Sparrow hawk flying low across m61 near to junction 5 , two days on the run. possibly hunting redwing, the trees lining the motorway on my drive from the A580 to junction 5 have had lots of these birds in them.
Mike Chorley said
Wed Dec 22 1:32 PM, 2010
Hi Mike.
I've not seen any of the other birds doing it, so far. Maybe that's because it's the sparrows regular patch. The blackbirds are happier under the thicker vegetation where there is less snow.
Cheers
Mike C
Mike hirst said
Wed Dec 22 12:21 PM, 2010
Hi Mike, the sparrows are doing the same thing in our garden. The blackbirds are doing something similar - bellyflopping in the snow and staying there for a minute or so.
cheers Mike
Mike Chorley said
Wed Dec 22 11:09 AM, 2010
In the catagory of 'bird behaviour I've not seen before' :
Most of our local House Sparrows are dust-bathing in the snow under the bushes around the car park. It's where I've been putting food out for them, so at first I thought it was just forageing activity, but a better look revealed what they were up to. There's a large conifer nearby, which is where they roost, so maybe it's a Roman style sparrow sauna: the conifer's the caladarium, the bushes the tepidarium and the snow the frigidarium! Certainly cold enough to freeze the mites off anything
Also heard what sounded like a sneeze from one of the local Carrion Crows
-- Edited by Mike Chorley on Wednesday 22nd of December 2010 01:25:04 PM
IanPlant said
Sun Nov 14 2:31 PM, 2010
Thank you for that guys.
This is the first year that we have had Coal Tits in the garden. We usually have the usual Sparrows pigeons and starlings with the occasional vist by the dunnock but this year we have the coal tit and 3 blue tits and spotted a great tit as well
sid ashton said
Sun Nov 14 2:19 PM, 2010
Saw something yesterday that I have never seen previously and that was a Dipper swimmimg on the surface of a rapidly flowing river, the river Kent near to Sizergh Castle. I have read that they do this but is it common behaviour?
Phil Owen said
Sun Nov 14 1:18 PM, 2010
Great Tits are known to sometimes watch exactly where the Coal Tits are food caching in order to help themselves to the stored goodies as well.
Mike hirst said
Sun Nov 14 12:05 PM, 2010
Hello Ian, this is normal behavior for Coal Tits and Jaysat this time of year, not always in lawns but in cracks in trees as well Cheers Mike
IanPlant said
Sun Nov 14 10:10 AM, 2010
Hi everyone,
Has anybody every noticed whether Tits or birds in general bury seed, as i have observed a Coal tit in my garden picking out the sunflower seeds from the feeders and burying them in different location in the garden
Regards Ian
Pete Welch said
Tue Nov 9 10:05 PM, 2010
On the subject of Jackdaws - twice at Inner Marsh Farm I've seen and photographed a Jackdaw mobbing Terns both of which happened to be rather rare terns at that. I wonder if it is food related i.e. to mob the gull/tern in the hope of an easy meal, or something else?
dave broome said
Tue Nov 9 10:00 PM, 2010
During this evening's gull roost at Pennington there was a group of about 20 Jackdaw swooping around practically at water level, among the gulls. They then flew to a tree on Ramsdale's before moving across the flash to the roost site later. A short while later another group of about 30 Jackdaws did the same, twisting around among the gulls. Other than a few short dashes there didn't seem to be any real attempt to harrass the gulls, other than one Jackdaw breaking away to pursue a Common Gull which took up. As the Common Gull was flushed from rest amongst the roost I doubt that it was carrying any food item. The Common Gull eventually turned and chased the Jackdaw, which re-joined the rest of it's group as they flew to trees on Ramsdale's.
I saw a group of Jackdaws behaving like this among the gull roost last week in a short visit during atrocious weather last week. Other than that I'd never seen this, despite there having been a Jackdaw roost occurring during gull roost counts last winter.
Matt Potter said
Tue Nov 9 9:38 AM, 2010
Mark Rigby wrote:
Absolutely stunning. Must be some sort of camera trickery
I thought there might have been a bit of camera tom foolery, but on seeing the video I hold me hands up!!
