Your day's wildlife

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potsy

Rambler
Location
My Armchair
Love these, this one was particularly brave and stayed right there while I took it's picture, I like the 'ordinary' duck looking over in the background too 🤭

PXL_20250413_114741929~2.jpg
 

blackrat

Senior Member
Quire rare it seems with about 7,000 feral population in the UK - having escaped from a collection. Doesn't appear to be having a negative affect on native birds - Wiki.
 
must be Spring, the rabbits are out during daylight hours! sure to drive Rosie the cat bonkers!
bunny 4-16-25.jpg
 

Rezillo

TwoSheds
Location
Suffolk
We've been feeding two pairs of ducks who turned up in our garden a few weeks ago. Today one brought some guests to our rather decrepit pond.

View attachment 769456

Update: They returned to our garden this morning - all 14 of them. Last night they had problems getting out of the pond as the water was low (mostly ignoring two planks put there for frogs) so I built up some brick steps and this morning they gratifyingly used them straight away. They turned up, jumped in the pond and then swarmed back up the steps. After feeding, they've now cleared off.

It's been several years since our last family appeared and then 12 of 13 reached adulthood. We mustn't get too attached to this one as we are bound to lose some ducklings. We have regular patrols by sparrowhawks in recent years. Our own cat ignores them (a mother duck can be very aggressive and the last one beat him up) but there are others around.

ducklings.jpg
 

blackrat

Senior Member
We've been feeding two pairs of ducks who turned up in our garden a few weeks ago. Today one brought some guests to our rather decrepit pond.

View attachment 769456

What a treasure.
Update: They returned to our garden this morning - all 14 of them. Last night they had problems getting out of the pond as the water was low (mostly ignoring two planks put there for frogs) so I built up some brick steps and this morning they gratifyingly used them straight away. They turned up, jumped in the pond and then swarmed back up the steps. After feeding, they've now cleared off.

It's been several years since our last family appeared and then 12 of 13 reached adulthood. We mustn't get too attached to this one as we are bound to lose some ducklings. We have regular patrols by sparrowhawks in recent years. Our own cat ignores them (a mother duck can be very aggressive and the last one beat him up) but there are others around.

View attachment 769524

It's a hard life for wildlife. Most are being driven off their homes by development.
 
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