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[Misc] The Official NSC Bird Spotting Thread.







BrightonCottager

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2013
2,251
Brighton
Dozens on the golf courses I played there this week.........................also saw a Purple Heron
Nice. Did you play any in Lagos or west of there? I'm not a golfer (my main reason for going is for the surf), but the courses I've seen look very hilly. I saw a purple heron when we were there in April.
 


dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
53,015
Burgess Hill
Nice. Did you play any in Lagos or west of there? I'm not a golfer (my main reason for going is for the surf), but the courses I've seen look very hilly. I saw a purple heron when we were there in April.
We played 4 - Silves, La Pinta, Gramacho and then Vila Sol yesterday as it’s on the way to the airport (we usually stay in Alvor). A few hills but not too dramatic really - just enough to have some lovely elevated tees.
 


dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
53,015
Burgess Hill
Nice. Did you play any in Lagos or west of there? I'm not a golfer (my main reason for going is for the surf), but the courses I've seen look very hilly. I saw a purple heron when we were there in April.
I forgot the tame Cattle Egret that lives on clubhouse chips
IMG_6807.jpeg

IMG_6808.jpeg
 
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Zeberdi

Brighton born & bred
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
5,023
I’m really fortunate to live and work in a rural area which means if I have time to take an hour’s lunch break at work, I get to do some birding. I also get to do it all on private land so no dogs or runners/cyclists, just the whole area to myself and very quiet and peaceful. Fish are spawning so no fisherman on the lakes today either.

IMG_1891.jpeg

IMG_1897.jpeg

IMG_1896.jpeg


My lunchtime walk today included:

Kestrel
Common Buzzard
Reed Bunting
Cuckoo
Blue Tit
Great Tit
Marsh Tit
Lesser Whitethroat
Common WhiteThroat
Black-tailed Godwit
Lesser Black Backed Gull
Mute swan
Mallard
Sedge warbler
Wood pigeon
Jackdaw
Carrion Crow
Chiffchaff
Teal
Tufted Duck
Great crested Grebe
Cettis warbler
Moorhen
Wren
Reed Warbler
Stock Dove
Shelduck
Blackbird
Robin
Starling
Coot
Greylag goose
Canada Goose
Egyptian Goose
Oyster Catcher
Jay
Long-tailed Tit
Skylark
Pheasant
Swift
Robin
Magpie
Song Thrush
Dunnock
Nuthatch
Pied Wagtail
Collared Dove
 




Zeberdi

Brighton born & bred
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
5,023
It has been a good day for birding so far today, totally as a by-product of other things.
First the dog walk and woodpeckers. I then had to walk home across fields after dropping my car off for a service...
Nice selection but I’m very surprised that you saw a Siskin which would be a very interesting record - they are Winter Visitors to most of UK and back on their breeding grounds by now - there is a breeding population in UK but in the far north of Scotland.

Edit - should clarify there are predominantly Scotland/Wales and parts of Northern England in breeding season - sparser distribution and patchy records throughout UK in breeding season but largely confined to conifer plantations.
 
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MJsGhost

Oooh Matron, I'm an
NSC Patron
Jun 26, 2009
4,660
East
Nice selection but I’m very surprised that you saw a Siskin which would be a very interesting record - they are Winter Visitors to most of UK and back on their breeding grounds by now - there is a breeding population in UK but in the far north of Scotland.
I can't claim to have seen/verified the siskin, which was picked up by Merlin. Not quite as whacky as the nightjar it suggested the other day, which was actually a lawnmower in the distance 😃
 


Boroseagull

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2003
2,079
Alhaurin de la Torre
I can't claim to have seen/verified the siskin, which was picked up by Merlin. Not quite as whacky as the nightjar it suggested the other day, which was actually a lawnmower in the distance 😃
You do need to treat Merlin with a little caution even though it's a good app. Why not add BirdNET app too? Here you actually record the bird song. Then you send it to the BirdNET servers in Germany who will analyze your recordings. Generally it is more accurate.
 




BrightonCottager

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2013
2,251
Brighton
Dozens on the golf courses I played there this week.........................also saw a Purple Heron
Nice. Did you play any in Lagos or west of there? I'm not a golfer (my main reason for going is for the surf), but the courses I've seen look very hilly. I saw a purple heron when we were there in April
I’m really fortunate to live and work in a rural area which means if I have time to take an hour’s lunch break at work, I get to do some birding. I also get to do it all on private land so no dogs or runners/cyclists, just the whole area to myself and very quiet and peaceful. Fish are spawning so no fisherman on the lakes today either.