Dennis atherton said
Mon Nov 8 6:34 PM, 2010
Superb, enjoyed seeing that, sat on his arm and hand aswell, excellent
Mark Rigby said
Sun Nov 7 10:37 PM, 2010
Absolutely stunning. Must be some sort of camera trickery
- Not sure what to suggest really. I do wonder though as to the cause; - I have seen in Pied Wagtails a tendency from time to time to take exception to reflections in car wing mirrors, and I wonder if the behaviour you note with your bird started with it pecking at the wing mirror(s) with resultant mounting frustration at not being able to see off its imagined rival. Could it be that a change of strategy has developed from there, with the bird now trying to attack the thing (i.e.vulnerable bits of the car) that it most associates with its "enemy" the reflection? I wonder if it would do any good, if when the car were parked up, a pair of old gloves were placed one over each of the wing mirrors, then the offending bird might think its rival had been vanquished and cease its attacks?
Cheers, Mike
We had a Dunnock earlier this year that used to have 'fights' with my wing mirror. We saw it almost on a daily basis for about a 4 week period.
Mike Passant said
Sat Nov 6 7:59 PM, 2010
Hi Karen,
What a strange thing with your Grey Wagtail.
- Not sure what to suggest really. I do wonder though as to the cause; - I have seen in Pied Wagtails a tendency from time to time to take exception to reflections in car wing mirrors, and I wonder if the behaviour you note with your bird started with it pecking at the wing mirror(s) with resultant mounting frustration at not being able to see off its imagined rival. Could it be that a change of strategy has developed from there, with the bird now trying to attack the thing (i.e.vulnerable bits of the car) that it most associates with its "enemy" the reflection? I wonder if it would do any good, if when the car were parked up, a pair of old gloves were placed one over each of the wing mirrors, then the offending bird might think its rival had been vanquished and cease its attacks?
Cheers, Mike
Karen Foulkes said
Sat Nov 6 10:08 AM, 2010
A Grey Wagtail has fairly recently started attacking my aunt's car. This consists of the bird constantly pooing on the car and attacking the windscreen wiper, so much so that it has even managed to break one!
My aunt's car is a silver colour and it also attacks her neighbour's car to a lesser extent which is blue, but it leaves my uncle's car alone, which is red.
Other than putting a bird of prey silhouette on the car, which is impractical, or buying a a new car, has anybody out there any ideas of a solution to this problem?
Cheers Karen
Bill Myerscough said
Fri Nov 5 4:53 PM, 2010
Was walking along a country lane this morning near Handforth - only just outside the southern edge of GM and had already watched a small (c20) but vocal flock of Teal along with 2 Snipe and 5 Meadow Pipits in a flooded field. After a walk a bit further along the lane, I thought I could hear the distinctive calls of adult male Teals coming from above head height in a large dead tree at the side of the road Looked up and a flock of Starlings were present - several of which were perfectly mimicking these Teal calls. I know Starlings are renowned for their mimicry but this is the first time I've heard them "doing" Teal. Brilliant! Just sets the mind thinking, what purpose such mimicry at this time of year serves....if any?
Cheers,
Bill.
-- Edited by Bill Myerscough on Friday 5th of November 2010 05:01:08 PM
Dean Macdonald said
Mon Jul 5 9:19 PM, 2010
A friend of my wife witnessed some interesting behaviour by a Blackbird in her garden.It was picking slugs up and rolling them in a nearby pile of seeds, giving the slug a nice coating, before flying off. Looks like the youngsters where getting sesame seed slugs
Dave Thacker said
Mon Jul 5 8:59 PM, 2010
I have just been watching a Sparrowhawk soaring around Swinton town hall which was being mobbed by up to 10 Swifts. Each Swift dive bombed the Hawk in turn getting very close indeed. Unfortunately one of the Swifts got too close and as it dived in the Hawk turned on its back and managed to catch the bird with its talons. The Swift tumbled to the ground landing on the gardens in front of the town hall about 50m in front of me. It was still alive and as I started to run over to get it the Sparrowhawk dived down and landed on the Swift. Then two of the resident Crows flew down and one of them mobbed the Hawk moving it from the Swift which the second Crow picked up and just managed to fly onto the new offices at the side of the town hall as the Swift was still flapping about.
