Hi there
I have to admit the endearing bird I have had is the Yellow hammer. While living at Stirling, Scotland we had a birdtable in the farm yard. A male and female Yellow Hammer would come in every morning and snack on the seed that had landed on the ground from the bird feeders.
In Scotland Yellow Hammers have the 'nickname' of Scottish Canery'. The yellow on the male bird is very bright and it was super to see them so close up as we did.
At the same property we where also lucky to have a Pied Wagtail and a Grey Wagtail. Both birds raised their families in our garden area. The little ones where so cute, and even though their tails where short and stubby they still wagged their tails. The birds in question seen to trust us. They where not worried when we weeded the garden area at all.
Anyone else had lovely experiences like mentioned here
Regards
Kathy and Dave
Another frequent, but fleeting, visitor to our back yard is the local sparrowhawk. What is unusual this time was that he stayed around long enough to be photographed. We had hot, gale force winds, which had lifted the dust until visbility was very low. I looked out the window and spotted the sparrowhawk sheltering on the fence between our house and that of our neighbour. He was panting heavily, as though he had just beaten his way 'home' against the wind. To get the photo (below), I had to kneel on the lounge, sneak the camera under the venetian blind, and take the shot through a dirty window, flyscreen and decorative grille, so please excuse the quality! You can see the movement of his chest and wings as he struggles to recover. When he had recovered sufficiently, he moved to our more sheltered backyard, drank deeply from a birdbath on the ground, and rested there for about 30 minutes. I didn't disturb him with the camera.
Smiles, Jan.
Wow Jan! Lovely photos and great stories. How I would have loved to see those white-browed babblers playing in the water. As for the sparrowhawk, how fortunate for him that he was able to rest and recover at your place when he did or the outcome might have been tragically different.
I don't know about anyone else but I always love to see photos of birds from other parts of the world. My OH visited Amazon World (on the Isle of Wight) during a 10 day stay in the summer and the first photos out of over 500 I wanted to see when he returned were the birds from there. I would put a few up on this forum if I could work out where is the appropriate place. Maybe in the tea room...?
Squirrel
The necessity of bird-watching is a really good reason for avoiding all forms of housework.
The dust will still be there tomorrow - the birds may not be!
Wildlife Friendly, I've just seen your photos and all I can say is WOW! You must have a wonderful garden. The kingfisher....I'm SO jealous. I've never seen one and am seriously green with envy. How brilliant to have one visit your garden.
I'm going to make a suggestion...how about putting our location in brackets beside our username so everyone can see roughly where everyone else is? Then we can see what birds are visiting our "neighbours" gardens.
Make the most of today because, unlike Sky+, there isn't a rewind button.
Lovely pictures WF and Wattle15!
Make the boy interested in natural history if you can; it is better than games [Robert Falcon Scott]
Super pictures Scott, Wildlife Friendly, and Jan. Love your Babbler, Jan
Great selection of photographs, and a pleasure to look at them.
Unknown said: Apart from the 6 chickens that roam our garden, a few years ago we got our best ever view of a Water Rail as it wandered along the edge of our lawn!! There is a stream at the bottom of the lane and have heard them in the meadow beyond this, but it still seemed a little out of place.
Apart from the 6 chickens that roam our garden, a few years ago we got our best ever view of a Water Rail as it wandered along the edge of our lawn!! There is a stream at the bottom of the lane and have heard them in the meadow beyond this, but it still seemed a little out of place.
If we include 'fly overs' we have justed topped our Water Rail, as 7 Cranes flew over this morning, have seen these in Norfolk before at Horsey (quite a steady population) but never on our local patch.
"Feed the birds, tuppence a bag" Mary Poppins
We had a yellowhammer visiting - I never saw it as I was away but my mum did, she thought it might have been an escaped canary at first! I think that is probably one of the most unusual, we were in an urban area though we weren't far from farmland. We used to have a kestrel come flying over daily too!
Millie & Fly the Border Collies
Unknown said: If we include 'fly overs' we have justed topped our Water Rail, as 7 Cranes flew over this morning, have seen these in Norfolk before at Horsey (quite a steady population) but never on our local patch.
Wow!! That's fantastic!
"All weeds are flowers, once you get to know them" (Eeyore)
My photos on Flickr
What a lovely variety of birds everyone has visiting them. I too am jealous of the kingfisher! We have had a family of great spotted woodpeckers this year and for the first time ever, a pair of siskins. I hope they come back again. We occasionally see a yellowhammer but more oftern just hear them and once several years ago saw a goldcrest but I haven't seen it since. We had a brambling once too. Our most unusual visitor one summer was a lovebird which had obviously escaped captivity. It was green with a pink face and stayed in the garden for several days. Unfortunately we were unable to catch it and I don't suppose it survived for long out in the wild, poor little thing.
As for photos of 'foreign' birds they could go in 'Wildlife' but that is rather a broad subject so perhaps we should have a special gallery for them. I shall request one.
There is something new to learn everyday...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/skylark58/
Unknown said: Our most unusual visitor one summer was a lovebird which had obviously escaped captivity. It was green with a pink face and stayed in the garden for several days. Unfortunately we were unable to catch it and I don't suppose it survived for long out in the wild, poor little thing.
Our most unusual visitor one summer was a lovebird which had obviously escaped captivity. It was green with a pink face and stayed in the garden for several days. Unfortunately we were unable to catch it and I don't suppose it survived for long out in the wild, poor little thing.
We had one of these too a few summers ago, green with a peach coloured face (oddly enough somebody from the RSPB identified it as a 'Peach Faced Lovebird'), it hung about for a week or so feeding off the bird table with the starlings (can only imagine what they thought of this poser), we named him/her 'Bernard the Budgie', was fairly tame but we never managed to catch him but did get a couple of pictures but that was back in the days before digital photography so they are probably buried away somewhere.
Shortly afterwards I found out that a work colleague had previously kept lovebirds and would have tried to catch him if she had known.