View attachment 182475
View attachment 182476
View attachment 182477

My lunchtime walk today included:

Kestrel
Common Buzzard
Reed Bunting
Cuckoo
Blue Tit
Great Tit
Marsh Tit
Lesser Whitethroat
Common WhiteThroat
Black-tailed Godwit
Lesser Black Backed Gull
Mute swan
Mallard
Sedge warbler
Wood pigeon
Jackdaw
Carrion Crow
Chiffchaff
Teal
Tufted Duck
Great crested Grebe
Cettis warbler
Moorhen
Wren
Reed Warbler
Stock Dove
Shelduck
Blackbird
Robin
Starling
Coot
Greylag goose
Canada Goose
Egyptian Goose
Oyster Catcher
Jay
Long-tailed Tit
Skylark
Pheasant
Swift
Robin
Magpie
Song Thrush
Dunnock
Nuthatch
Pied Wagtail
Collared Dove
That's an outrageous list for a lunchtime. I heard (but didn't see) some Blackcaps up at Hollingbury Hill Fort on Wednesday- one of my favourite birdsong. I use Birdnet to id them.
 


Zeberdi

Brighton born & bred
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
5,023
That's an outrageous list for a lunchtime. I heard (but didn't see) some Blackcaps up at Hollingbury Hill Fort on Wednesday- one of my favourite birdsong. I use Birdnet to id them.
That’s a really good birding spot - I found a male Red-Backed Shrike up there one summer. Also good for Nightingale and both species of Whitethroat

I love Blackcaps singing too - woke up to one in the garden a few weeks ago.🙂
 


MJsGhost

Oooh Matron, I'm an
NSC Patron
Jun 26, 2009
4,660
East
There's a lot of GSW near me. In fact, one widened the opening on our bird box and cleaned out a brood of blue tit chicks a few years ago. I have since put a metal ring over the aperture, but somehow the tits know and haven't been back.

There's a telegraph pole about 5m from our bedroom window and we are often woken by the sound of a woodpecker tapping away at metal. I used to think it was just a really stupid woodpecker, but apparently they are males showing off with the sound it makes rather than looking for food.

They are too smart to go into the nest when they can see me, but I could hear the chicks, so waited by this tree with the obvious nest holes to get a shot of sorts (and now I'll be late for work :)):

View attachment 182416
 








Zeberdi

Brighton born & bred
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
5,023
Sometimes people forget to consider how wars effect the environment- Ukraine is a particularly important country for biodiversity holding some of the best habitat in Europe providing home to some of our rarest species; especially around the Pripyat delta system (and around Chernobyl), Danube Delta and the Dnipro River which runs from Kyiv all the way to the Black Sea and the mountainous and wetland nature reserves bordering Belarus (which holds 70% of the world’s population of Aquatic warbler).

The toll on European wildlife in a what is a massive and largely rural Country is incalculable - the Danube and Dnipro are also internationally important migration routes that many bird species rely on for staging (food and water stops en route). Tracking has now shown Greater Spotted Eagles have been pushed away from their migration routes by the war - that will also likely be the case for other species too with negative effects. The impact from artillery and troop movement through wetland and woodland habitats goes without saying but the Birdlife article below sheds some light on just how extensive the impacts are likely to be:


Birdlife International has pulled together some assessments of the impacts based on what we already know about wildlife in the area and its use of habitat.



Sorry to go off piste but I hope this will be if interest to some of you.
 




maresfield seagull

Well-known member
May 23, 2006
2,262
I’m really fortunate to live and work in a rural area which means if I have time to take an hour’s lunch break at work, I get to do some birding. I also get to do it all on private land so no dogs or runners/cyclists, just the whole area to myself and very quiet and peaceful. Fish are spawning so no fisherman on the lakes today either.