Joey Eccles said
Sun May 9 6:34 PM, 2010
i once heard reports of 11 helpers(!) to a single nest. you certainly coundn't call those chicks neglected!
Bill Myerscough said
Sun May 9 4:05 PM, 2010
Long-tailed Tits carrying small bills full of insect food into nests (usually situated in brambles) have been particularly conspicuous in the last week or so - I have recorded 8 pairs carrying food into nests across different parts of GM between 2/5 and 9/5. Today on my wanderings I came across one pair carrying food into a nest and around a quarter of a mile or so away another nest was found but this had 5 separate adult birds carrying food into the nest in the space of less than 1 minute, plus from the calls being made behind me, at least 1 possibly 2 other birds were waiting to do the same! I am aware that many nests of this species have "helpers" - some statistics put the number of nests with helpers in quite high percentages but this is the first time that I have seen so many birds helping around a single nest! I understand from my readings that many of the helpers might be family members who have failed in their breeding attempts this year but it does make you wonder why they don't rebuild, as only yesterday I was watching a pair of LTT building a nest elsewhere in GM, at a time when most adults are getting ready to bring fledged young out into the big wide world. In fact it should be any day now - my first record of fledged young seen last year was on 9/5/09.
Does anyone have any figures on max numbers of helpers at a LTT nest?
Long-tailed Tit nests.....now what truly awe-inspiring structures they are!
Keep atlasing!
Bill.
Anthony Dixon said
Mon Apr 5 7:21 PM, 2010
I made a quick visit to Brabyns Park in Marple today and watched a Moorhen break and then eat the yolk of a Moorhen egg. I'm guessing that the bird in question was most likely a male and committed the act so he could have a chance to breed with the female?
Any other theories?
Anthony
James Hutchison said
Thu Apr 1 3:40 PM, 2010
On two mornings in the last week I've watched a chiffchaff feeding on the lawn in my back garden. Anyone know if this is common? I was a bit surprised to see it in the garden at all as I would have thought of them very much as woodland birds. I would also have expected it to be much more arboreal so to see it feeding on the lawn was a bit of a surprise.
As I type this I'm also listening to a song thrush outside the window, who's repertoire includes mimicry of a blackbird alarm call and I think possibly a greenfinch. Near my university accomodation there is one which is a very clear mimic of some sort of car/house alarm, possibly the college fire alarm which is tested weekly!
Steve Atkins said
Wed Mar 31 7:55 PM, 2010
Following on from Bill, John and Steven's comments about Jay mimicry on the Stamford boating lake thread. A couple of weeks ago I was walking along the River Roch in Smallbridge and heard repeatedly what I assumed to be a Grey Heron calling from nearby trees. When I finally located the source of the calls it turned out to be a Jay and I could see its bill opening as the call was made. It just goes to show that recording birds just on call may lead to mistakes!
Rob Thorpe said
Mon Mar 29 7:38 PM, 2010
I heard a Lesser Black-backed Gull calling over Ashton-in-Makerfield at 23:30ish last night... Seemed unusual.
Dave Thacker said
Mon Mar 29 7:31 PM, 2010
A friend of mine who is currently residing in the famous Strangeways motel [ anyone who remembers Mike Harding's folk song will know where I mean] mentioned in his last letter to me that a number of inmates had complained of being kept awake as birds were singing all night. He identified the birds as Robins with a number of Wrens thrown in as well which were singing all through the night due to the very large security lights surrounding the motel making the birds think that it was 24 hour daylight.
Bill Myerscough said
Mon Mar 29 8:56 AM, 2010
Many thanks for that info Simon and Phil. Looks like we might have a few insomniacs about - birds......and birders!
Cheers,
Bill.
Simon Warford said
Sun Mar 28 7:30 PM, 2010
Bill, we have a Robin singing through the night at the moment even in the rain its still at it.
Phil Owen said
Sun Mar 28 10:56 AM, 2010
Our local Blackbirds are singing right through the night too!!
