BBC Breakfast's weather report came from the London Wetlands Centre this morning. Reports of Bittern and Waxwing being present as well as a couple of Swallows still hanging about this week.
Just seen 'Richard Hammond's miracles of nature' on the Iplayer. There's a nice episode on how Great Spotted Woodpeckers protect their brains from the impact of their beak on the wood (a few nice slow motion shots of it hammering away). Funnily enough, at 34 minutes, we see a short clip of what I can only conclude to be a White-Backed Woodpecker !! (Which I expect is quite a rare bird to be found in the forest of Dean) You only see its head attacking a trunk, but after going through 'Collin's bird guide' and the 'Advanced bird ID guide', I can't see how it could be anything else (unless its an aberrant juvenile Great Spotted Woodpecker of some obscure sub-species). I spent 5 minutes trying to pause the clip exactly so I could properly see the head! Anyway, I hope I'm right, otherwise I think I'll have to go over all the other woodpecker's I've seen recently to check if I identified them correctly...
__________________
Target birds: Golden Plover, Little Owl, Common Crossbill.
Catching up on Iplayer today I also clocked The Sound of Music, Terms of Endearment and The Last Emperor. Maybe if he wasn't spending as much time doing this he wouldn't have translocated Uganda into the middle of the Congo in the piece on Swifts!
The Peregrine diet film was shown. Corncrakes as a prey item was the most mindblowing for me!! I think it was in Exeter. Daftest comment was when they found Knot as a prey item in Derbyshire, Mike Dilger said "I bet no Derbyshire birders have seen a live Knot". I presume he meant in Derbyshire - because I am sure many Derbyshire birders visit the coast!! Even if he meant Derbyshire then the big reservoirs get passage Knot every year (classified in the Derbyshire list as scarce - c.10 birds annually)!!
I,ll just pop this in Radio 4 The Alien Birds Have Landed, listen on catch up etc,thought provoking and best listened to in one session whilst in the garage and the wife,s managing the grandkidsranges from Ruddy to Eagle Owl,enjoy
This thread has gone way off topic now everyone and has currently nothing to do with birds of television what so ever I'm afraid. Let's get it back on track.
Take a look at the link to this programme from Norway, its all about the White Tailed Eagle. Stunning stuff, am slowly working my way through the previous episodes, they certainly know how to make a nature programme, & you don't really need a commentary, the filming speaks for itself.
.... and Radio. On Radio 4 this morning, the 'Nature' programme entitled 'Drumming Down' was about the serious decline in Lesser Spotted Woodpecker numbers. Interesting, informative stuff. I also learned from this programme that a Starling will boss a Great Spotted Woodpecker in a nest hole dispute; that surprised me, and is well worth knowing On BBC Radio 4 iPlayer.
Excellent footage of the cranes being attacked by the eagles and peregrines too. You have to wonder if lone birds usually associated on flocks(such as the lone pink footed goose seen at Rumworth a few days ago) have had similar experiences i.e. attacked by peregrines and forced to land and are waiting for the next geese skein to come over so it can resume it's journey. I have heard reports of peregrines taking geese before so it wouldn't be too far fecthed an explanation would it?
Hi Joey,
That's an interesting and thought-provoking observation. I personally have seen Peregrines attacking skeins of Pink-feet in GM on two occasions. Firstly, in conjunction with another observer we watched as one attacked a skein over the Rochdale/Calderdale Moors at Light Hazzles on 31/12/03. This sighting is documented in the County Report of that year. I have also observed this once over the Piethorne Valley (again Rochdale moorland) but I can't quickly lay my hands on the date. In my opinion, it is always worth having a second look at skeins that seem to become suddenly and seriously fragmented and disorganised. I guess that there wouldn't be much "logic" in Peregrines bringing down geese over our more heavily built up areas but over quieter moorland areas it might make more "sense", where they could then feed on any kill undisturbed?
This is one of those instances where it would be of interest to try to look at trends. Has the frequency of birds seen "down" increased as the Peregrine population has recovered somewhat?
Excellent footage of the cranes being attacked by the eagles and peregrines too. You have to wonder if lone birds usually associated on flocks(such as the lone pink footed goose seen at Rumworth a few days ago) have had similar experiences i.e. attacked by peregrines and forced to land and are waiting for the next geese skein to come over so it can resume it's journey. I have heard reports of peregrines taking geese before so it wouldn't be too far fecthed an explanation would it?
Probably on a TV (Sky) some time soon will be 'The Big Year' starring Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson about 3 'birders' attempting the US year list world record. Crammed with loads of birds and is actually an entertaining 90 minutes, even the wife enjoyed it.
I notice in the narration that many of the locations are not named.
The scenes of the very high concentrations of Scarlet Ibises, Egrets, Jabirus, Wood Storks, Jacanas, Capibaras, etc. to which you refer, is an unbelievable spectacle and would be shot in the llanos of Venezuela; it looked exactly like Hato Cedral, (a working ranch which floods seasonally), which caters for birding visitors.
__________________
Challenges are inevitable, but failure is optional.
Agreed - I don't think the Harpy Eagle was even filmed in the same country as the Parrot lick ! (I recently went to Napo in Ecuador which is where I think the lick was, and they hadn't had Harpy Eagle there for a few years )
Amazing to see the Condors all together - we were lucky to see 2
Why oh why do producers of nature programmes have to make everything into a dramatic storyline? The photography was awesome enough. Harpy Eagle taking a baby spider monkey was simply breathtaking. But the stupid narrative about the parrots having to find another salt lick fast or suffer the consequences of a poorly tummy was simply rubbish. Why can't nature programmes just deliver facts anymore? The fact is that they take on the clay to settle their stomachs. There is simply no point in dramatising it. Especially when it's David Tennant's smug face the words are drivveling out of.
Anyway, great photography, but if you're going to watch it, I suggest watching it on mute.
There was one scene of a wetland somewhere near Rio I think where the whole frame of every shot was crammed with all sorts of waders, herons, storks and raptors (including some stunning Ruby Ibises). I honestly think that if there is such a thing as heaven, that's what it will be like.
Never watched it and do not intend to start now, but the Radio times write up..
A RARE BIRD. A row between birdwatchers over the reported sighting of an African species in Midsomer-in-the-Marsh turns nasty when the president of their society is found dead. Patrick Morgan apparently met his end while hoping to sight the rare bird....
Now thats a shame I hope he saw it before he died.
Re: Earthflight. Great photography, that's all that's going for it! Awful narration from David Tennant coupled with a terrible musical score and quite probably 15 minutes to long. Undoubted highlight were the flying rays, amazing.
Nice little programme called Earthflight about bird migration, behaviour and other stuff on BBC 1 at 8.00pm on Thursdays for six episodes. Lots of views from the birds' point of view using birdcams as well as close ups of birds in flight (probably using trained birds following a microlight).
Series started last Thursday (29 Dec) - I missed it live so I watched it on iPlayer where it can still be seen. This was about North America with eagles, snow geese and brown pelicans being featured as they crossed the US. The next programme is about Africa.
I managed to catch half of the 40 year twitch whilst working so I missed quite a bit,nice informed content and humerous (for radio 4) although it,s a nightmare end senario.
Also available on Radio 4 Saving species,well worth a listen this weeks edition included the BTO cuckoo tracking project,get it on catch up or podcast etc,i,ll have to. the valve on my radiogram went halfway through.