feeding the birds

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ScotiaLass

Guru
Location
Middle Earth
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A few of these little things were found in the local park. They were very thin and exhausted but are now on the mend!
 

nickyboy

Norven Mankey
View attachment 115079

A few of these little things were found in the local park. They were very thin and exhausted but are now on the mend!

They're Little Auks. They live in the high Arctic but head south in the winter. They are the classic winter storm-blown waif. They have a long history of turning up miles inland in fields, parks, gardens etc. Usually in poor condition
 
OP
OP
Levo-Lon

Levo-Lon

Guru
Ive never seen one @twentysix by twentyfive ..
id have thought Linnet..or something if i saw one.
thers a very nice nature reserve near me..old brick yard land.
as kids 40 yr ago there were so many species that were around then but i dont see now sadly..
yellowhammers, gold crests, warblers linnets..etc shame..
i guess they are still about but id have to go Full Metal Twitcher to see them..
 

Dave7

Legendary Member
Location
Cheshire
Lordy, where do I begin?
I once bagged a wayward shag on Miss Goodbody's trimmed bush.
I am surprise you got a shag in the country. What sort of bush was it ? and what colour was it? what shape was it rimmed to?
 

Glow worm

Legendary Member
Location
Near Newmarket
The number of birds in our garden has plummeted since a sparrowhawk moved in. :sad:

Shaun

I love seeing the sparrohawk here. I tend to view it as a good sign, in that there must be a healthy enough supply of small birds to support such a top level predator. I'd be more worried about bird populations if I didn't see the sparrowhawk- if that kind of makes sense!

I should think that it's cats having much more impact. They take millions of birds a year in the UK.
 
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