Not unusual especially during the breeding season but light levels can have an effect on them singing, for example street lamps etc.
-- Edited by Phil Owen on Sunday 28th of March 2010 11:04:26 AM
Bill Myerscough said
Sun Mar 28 7:18 AM, 2010
28th March.
A Robin was singing in my Chadderton back garden at 2.15 am BST (1.15 am old time) this morning. I know that this species sings late into the evening and very early morning but not actually in the middle of the night! Maybe this is normal behaviour? Leaned out of the bedroom window to listen and another bird was singing back at it!
Cheers,
Bill.
Dave Tennant said
Tue Mar 23 9:45 PM, 2010
Hi Paul, have spotted buzzards and badgers taking worms like you say but i was just amazed to see a top predater behaving in this manor. one of the pair were at it again tonight this time perching on the crossbar in pouring rain and then every minute or so dropping down to feed . a magpie was sat watching 3 feet further along the bar, i guess you could call it a cross bar challenge .
Paul Risley said
Tue Mar 23 6:27 PM, 2010
Dave Tennant wrote:
A pair of kestrels hunting a round hindley town football pitch 6 pm till 630, nothing unusual there. one hunted over some long grass at the side of the pitch while the other used the changing room roof as a perch and for at least half an hour swooped onto the flooded pitch landed and seemed to be picking worms from the mud.could there be a shortage of larger prey?.
Hi Dave, Earthworms are supposedly rich in protein,(well at least according to Ray Mears) many larger birds including Buzzards and Herons activly hunt them out, Foxes and Badgers do so too, I imagine it was taking advantage of easy prey on a wet day.
Mark Rigby said
Mon Mar 22 10:46 PM, 2010
Dave Thacker wrote:
Getting a meal from carrion is a lot easier especially from road kill and I have seen Buzzards in the road feeding on Hedgehogs, Grey squirrels and Rabbits.
I regularly see Buzzards on or adjacent to the railway lines, feeding on, or waiting for "rail kills". It is not uncommon to see 20+ birds on a return trip to Chester via Delamere or 15+ on a return trip to Crewe via Alderley Edge.
Over the last 10 years or so , they have become far more common and are now seen around Manchester Airport, Romiley to Strines and on the Hadfield line.
Unfortunately, is is also becoming more common to find Buzzards as "rail kills", but I suppose its all relative because they become food for foxes, other Buzzards etc........
Dave Tennant said
Mon Mar 22 8:20 PM, 2010
A pair of kestrels hunting a round hindley town football pitch 6 pm till 630, nothing unusual there. one hunted over some long grass at the side of the pitch while the other used the changing room roof as a perch and for at least half an hour swooped onto the flooded pitch landed and seemed to be picking worms from the mud.could there be a shortage of larger prey?.
Dave Thacker said
Sun Mar 14 8:20 PM, 2010
Hi Geoff and Mel
I have witnessed Buzzards chasing and catching Rabbits on the mosses over the years. I have also seen them chase Hares but never catch them. Sometimes Buzzards will sit on a post and watch for small rodents and I have seen them hopping around a field chasing and catching the rodents.
Getting a meal from carrion is a lot easier especially from road kill and I have seen Buzzards in the road feeding on Hedgehogs, Grey squirrels and Rabbits.
Melanie Beckford said
Sun Mar 14 8:06 PM, 2010
Geoff Hargreaves wrote:
Do buzzards take live prey ??
Although l've never seen them hunting myself Geoff, l always presumed they preferred live prey to carrion.
Did you not see the article on the Buzzard that took the Phalarope last year ?
