Nice radio 3 series last week called The Sounds of Wild Poland...now on BBC sounds. I particularly liked episode 2 with a duetting Cuckoo and Black Woodpecker.
Great programme on world Service started last Wednesday and for the next 4 weeks at 9am called 'It's a Bird's world' presented by Mya Rose-Craig and having a different environmental theme each week.
BBC Breakfast this morning (23/10/21). "in other news" a report with photo of a sighting of a Shelley's Eagle Owlin Ghana.....a mere 120 years after the last one, it seems.
Finally got around to watching this year's Springwatch on catch up. There is an item regarding Black - headed Gulls about 20 minutes into the first episode. BBC dipped on a pair of Adult Mediterranean Gull @ 23:44. minutes.
In this case the wrong birds! Last week there was a piece on Antiques Roadshow about the Peregrines nesting on site - cue shot of a Common Buzzard, then followed by a Peregrine. It was made clear that the team failed to see the birds on the day, so this was presumably stock footage. Today in a Travel Show segment on the landscape-scale rewilding in the Cairngorms a pair of Griffon Vultures flew through a report on the Loch Garten Ospreys. To paraphrase an old Rice/Lloyd-Webber song "Any bird will do"!
Some nice footage of a Regent Honeycreeper on BBC Breakfast. Unfortunately, featured because there are now so few (c300) that they very rarely hear each other call and are starting to imitate other species. Birds in captivity (hopefully a breeding programme) are being played their calls to refresh their memory. Footage at start of programme at 6:13 on Iplayer.
Kit Jewitt (@YOLOBirder on Twitter) has launched a podcast, Golden Grenades, in which birders talk about their five favourite species. David Lindo is on the first episode, available online now
Not on the radio exactly, but hopefully considered to be appropriate to this thread.
Today (Tuesday 21st April) at 7PM [Quote]Alan Davies is with Ruth Miller. We are all set for our live question and answer session on Glaslyn Osprey Group Facebook page tomorrow 7pm on Tuesday 21 April. We are looking for questions from you the lovely folks of Facebook. You can join us on the night which would be brilliant or ask a question here in the comment section and we can answer it on air. No holds barred just fire away with those questions you have always wanted to ask! Any bird/birding related topics but we are happy to have a go at anything you throw at us!!
also, my friend David Lindo (The Urban Birder) is doing some webinars over Zoom with various interesting personalities from the Birding and Wildlife world, while he is holed up in Extremadura. Already he has spoken with Iolo Williams (Friday) and Dawn Balmer of the BTO yesterday. More are lined up as follows:
Tuesday 21st April: Darren Woodhead (Wildlife Artist) Wed 22nd April: Chris Watson (David Attenborough's soundman) Thurs 23rd April:Kenn Kaufman (american Birder) Fri 24th April: Jason Ward (American Birder) https://theurbanbirderworld.com/live-webinars/
more are planned for the following weeks.
-- Edited by Charles Farrell on Tuesday 21st of April 2020 11:35:49 AM
-- Edited by Charles Farrell on Tuesday 21st of April 2020 11:36:10 AM
-- Edited by Charles Farrell on Tuesday 21st of April 2020 11:40:42 AM
On BBC Inside Science today they had a report about a study into Great Tits having different personalities. Think it's about 14 minutes in (after the bit about violins!):
The piece on using NASA tech to count Northern Royal Albatrosses mentioned by Rob was on BBC Breakfast and 6 p.m. news as well, so will be available on Iplayer for 24 hrs. Worryingly actual numbers are lower than estimated. At least it gives the conservationists a more accurate picture of the problem
This Sunday 7th May BBC Radio 4 will be broadcasting a dawn chorus programme from 12:30am until 7:00 am, presumably including live broadcasts. It will be available on iPlayer later.
"One of the great wonders of the natural world is in deep trouble.
Millions of shorebirds fly from Australia and Southeast Asia to the Arctic every year. They follow the planets most gruelling migratory route the East Asian Australasian Flyway.
Join Ann Jones as she watches wading birds such as curlews, godwits and sandpipers prepare for their epic journey. They fatten up on clams to the point of obesity, to fuel the flight. They grow bigger hearts and flight muscles. Just before departure, they shrink their digestive organs to become the most efficient flying machines for their first 7 day non-stop flight.
The birds lives are full of danger and the most serious threats are man-made. The flyway is in peril with many species plummeting towards extinction. As youll hear, its enough to make a grown man cry."
BBC Radio 4's 'Claire in the Community' has 'The Sparrowhawk Estate' - a rundown hellhole of crime doubtless inspired by the real life Blackbird Leys estate on the non-dreaming spires side of Oxford.
Actually on Twitter but still media... The BTO just tweeted #springwatch a pic of their 'oldest Swift' taken by none other than Dennis Atherton. Nice pic Dennis
Dawn chorus. Still available on iPlayer. To quote the blurb"Uninterrupted and unspoiled by voiceover or music, the birdsong of sunrise in all its glory. Three different habitats, Britain's woodland, heathland and parkland, burst into song"
Robert Snell spotted a couple of Mediterranean Gulls by the treatment plant and has asked Eddie Grundy not to mention it to Jim, Robert's birding rival. Eddie, of course, couldn't give a monkey's; the only birds he has any interest in are the turkeys he rears to sell at Christmas.
