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#1 |
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Senior Member
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mastermind 13
Bits and pieces
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#2 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Germany
Posts: 3,347
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1.Gelbbrauenlaubsänger
2. Goldhähnchenlaubsänger 3.?? a little grey job 4. white wagtail |
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#3 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Germany
Posts: 3,347
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3. perhaps Orpheusgrasmücke
I will give you the english names whenI have the time to find them |
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#4 |
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Grumpy Git
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Isle of Man
Posts: 4,619
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1) Greenish Warbler
2) Arctic Warbler 3) Barred Warbler 4) Redstart |
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#5 |
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Jason-occasional-twitcher
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Nottinghamshire
Posts: 1,025
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1. Yellow Browed Warbler
2. Greenish Warbler 3. Barred Warbler 4. Common Redstart
__________________
Jason Blackwell |
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#6 |
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Professor of Listening
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Oh lordy another one.
1) Hume's Warbler 2) Pallas's Warbler 3) Blackcap 4) Redstart, possibly of a funny race, possibly taken at the same time as the Whitethroat and Garden Warbler in the last round, judging by the wierd light. |
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#7 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Germany
Posts: 3,347
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OK, again in english
1. yellow browed warbler 2. Pallas´s warbler are the english names and my las two guesses I change to 3.barred warbler 4. commomn redstart (Probably its not only the light, that makes it look so red) |
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#8 |
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Senior Member
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You are right about the light Mr Fife, also a late May capture...in the same net as the Whitethroat
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#9 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Cork,Ireland
Posts: 3,507
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1)Dusky Warbler?
2)Pallas' Warbler 3)Barred Warbler 4)Common Redstart Harry H |
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#10 |
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Senior Member
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here is all of bird 3... yes it a Barred warber. I could barley get my hands round it to hold it!
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#11 |
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Senior Moment
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Plymouth, Devon
Posts: 6,409
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I know Jane will kill me for spoiling the fun, but...
1. Arctic Warbler 2. http://www.surfbirds.com/mb/mystery/...s-warbler.html 3. Garden Warbler 4. Black Redstart |
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#12 |
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Senior Moment
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Plymouth, Devon
Posts: 6,409
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Actually, the second isn't the same bird, is it? I'll go with Arctic Warbler for that.
Jason |
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#13 |
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Senior Member
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Nope its not that one...
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#14 | |
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Senior Moment
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Plymouth, Devon
Posts: 6,409
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Quote:
Do you get the impression I haven't the foggiest what I'm talking about? <Answer: No, it's bl**ding obvious you don't!> Jason |
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#15 |
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Senior Member
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Those birds in full.
Should be simple now |
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#16 |
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Senior Member
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I want age sex and subspecies now of course :)
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#17 |
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conehead
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Newcastle, Northumberland, European Union
Posts: 6,796
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Suddenly #1 becomes a Wheatear - I'd go for adult male leucorhoa.
2 - Yellow-browed, probably juv. 3 - Pallas's, also probably juv. Michael |
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#18 |
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Senior Member
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HOUSE
1. 1st year Yellow-browed Warbler, probably female on biometrics, at least at the small end of the range. This birds had clearly been in the country for a good time and had been feeding fweel, it had a fat score of 5/5 2. 1st year Pallas Warbler. Again I'm assuming female on biometrics. It was truly tiny! There is a funny story to this bird. Caught at Filey, in the top scrub while everyone else...and I mean everyone else was out looking for a reported Gyr Falcon. I was doing a net round and came back to find that everyone had scarpered. This was a nice consolation., and the falcon turned out to be a Buzzard-sized Saker! The photo is a little dark, but it is quite the darkest of these little gems I've ever seen 4. Northern Wheatear, Greenland Race, it is indeed male, though probably 1st summer male, leucohoa. It was a monster bird, with a wing length longer than many Song Thrushes and a tarsus wider than than the ring-size it was supposed to take! A strange thing about Greenland Wheatears, they seem to be a great deal easier to catch than the European Birds. I don't know if they get excited by trees or something, but of the 15 or so Wheatears I've caught locally all have been definite or probable leucohoa. I find the first Wheatears that come in a barely larger than Redstarts...by early May some are starting to lookk bigger and browner mantled, and by late May all the birds going through are hulking great things like this one. |
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#19 | ||
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conehead
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Newcastle, Northumberland, European Union
Posts: 6,796
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Quote:
Quote:
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#20 | |
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Professor of Listening
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Quote:
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#21 |
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Senior Member
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feeding well...it would be ok if I could type
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