Geoff Hargreaves said
Sun Mar 14 4:09 PM, 2010
Whilst chasing the elusive merlin and racking up some borough ticks I bumped into mr thorpe and woosey at rindle rd we saw a buzzard swoop down from a fence post and land almost on top of a 'live' rabbit neither seemed to know what to do next,the rabbit hopped off stage right,the buzzard back to a fence post.Do buzzards take live prey ??
cheers geoff
Ian Campbell said
Tue Jan 26 8:47 PM, 2010
See last post Amazing , Craig but this weekend at Radcliffe recycling centre on Cemetary Rd I heard exactly the same call from a Magpie, I actually thought at the time it might be a call advertising a potential nest sight as it was so unusual. Cheers Ian
Craig Higson said
Tue Jan 26 6:07 PM, 2010
Whilst out and about today (out of county mostly) I was intrigued to hear a flock of starlings chortling away in a block of low scrub. It was hardly typical starling habitat, and more confusingly I couldnt see any of them. I then realised it was a Magpie, happily sat there mimicing a flock of starlings. I know Magpies are mimics but I've never heard them (or any other bird) mimic a flock of birds.
More bizarrely - I also saw my first young bird of the year - a young Moorhen (and I mean young - 10-11 days or so) on the River Sankey in Warrington!!
Bill Myerscough said
Fri Nov 13 5:22 PM, 2009
I'm sure that the botanists amongst the users of the forum will have noticed that earlier in the year there seemed to be a mass, widespread flowering of Cordyline species. More info on this plant species at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabbage_tree_(New_Zealand)
I assume this mass flowering might have been as a result of a relatively dry '08-09 winter? I understand that these plants are non-native species and originate from New Zealand I think? Anyway, the flowering spikes from earlier on in the year are now loaded with numerous small white berrries. Have noticed that my local Chadderton Starlings appear to have taken a liking to these small berries and a great cloud of birds descended onto the tree in next doors garden on 11/11 and enthusiastically picked off these berries. Had a look through my Birds of the Western Palearctic interactive to see if this had been reported as a food source before and couldn't see it mentioned. From my limited experience I have noticed that Cordylines don't flower in this country in the vast majority of years, so maybe it is just Starlings taking advantage of this years unusual circumstances? I wonder if Starlings in New Zealand (which were introduced there in the 1800s I understand) feed on this food source in this plants native country?
Bill.
Bill Myerscough said
Tue Nov 10 7:45 AM, 2009
Joey Eccles wrote:
When at Chesire Oaks today i noticed that the resident population of starlings were being severly harassed by the black headed gulls. The gulls would gang up in groups of 3 or 4 and fly really fast at the trees in which the starlings were sited. This of course sent the starlings up and flying about. The gulls would then try to isolate a victim before trying to chase it down. They weren't very sucessful but on one occasion a gull did knock a starling out of the air only for it to regather its bearings and fly to a nearby tree when it was only a couple of feet from the ground. The gulls seemed so energetic and surprisingly fast and agile that at first i thought they were birds of prey. Yet it left me wondering why they did it? Maybe to try and oust the starlings from feeding in the gulls' spot? or possibly it was their predatory nature kicking in as with other gulls, although a starling would put up quite a scrap for a sparrowhawk let alone a bh gull! Has anyone experienced this before?
Hi Joey,
Much as many of us might like to think that wildlife doesn't have some of the less savoury behavioural traits that we humans have..... well I'm afraid to say that they do! From my limited experience, of the commoner day to day birds, Black-headed Gulls are probably one of the worst "offenders" when it comes to trying to "mug" other birds and steal their hard earned food! I wonder if this is maybe what might have been happening with your Starlings and gulls? I have seen at Piethorne foraging and diving parties of Goosanders moving across the surfaces of the valleys reservoirs and quite often they are surrounded by a posse of yapping, threatening BH Gulls and I have watched them trying to steal food from these ducks. Also, at the same site I have seen opportunistic BH Gulls attempting the same with Great Crested Grebes (unsuccessfully) and Little Grebes (successfully). I have also watched them in very agile and aggressive aerial pursuit of Common Gulls and Jackdaws at Kingsway Business Park, also attempting to steal food - I would guess usually by getting the threatened bird to drop their food at the sheer thought of any attempted aggression! Whilst walking along my local section of the Rochdale Canal on Saturday 7th November 2009, I could hear the sharp alarm calls of a Kingfisher and about 15 Black-headed Gulls were swooping down low over the canal - I would guess trying to scare it into dropping a small fish that it had probably spent a good while waiting to catch! Can't claim to be an expert on these matters but I'm sure I have read somewhere that some species, such as Lapwing and Golden Plover, feed at certain times of the year at night time... possibly to avoid the close attentions of these unwelcome food pirates!