View attachment 182475
View attachment 182476
View attachment 182477

My lunchtime walk today included:

Kestrel
Common Buzzard
Reed Bunting
Cuckoo
Blue Tit
Great Tit
Marsh Tit
Lesser Whitethroat
Common WhiteThroat
Black-tailed Godwit
Lesser Black Backed Gull
Mute swan
Mallard
Sedge warbler
Wood pigeon
Jackdaw
Carrion Crow
Chiffchaff
Teal
Tufted Duck
Great crested Grebe
Cettis warbler
Moorhen
Wren
Reed Warbler
Stock Dove
Shelduck
Blackbird
Robin
Starling
Coot
Greylag goose
Canada Goose
Egyptian Goose
Oyster Catcher
Jay
Long-tailed Tit
Skylark
Pheasant
Swift
Robin
Magpie
Song Thrush
Dunnock
Nuthatch
Pied Wagtail
Collared Dove
You saw all of these in a lunchtime stroll ?
or perhaps identified by song ?
 


One Love

Well-known member
Aug 22, 2011
4,407
Brighton
I’m really fortunate to live and work in a rural area which means if I have time to take an hour’s lunch break at work, I get to do some birding. I also get to do it all on private land so no dogs or runners/cyclists, just the whole area to myself and very quiet and peaceful. Fish are spawning so no fisherman on the lakes today either.

View attachment 182475
View attachment 182476
View attachment 182477

My lunchtime walk today included:

Kestrel
Common Buzzard
Reed Bunting
Cuckoo
Blue Tit
Great Tit
Marsh Tit
Lesser Whitethroat
Common WhiteThroat
Black-tailed Godwit
Lesser Black Backed Gull
Mute swan
Mallard
Sedge warbler
Wood pigeon
Jackdaw
Carrion Crow
Chiffchaff
Teal
Tufted Duck
Great crested Grebe
Cettis warbler
Moorhen
Wren
Reed Warbler
Stock Dove
Shelduck
Blackbird
Robin
Starling
Coot
Greylag goose
Canada Goose
Egyptian Goose
Oyster Catcher
Jay
Long-tailed Tit
Skylark
Pheasant
Swift
Robin
Magpie
Song Thrush
Dunnock
Nuthatch
Pied Wagtail
Collared Dove
That is impressive.

Where was this, if I may ask?
 


Zeberdi

Brighton born & bred
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
5,023


Eeyore

Colonel Hee-Haw of Queen's Park
NSC Patron
Apr 5, 2014
24,037
An Indigo Bunting was spotted in the North-East recently. A friend of mine has a picture.

I feel sorry for the poor thing. Condemned to a life in a colder climate and never having nookie. No wonder it looks looked so miserable.

Most likely carried across the pond in poor weather conditions and lost its co-ordination. Off to Florida for a sex tour and ends up wandering aimlessly around Sunderland.
 




Zeberdi

Brighton born & bred
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
5,023
An Indigo Bunting was spotted in the North-East recently. A friend of mine has a picture.

I feel sorry for the poor thing. Condemned to a life in a colder climate and never having nookie. No wonder it looks looked so miserable.

Most likely carried across the pond in poor weather conditions and lost its co-ordination. Off to Florida for a sex tour and ends up wandering aimlessly around Sunderland.
Beautiful colour bird - It is possibly an escape (from captivity ) so would have been condemned to a life in a cage - there was one in Holland too this week.

Unfortunately hundreds of wild birds overshoot migration or get blown off course by weather or even piggy bag legitimate migrating species by ‘accident’ - a few might get absorbed by the local gene pool, most succumb to predators (because they look ‘different’ ) or as you say, eventually die from hunger or exhaustion. It’s the one aspect of birding I always felt quite sad about and never enjoyed that aspect of twitching despite the excitement of seeing a rare bird.
 


Eeyore

Colonel Hee-Haw of Queen's Park
NSC Patron
Apr 5, 2014
24,037
Beautiful colour bird - It is possibly an escape (from captivity ) so would have been condemned to a life in a cage - there was one in Holland too this week.

Unfortunately hundreds of wild birds overshoot migration or get blown off course by weather or even piggy bag legitimate migrating species by ‘accident’ - a few might get absorbed by the local gene pool, most succumb to predators (because they look ‘different’ ) or as you say, eventually die from hunger or exhaustion. It’s the one aspect of birding I always felt quite sad about and never enjoyed that aspect of twitching despite the excitement of seeing a rare bird.
The plumage of the bird suggests that it is very young. So it may well be wild. What I didn't know was that it navigates by the stars. Poor thing. Feel really sorry for it.
 


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