I am severely disabled and wheelchair bound due to sickness. I am not well enough to keep a pet anymore. I am new to this specially adapted home I live in I innocently started feeding the wild birds and a little male gray squirrel whom I have called Hamish I have a bird feeding station and thoroughly enjoy watching all the different species of birds who now visit every day. It has given me a new lease of life and I have learned a lot about the different species of birds and what kind of food they like. I even scatter some seed for the pigeons who now recognise me and sit up on the back porch peering down into my living room window waiting to be fed It's comical. I had no idea that birds even pigeons can learn to recognise people, especially those who feed them. They get fed in the morning and at lunchtime, the rest of the day they are good at cleaning up all the spilled seeds and pieces of suet from underneath the bird feeding station. I love the cooing noise they make it so relaxing to listen to. I am really worried about feeding Hamish. I didn't know anything about birds or squirrels till now. I am really worried about my neighbour who lives across the back door from my garden His son who lives a good bit away, hates squirrels and works for pest control with his local council, although he is in a very different area, I am terrified he will kill Hamish who I have grown very fond of. I fear also that I have upset his dad who do not like squirrels either although way before I met his son, he helped me erect a little squirrel Feeder on the fence He is a kindly old man Sadly though he has become very seriously ill with cancer, and its now terminal. He is a gentleman. I feel awful because I really like him. But when I met him one day with his son, who I right away felt very uneasy with, and he admitted he utterly hates gray squirrels, and then told me about his job at pest control, I couldn't hide my horror but I still respect him and really like his dad. The other neighbours feed both the birds and the squirrels too. However I fear and sense I may have caused tension without meaning to. I have a soft spot for animals and although I genuinely love animals dearly I am not a person who prefers them to people. Can you kindly offer me some advice on what I should do? I'm torn between my hobby and my attachment to Hamish I will mention that it's definitely a male squirrel and a young one. He has also chased every other squirrel away from my garden. He is fiesty and aggressive and the other squirrels are absolutely terrified of him! I am thinking that is actually a good thing. He visits several times throughout the day and is really only interested in his feeder and scurrying around burying food and eating. I love watching him eating and his cute little antics. There are loads of squirrels in the area as myself and my neighbours have a lot of woodland nearby and that's where Hamish lives. Again, any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks so much for taking time to read my post
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Tracy Gilbert said:Mike these are amazing videos! I am so ill just now but I loved the first one with the black bird. I have a lot of Siskins. They are beautiful and I have a video of them eating. I feed them sunflower hearts and they are such laid back little birds. They all perch happily on the seed feeders eating away. I get amused at the sound of the sunflower hearts cracking in their little beaks when they eat. I have some Goldfinches too. The occasional black bird. The Starlings like their suet which keeps them busy squabbling even though there is plenty, plus it keeps them away from the little birds. They mimic other bird calls, they are very clever. The pigeons all recognise me. They wait for me everyday up on the porch peering in cooing peacefully away. Their little faces with their orange eyes. They are the ones I'm closest to out of my garden visitors and the ones I'm most fond of including the squirrels. I have Hamish, and still the little male who I will call Peanut and a female who is lactating. I think she has a nest over in the woods. That's where they all come from and race back to if they get startled and at the end of the day. The pine trees they live in are plentiful and extremely tall. I watched a squirrel run up one recently. The woodland is dense and wild with a mixture of different trees and bushes, perfect for wildlife and its a squirrel paradise! I will certainly enjoy the rest of your videos when I am better. Thanks so much for sharing. So encouraging.
Thank you.
Sorry for the late reply, I've been a bit busy with work, family and hospital, all positive stuff I'm happy to report.
Digressing, I may or may not have said, four years ago someone ran a red light while I was crossing the road, resulting in major lower leg reconstruction. It's been a long slow journey, and still a long way to go yet, but finally things are moving in he right direction.
Mike
Flickr: Peak Rambler
Sadly as a species, many of us have become too detached from the real world, the one that we are destroying, in favour of the idealistic perfect world, which doesn't and never will exist, well, not in my eyes.
We have a neighbour at the back who has a set of giant wind chimes close to their house, and has now put one close to where our garden joins their's.
They chopped down a large shrub which not only gave both houses privacy, but nature some refuge. I've now had planted some new shrubs in my garden, to regain that privacy and also provide refuge for nature. These neighbours keep looking at it and I understand they're looking at chopping it down!
There'll be war if they do.
For me, grey squirrels are not native to this country, they were introduced in the late 1800's from the US. Sadly, as with many species innocently introduced they thrive and adapt a lot easier than our own native species.
That is no excuse for cruelty, nor would I condone it, we have had quite a few greys running around our garden, though I'm pleased to say, I think nature has taken its course and from what almost seemed an epidemic of 15 greys, has settled down to two pairs.
My observations are based on what I see and what the Bushnell Gardencam records.
I'm a believer in nature goes in cycles, some years are good ears for many species and vice versa, last year we hardly had any robins, this year, we have abundance.
However, man's intervention over the centuries hasn't done many species any favours, which is almost why red squirrels are struggling, among many other reasons. Sadly I don't see it getting any better in my lifetime.
You keep feeding those birds and greys Tracy, I doubt many people cocooned in their perfect utopia will ever see sense, but it's good to see many folk do see sense and try their best to fight for nature.
Tracy Gilbert said:Gosh, you've been through the wars! I'm so sorry to hear about your struggles.
I've been lucky, I've a supportive family, a lot of good friends and work have been extremely supportive, which has helped a great deal to move forwards.
You keep feeding those birds and squirrels, enjoy what they do, and what a lot of people do not realise, they have feelings as well, they do think and they each have their own personalities.