Best wishes,
Bill.
Joey Eccles said
Sun Nov 8 7:49 PM, 2009
When at Chesire Oaks today i noticed that the resident population of starlings were being severly harassed by the black headed gulls. The gulls would gang up in groups of 3 or 4 and fly really fast at the trees in which the starlings were sited. This of course sent the starlings up and flying about. The gulls would then try to isolate a victim before trying to chase it down. They weren't very sucessful but on one occasion a gull did knock a starling out of the air only for it to regather its bearings and fly to a nearby tree when it was only a couple of feet from the ground. The gulls seemed so energetic and surprisingly fast and agile that at first i thought they were birds of prey. Yet it left me wondering why they did it? Maybe to try and oust the starlings from feeding in the gulls' spot? or possibly it was their predatory nature kicking in as with other gulls, although a starling would put up quite a scrap for a sparrowhawk let alone a bh gull! Has anyone experienced this before?
Judith Smith said
Sun Oct 11 8:27 PM, 2009
I heard they bred there, or tried to.
Dave Tennant said
Sun Oct 11 3:58 PM, 2009
While picking up my son who had been playing football at the jjb soccerdome on friday evening, i noticed a kestrel sat on top of one of the lamp posts, it was dark but the grass verge below was lit up by the line of lamp posts. I saw this a couple of years ago and had forgotten about it . pressume the kestrel was using the lights to spot prey, is this regular behavior and has anyone spotted a similar thing. Ps this occured at wigan jjb.
Rob Thorpe said
Sun Sep 27 8:20 PM, 2009
Rob Thorpe wrote:
Being stuck at Penni Flash is enough to drive anyone mad!
-- Edited by Rob Thorpe on Sunday 27th of September 2009 07:32:51 PM
more likely he had the dreaded leg lurgy from pearsons flash
Touché
JOHN TYMON said
Sun Sep 27 8:10 PM, 2009
Rob Thorpe wrote:
JOHN TYMON wrote:
Rob Thorpe wrote:
John, maybe it's trying to swim but only has one leg
couldn't haveit changed its spinning direction twicethink it thought it was a phalarope
Being stuck at Penni Flash is enough to drive anyone mad!
-- Edited by Rob Thorpe on Sunday 27th of September 2009 07:32:51 PM
more likely he had the dreaded leg lurgy from pearsons flash
Rob Thorpe said
Sun Sep 27 7:31 PM, 2009
JOHN TYMON wrote:
Rob Thorpe wrote:
John, maybe it's trying to swim but only has one leg
couldn't haveit changed its spinning direction twicethink it thought it was a phalarope
Being stuck at Penni Flash is enough to drive anyone mad!
-- Edited by Rob Thorpe on Sunday 27th of September 2009 07:32:51 PM
JOHN TYMON said
Sun Sep 27 7:23 PM, 2009
Rob Thorpe wrote:
John, maybe it's trying to swim but only has one leg
couldn't haveit changed its spinning direction twicethink it thought it was a phalarope
I've not seen any of the other birds doing it, so far. Maybe that's because it's the sparrows regular patch. The blackbirds are happier under the thicker vegetation where there is less snow.
Cheers
Mike C
the sparrows are doing the same thing in our garden. The blackbirds are doing something similar - bellyflopping in the snow and staying there for a minute or so.
cheers
Mike
Most of our local House Sparrows are dust-bathing in the snow under the bushes around the car park. It's where I've been putting food out for them, so at first I thought it was just forageing activity, but a better look revealed what they were up to. There's a large conifer nearby, which is where they roost, so maybe it's a Roman style sparrow sauna: the conifer's the caladarium, the bushes the tepidarium and the snow the frigidarium! Certainly cold enough to freeze the mites off anything
Also heard what sounded like a sneeze from one of the local Carrion Crows
-- Edited by Mike Chorley on Wednesday 22nd of December 2010 01:25:04 PM
This is the first year that we have had Coal Tits in the garden. We usually have the usual Sparrows pigeons and starlings with the occasional vist by the dunnock but this year we have the coal tit and 3 blue tits and spotted a great tit as well
this is normal behavior for Coal Tits and Jaysat this time of year, not always in lawns but in cracks in trees as well
Cheers
Mike
Has anybody every noticed whether Tits or birds in general bury seed, as i have observed a Coal tit in my garden picking out the sunflower seeds from the feeders and burying them in different location in the garden
Regards
Ian
I saw a group of Jackdaws behaving like this among the gull roost last week in a short visit during atrocious weather last week. Other than that I'd never seen this, despite there having been a Jackdaw roost occurring during gull roost counts last winter.
