy to woodland and farmland. I regularly have up to 5 pairs of bullfinches all through the season, I love them. They also nest nearby but I've never located where, as they bring their young to the garden. I constantly hear their beeping noises to locate each other while I'm working in the garden so I know they are near. They come and go in a large flock with the chaffinches, greenfinches and lots of goldfinches. They come for the sunflower hearts that I put out for them - the supply of which will bankrupt me soon!!  Once I put the seed out they are down before I get back in the house and are round most of the time.  Sitting among the cherry blossom where the feeders are is wonderful. My garden is full of birds at the moment, blue tits, great tits, coal tits, wrens, dunnocks, a pair of robins, blackbirds, thrush, sparrows, woodpeckers and reed buntings. Of course they all dive for cover when the sparrow hawk comes to visit or they catch sight of the buzzard high above. My garden is a constant source of joy and entertainment.

Children
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