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Showing posts from December, 2013

At Last

The sultanas on the ground feeder are being eaten. On two occasions today I saw a hen blackbird hop up to it and take one or two. She would take the sultana and hop away with it and then return for the next one rather than eat at the feeder. When I put out some more fat treats a robin was down almost before I moved away pecking at the dried mealworms embedded in them. Next time I looked out they had all gone. I am guessing a magpie as there are plenty about but I haven't seen one take them. I might try suet pellets instead when these run out. After driving out to the farm where we always buy our Christmas bird we did some shopping in Thame. The water meadows on the edge of the towm were flooded with a large flock of black headed gulls in residence. Not much else to see apart from the usual crop of red kites throughout the journey.

Thank You Clue

I was about to go out at noon when I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue came on the radio so I decided stay in for another 30 minutes and break my habit of doing the washing up in one evening session. This meant that the fat feeder on the quince tree was actually visible for a change. A great tit was feeding on it but the excitement was a pair of long tailed tits, the first of the winter to be seen in the garden. They worked over the tree, ignoring the feeder and returned a little later to repeat the process. Also ignoring the feeder a female great spotted woodpecker spent some time on the tree. In the back garden only a robin has been seen on the fat feeder while fat pieces keep getting taken from the ground feeder when I am not watching. Whatever is doing it defintiely doesn't like the sultanas which still seem to be untouched.

Lapwings

Driving around the M25 this morning I had an annoyingly brief glimpse of a flock of lapwings taking flight from the fields between junctions 26 and 25. Any other spiecies and I might have been hard pushed for the identifictation but there is no mistaking the way lapwing wingws curl in flight or the pale flash on every beat. Flocks like that are far less common these days. I also had another glimpse on the egret on Boxmoor. If I was a determined twitcher I could note three spiecies of egret within a short drive at the moment which is something that still comes as a suprise. At home the blackbirds have stripped the rowan tree and have, I assume from where they take flight when I come home, been sampling the few fallen quinces that I failed to remove from the lawn last week. I put a fat block in a feeder on one of the quince trees a couple of days ago and there are some beak marks on it but I have yet to see any birds on it. In the back garden, having finished the box of fat treats I

Rowans and Redwings

A rather damp misty day today with that grey light that seems to drain the colour from things at any distance. Giving the front garden some much overdue tidying I was distracted by a pair of blackbirds taking berries from the rowan tree in the garden. There was a good crop this year and most have now been taken although this is the first opportunity that I have had to see this in action. While I was watching I realised that there was a lot of activity in the treetops in Broomstick Lane and saw a flock of redwing making their way along the canopy towards Ley Hill. They stayed in the high branches and followed the line of the lane very precisely with none spilling out to the lower trees in the gardens.

Egret and Seagull Superhighway

Driving through Hemel on my way to east London yesterday I spotted a hunched white shape on Boxmoor as I turned from London Road into Station Road. I had no chance to determine what species of egret it was but recent sightings in Gadebridge Park nearby suggest that a little egret is most likely.  A red kite over St Alban's Road is no longer a cause of suprise but despite the clear afternoon I saw none beyond the Park Street roundabout on the A414. Crossing the Lea valley as dusk approached the passage of gulls to roost wasn't at its most impressive but I could see group after group heading south over a fairly narrow band between the river and Epping Forest. After Bell Common Tunnel there was one stray group following the east side of the ridge and then only the occasonal singleton.

Still Quiet

There is not much activity in the garden during the day but there was quite a little flurry at around 9:30 with a succession of blue tits and one great tit taking fat from the feeder. When they moved on all activity seemed to cease although some fat treats that I put on the ground feeder were taken without me seeing anything there. That is something that has been happening all week. Walking into Chesham a kite circling over the White Hill Centre was making a lot of noise calling almost continuously.