I thought there might have been a bit of camera tom foolery, but on seeing the video I hold me hands up!!
http://fair-isle.blogspot.com/2010/11/waxwings-oct-25th-2010-day-well-always.html
We had a Dunnock earlier this year that used to have 'fights' with my wing mirror. We saw it almost on a daily basis for about a 4 week period.
What a strange thing with your Grey Wagtail.
- Not sure what to suggest really.
I do wonder though as to the cause; - I have seen in Pied Wagtails a tendency from time to time to take exception to reflections in car wing mirrors, and I wonder if the behaviour you note with your bird started with it pecking at the wing mirror(s) with resultant mounting frustration at not being able to see off its imagined rival.
Could it be that a change of strategy has developed from there, with the bird now trying to attack the thing (i.e.vulnerable bits of the car) that it most associates with its "enemy" the reflection?
I wonder if it would do any good, if when the car were parked up, a pair of old gloves were placed one over each of the wing mirrors, then the offending bird might think its rival had been vanquished and cease its attacks?
Cheers,
Mike
My aunt's car is a silver colour and it also attacks her neighbour's car to a lesser extent which is blue, but it leaves my uncle's car alone, which is red.
Other than putting a bird of prey silhouette on the car, which is impractical, or buying a a new car, has anybody out there any ideas of a solution to this problem?
Cheers Karen
Cheers,
Bill.
-- Edited by Bill Myerscough on Friday 5th of November 2010 05:01:08 PM
A friend of my wife witnessed some interesting behaviour by a Blackbird in her garden.It was picking slugs up and rolling them in a nearby pile of seeds, giving the slug a nice coating, before flying off. Looks like the youngsters where getting sesame seed slugs
Does anyone have any figures on max numbers of helpers at a LTT nest?
Long-tailed Tit nests.....now what truly awe-inspiring structures they are!
Keep atlasing!
Bill.
I'm guessing that the bird in question was most likely a male and committed the act so he could have a chance to breed with the female?
Any other theories?
Anthony
As I type this I'm also listening to a song thrush outside the window, who's repertoire includes mimicry of a blackbird alarm call and I think possibly a greenfinch. Near my university accomodation there is one which is a very clear mimic of some sort of car/house alarm, possibly the college fire alarm which is tested weekly!
When I finally located the source of the calls it turned out to be a Jay and I could see its bill opening as the call was made. It just goes to show that recording birds just on call may lead to mistakes!
Cheers,
Bill.
Not unusual especially during the breeding season but light levels can have an effect on them singing, for example street lamps etc.
-- Edited by Phil Owen on Sunday 28th of March 2010 11:04:26 AM
A Robin was singing in my Chadderton back garden at 2.15 am BST (1.15 am old time) this morning. I know that this species sings late into the evening and very early morning but not actually in the middle of the night! Maybe this is normal behaviour? Leaned out of the bedroom window to listen and another bird was singing back at it!
Cheers,
Bill.
Hi Dave, Earthworms are supposedly rich in protein,(well at least according to Ray Mears) many larger birds including Buzzards and Herons activly hunt them out, Foxes and Badgers do so too, I imagine it was taking advantage of easy prey on a wet day.
I regularly see Buzzards on or adjacent to the railway lines, feeding on, or waiting for "rail kills". It is not uncommon to see 20+ birds on a return trip to Chester via Delamere or 15+ on a return trip to Crewe via Alderley Edge.
