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Showing posts with the label pheasant

Pheasants

I had quite a suprise driving back from the garden centre this afternoon. In the road between Latimer and Ley hill was a flock of ten juvenile pheasants, 7 cock birds and 3 hens. They proceeded to run down the lane away from the car milling back and forth across the road. One eventually ran down the side of the car and some of the others made for the hedgerows. As I carried on at walking pace the rest ran in front of me, one or two finally diving into the verge and the rest finally remembering their wings and taking flight.

Bluebells

A walk this morning took in Cowcroft Wood again. Bluebells are now out but not in any great numbers, there are wide areas where they are just in leaf. I must read up on wild flowers, I recognise the celendine and primroses, both giving fine shows but ther are others that I can't identify. On the birding front the walk was mostly the usual suspects, tits, chaffinches, blackbirds, robins, wood pigeons and assorted corvids. I heard skylarks and pheasants, it was very striking how far the pheasant's call will carry. The high spots were a green woodpecker in the wood and house sparrows in Ley Hill. The sparrows seem to concentrate at one end of the village where there are a lot of privet hedges. Red Kites are no longer unusual although always special but the number circling over Great Missenden on Easter Day were striking. I didn't make an exact count but it was the sort of sight that I used to associate only with the villages along the escarpment from Chinnor down towards Benso...

Valentine

The birds are supposed to be choosing their mates today. I haven't noticed any behaviour to suggest that is true. I am seeing more in the garden however. I have had a fat feeder on one of the quinces in the front garden for the last week. This has been attracting blue and great tits, while blackbirds will perch on the adjacent branch to use it. This morning a greater spotted woodpecker put in an appearance. Hopefully we will be seeing chicks again this spring. At the back a pair of goldfinches seem to be becoming regulars again and a coal tit is also putting in an appearance. Numbers still feel light compared with previous years but are definitely picking up.