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Showing posts from February, 2020

More Badgers

I looked out into the garden at 9pm and found that the ground tray for the badgers was already empty. On looking at the films there were two separate visits about 45 minutes apart but I can't tell if they were different individuals. He seemed keen to find any spillage too. And later I just hope that they haven't dug up any more of my primroses

Not Birding

I took a trip to Bedford today to visit the Bawden and Burges collections at The Higgins. I didn't want to faff about looking for parking in a strange town so I took advantage of free parking at Milton Keynes Coachway and used my pass on the X5. The view from the coach wasn't inspiring. Mostly of soggy arable fields with hedges trimmed to a uniform low height, presumably so that little Jocasta can safely follow the hunt on her pony. Even less inspiring is the area around Bedford Bus Station, redeveloped in the new town brutalist school. I had almost lost the will to live when I emerged from the Harpur Centre into Harpur Square. It was only when I turned round that I realised that the shopping mall had been built behind the grade 2 listed former Bedford Modern School. As well as being an excellent gallery The Higgins also has an excellent cafe / restaurant. Coming back another belt of bad weather was moving in creating some fascinating cloudscapes. These didn&#

Not All Storm Damage

We got off very lightly from the storms with one fence developing a bit of a wobble and the squirrel baffle on the bird feeder twisted until the mounting snapped. Our visiting badger seems to have made up for this though after deciding that there was something tasty lurking under my alpine bed. I wouldn't have minded so much if it had just been the weeds that I was going to take out in the next few days anyway but I do begrudge him the primroses. Since the storms there have been very few finches coming to the feeders and the great tits and the nuthatch seem to have moved away too. The blue and long tailed tits are still around in numbers as well as the resident robins and blackbirds. I was getting a bit fed up with uneaten bird food on the ground so I tried moving the feeding point by about three feet. Now the blackbird comes and hoovers up the mealworms and fat pellets. The robin on the other hand has no truck with feeding off the ground and tries to imitate the blu

Storm Ciara

I was away from home during the storm so spent Sunday worrying about my garden fence. Coming home on Monday the train was crawling up to the junction after Moor Park when I realised that a parakeet was flying along with us. The weather had turned clear and bright and with the very low relative velocity I could see the bright green plumage clearly. This was definitely the best view that I have yet had of a parakeet, normally I see little more than a silluette, and the first that I have actually seen, rather than just heard, outside of the build up area of London. When I got home the fence was intact although with a disturbing amount of play in one of the posts. The big surprise was that the sunflower heart feeder was missing. I thought that it had just blown off but it was nowhere to be found and I suspect that it had been stolen by a squirrel. I have observed one carrying off a feeder before.

Leigh on Sea

A little trip to the coast today, lovely clear sky, the tide on the way out. Parking at Two Tree Island there were teal roosting on the edge of Leigh Creek. Walking down to the old town there were plenty of redshank as well as the usual collection of gulls and corvids. The tide was receeeding across the flats with a lot of waders following it. Redshank obviously as well as grey plover and turnstone. I only had the lightweight spotting scope so I couldn't see the tideline in detail but it is a good guess that the little black dots were dunlin. Brent geese numbers weren't high but there were plenty to be seen and heard. There was also a curlew somewhere out on the flats, audible but I didn't get a view, I can't get use to seeing egrets at Leigh but there were several around. Little egrets I think but I will have to read up on their id, all of my field guides were published when they were still very rare vagrants.