There's no shame in being an Archers listener Jamie, and therapy is available these days. Anyway, Sabrina aught to be grateful to have such a good garden tick as Grey Wagtail.
Jim Lloyde - there is a bit of story line developing where they are both year-listing and becoming increasingly competitive. Jim was in trouble last week for peeping into Sabrinas garden to catch a glimpse of a Grey Wagtail...
I'd rather not answer any questions on how I know that. Cheers all
The Inside Science program on R4 this afto' had an interesting feature on the hunting tactics of Northern Goshawks. Here's a link to BBC iPlayer Radio.. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05126zf
Just listened to a really good programme on playback that was on BBC Radio 4 this morning at 06.35 called The Living World. This edition was about Nightjars - very well put together, could almost feel the mosquitoes biting
As Chris Harper mentioned previously, yesterday (05/05/13) was 'International Dawn Chorus Day' and here's the link to the BBC R4 'The Living World' programme about it:
Also on Radio4, Sun am at 6.35 new series of Living World. Last Sun about Golden Pheasants in Breckland, next about Dawn Chorus Day. Not that I'm awake then. The benefits of i-player!
Peter Baron, a well-known local Birder, educator and recorder for Elton in Bury, is to be interviewed on BBC Radio 4's iPM programme at 5:30pm tomorrow (Saturday 13th April). Peter has an incredible knowledge of birds and he is very entertaining with it, so it should be a good listen. I'll try to download or record the programme and I'll make it available through my websites if I'm successful. It may also be available on iPlayer for a while too.
Beginning on May 6th, Radio 4 will be starting a new series of ninety second broadcasts featuring new recordings of British birds, every weekday morning at 05:58, running for a year. Each 'episode' will feature a different species.
I believe it's being called 'Tweet of the Day' - argghh!
Details here : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-22277084
Beginning on May 6th, Radio 4 will be starting a new series of ninety second broadcasts featuring new recordings of British birds, every weekday morning at 05:58, running for a year. Each 'episode' will feature a different species.
Peter Baron, a well-known local Birder, educator and recorder for Elton in Bury, is to be interviewed on BBC Radio 4's iPM programme at 5:30pm tomorrow (Saturday 13th April). Peter has an incredible knowledge of birds and he is very entertaining with it, so it should be a good listen. I'll try to download or record the programme and I'll make it available through my websites if I'm successful. It may also be available on iPlayer for a while too.
Peter Baron, a well-known local Birder, educator and recorder for Elton in Bury, is to be interviewed on BBC Radio 4's iPM programme at 5:30pm tomorrow (Saturday 13th April). Peter has an incredible knowledge of birds and he is very entertaining with it, so it should be a good listen. I'll try to download or record the programme and I'll make it available through my websites if I'm successful. It may also be available on iPlayer for a while too.
Very good it was too!! I just wish there were still 700 Golden Plover around GM!!
Peter Baron, a well-known local Birder, educator and recorder for Elton in Bury, is to be interviewed on BBC Radio 4's iPM programme at 5:30pm tomorrow (Saturday 13th April). Peter has an incredible knowledge of birds and he is very entertaining with it, so it should be a good listen. I'll try to download or record the programme and I'll make it available through my websites if I'm successful. It may also be available on iPlayer for a while too.
'Saving Species' on Radio 4 today is worth catching on iPlayer for an interesting piece on the slightly depressing, but ongoing search for Slender-Billed Curlew
-- Edited by dave broome on Tuesday 12th of February 2013 10:09:14 PM
On iplayer, 100 years of wildlife film making, i enjoyed it, good to see the first wildlife film made in 1907, lots of footage of birds, some classics by Attenborough and some stuff i hadent seen before, two hours long all host by the one and only Bill Oddie
Thanks to the Manx Birder for putting me on to a BBC Radio 4 programme " The Alien Birds Have Landed". Just a 15 minute broadcast at 1.45pm each day this week discusses "none" British species. Today was on about Little Owls and Eagle Owls, very interesting, listen on BBC iPlayer.
Also worth listening to on Radio 4 iPlayer (1st broadcast this Tuesday) is the 'Nature' programme 'Bird Wars On Malta'. As you might expect, it's about the wonderful tradition amongst certain Maltese 'hunters' of blasting migrating birds out of the sky with shotguns. The programme also focuses on a German birding group who are trying to keep an eye on the illegal shooters. It's worth a listen.
Worth listening to Open Country on Radio 4 yesterday at 3pm. The 'Urban Birder' David Lindow and others put the case for wildlife watching in cities. Interesting listen.
Have to say, earthflight was a bit of a mixed bag. I personally didn't mind the simplistic narration, but the camerawork was brilliant in places (like with the martins) as the birds just came into focus then out again. In other places like with the polar bears it was like they were miles away shooting through heat haze! Still really good stuff though!
Some top filming again this time showing cranes, white stork, barnacle geese, brent geese, swallows and others, superb behaviour showing arctic tern, skuas and geese coming together trying to ward of a bear, slow motion captures of swallows and sand martings catching mayflys, feathers, gannets diving, ospreys fishing, peregrine chasing starlings, a great series,
__________________
Did you see it? It was small and brown and flew that way.........................