Over the last 10 years or so , they have become far more common and are now seen around Manchester Airport, Romiley to Strines and on the Hadfield line.
Unfortunately, is is also becoming more common to find Buzzards as "rail kills", but I suppose its all relative because they become food for foxes, other Buzzards etc........
I have witnessed Buzzards chasing and catching Rabbits on the mosses over the years. I have also seen them chase Hares but never catch them. Sometimes Buzzards will sit on a post and watch for small rodents and I have seen them hopping around a field chasing and catching the rodents.
Getting a meal from carrion is a lot easier especially from road kill and I have seen Buzzards in the road feeding on Hedgehogs, Grey squirrels and Rabbits.
Although l've never seen them hunting myself Geoff, l always presumed they preferred live prey to carrion.
Did you not see the article on the Buzzard that took the Phalarope last year ?
cheers geoff
Amazing , Craig but this weekend at Radcliffe recycling centre on Cemetary Rd I heard exactly the same call from a Magpie, I actually thought at the time it might be a call advertising a potential nest sight as it was so unusual.
Cheers Ian
More bizarrely - I also saw my first young bird of the year - a young Moorhen (and I mean young - 10-11 days or so) on the River Sankey in Warrington!!
More info on this plant species at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabbage_tree_(New_Zealand)
I assume this mass flowering might have been as a result of a relatively dry '08-09 winter? I understand that these plants are non-native species and originate from New Zealand I think? Anyway, the flowering spikes from earlier on in the year are now loaded with numerous small white berrries. Have noticed that my local Chadderton Starlings appear to have taken a liking to these small berries and a great cloud of birds descended onto the tree in next doors garden on 11/11 and enthusiastically picked off these berries. Had a look through my Birds of the Western Palearctic interactive to see if this had been reported as a food source before and couldn't see it mentioned. From my limited experience I have noticed that Cordylines don't flower in this country in the vast majority of years, so maybe it is just Starlings taking advantage of this years unusual circumstances? I wonder if Starlings in New Zealand (which were introduced there in the 1800s I understand) feed on this food source in this plants native country?
Bill.
Hi Joey,
Much as many of us might like to think that wildlife doesn't have some of the less savoury behavioural traits that we humans have..... well I'm afraid to say that they do! From my limited experience, of the commoner day to day birds, Black-headed Gulls are probably one of the worst "offenders" when it comes to trying to "mug" other birds and steal their hard earned food! I wonder if this is maybe what might have been happening with your Starlings and gulls? I have seen at Piethorne foraging and diving parties of Goosanders moving across the surfaces of the valleys reservoirs and quite often they are surrounded by a posse of yapping, threatening BH Gulls and I have watched them trying to steal food from these ducks. Also, at the same site I have seen opportunistic BH Gulls attempting the same with Great Crested Grebes (unsuccessfully) and Little Grebes (successfully). I have also watched them in very agile and aggressive aerial pursuit of Common Gulls and Jackdaws at Kingsway Business Park, also attempting to steal food - I would guess usually by getting the threatened bird to drop their food at the sheer thought of any attempted aggression! Whilst walking along my local section of the Rochdale Canal on Saturday 7th November 2009, I could hear the sharp alarm calls of a Kingfisher and about 15 Black-headed Gulls were swooping down low over the canal - I would guess trying to scare it into dropping a small fish that it had probably spent a good while waiting to catch! Can't claim to be an expert on these matters but I'm sure I have read somewhere that some species, such as Lapwing and Golden Plover, feed at certain times of the year at night time... possibly to avoid the close attentions of these unwelcome food pirates!
Best wishes,
Bill.
Has anyone experienced this before?
Being stuck at Penni Flash is enough to drive anyone mad!
-- Edited by Rob Thorpe on Sunday 27th of September 2009 07:32:51 PM
more likely he had the dreaded leg lurgy from pearsons flash
Touché
more likely he had the dreaded leg lurgy from pearsons flash
Being stuck at Penni Flash is enough to drive anyone mad!
-- Edited by Rob Thorpe on Sunday 27th of September 2009 07:32:51 PM
couldn't haveit changed its spinning direction twicethink it thought it was a phalarope