• Welcome to BirdForum, the internet's largest birding community with thousands of members from all over the world. The forums are dedicated to wild birds, birding, binoculars and equipment and all that goes with it.

    Please register for an account to take part in the discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.
ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

Super Saturday (1 Viewer)

Andy Ledger

Falling into disrepair
Today has been the best day in the garden for ages. It's been a bit quiet for a while, but this morning the lawn was crawling with House Sparrows, with female Chaffinch, female Blackbird and a Dunnock in there, and Blue Tits on the new peanut feeder for the first time that I've seen, plus a Collared Dove and a Woodpigeon. This afternoon at teatime, I went out to eat my macaroni cheese on the patio, and the hedges and trees around the garden were alive with Long Tailed Tits, which were also competing for space on the nut feeder with Blue and Great Tits, and in the Silver Birch was a Willow Warbler. Nothing earth-shattering, but the warbler was a garden tick for me, and it was great to see so many birds in the garden at one time. And there I was the other day, complaining that all I get are Sparrows and Collared Doves!

:bounce:
 
Willow Warbler?

I appreciated the tone of this post very much. It goes along with my thinking on birders vs twitchers (see that thread for more!) and you are evidently and admirably the former, and also the thread about what underrated birds are. All yours are everday jewels. Good on you!
Just out of interest - how did you identify the Willow Warbler?
Hope the macaroni cheese was as enjoyable as the birds!!
best
David
 
black52bird said:
Just out of interest - how did you identify the Willow Warbler?

I sat with a pair of bins waiting until it showed me its legs. I may not be a twitcher, but I don't want a Willow/Chiff on the garden list - I need certainty!

The macaroni cheese was just the ticket, too.
 
Hi Andy, that must have been a very nice sight to have longtailed tit's, we have not had them for at least 6 months. And the warbler!! what a day for you best of luck for a few more.
bert.
 
black52bird said:
I appreciated the tone of this post very much. It goes along with my thinking on birders vs twitchers (see that thread for more!) and you are evidently and admirably the former, and also the thread about what underrated birds are. All yours are everday jewels. Good on you!
Just out of interest - how did you identify the Willow Warbler?
Hope the macaroni cheese was as enjoyable as the birds!!
best
David
I agree with David, Andy - a lovely post. You have a very 'green' garden, by the sounds of it. Sadly we don't have enough space for lots of trees and bushes. We're attracting goldfinches now, which is nice.
 
I think we benefit by being right on the edge of town, literally. On our side of the road it's all houses, cross over and it's farmland. I just pray that the farmer never sells it to property developers. Plus, I'm not much of a gardener, so there's plenty of cover in our hedge and around the borders. It's not a huge garden, but the two trees either side do help.
 
Goonerbirder said:
I think we benefit by being right on the edge of town, literally. On our side of the road it's all houses, cross over and it's farmland. I just pray that the farmer never sells it to property developers. Plus, I'm not much of a gardener, so there's plenty of cover in our hedge and around the borders. It's not a huge garden, but the two trees either side do help.
Trees are the secret to attracting birds - that and lots of dense cover such as ivy. You're in a great part of the country, too, if you're nearish to the coast, anyway.
 
We're about a mile from the Medway Estuary, near where it meets the Thames. A short drive from some top spots, and only a slightly longer drive to even more. I think I'm pretty lucky. More time to get out there would be nice, but birds turn up in unexpected places - like the Wheatear in the middle of a roundabout near our local Tesco supermarket.
 
black52bird said:
Do you think legs are enough?
It's always worried me as a certain ID focus.
Best
David

As it was just for a Willow Warbler on my garden list, and not for a first on the British list, it was enough for me. They weren't in any way dark, far from it. Also, it was tinged greener than I'd expect from a Chiffchaff. In the absence of it actually singing, or a VERY close look at its primaries, I can live with it. I sometimes wish I was set up for digiscoping, then I'd be able to peruse the bird at leisure, but for now I'll just have to do it the old fashioned way!
 
I had a Willow/Chiff in my garden in spring. I was able to photograph it, and sent pics to 2 experts asking for i.d. Yes. you guessed - one said w.w. and the other chiffchaff! In the finish, I measured the relationship of secondries/primaries and tail, and compared with guide book, which made it a chiffchaff! Best I could do.
cheers
Mary
 
Warning! This thread is more than 20 years ago old.
It's likely that no further discussion is required, in which case we recommend starting a new thread. If however you feel your response is required you can still do so.

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top