Now trying to identify a bird that's taken to visiting - about the size of a Great tit but with a big white chest and black head.
Coal tit?
First swallow earlier, loads of skylarks and a selection of small birds of prey. Of more interest, last weekend I was counting adders in the Isle of Arran:-
I saw some goats gambolling on the other side of cheddar gorge - 2 adults and 3 kids constantly bleating to each other as they climbed the cliff. I took a picture but my phone doesn’t seem to as good as my eyes so I can’t even make them out. On the drive back I saw a buzzard just sitting on top of a lamp post by the side of the M5 staring into some trees. Less effort than soaring around looking for prey I suppose
A naughty animal has burrowed a hole in our lawn. Maybe a worm on steroids. No, it'll be a bee. Not as impressive as buzzards or whatever but we'd be stuffed without them so I've installed a 24 hour security cordon round it.
"My God, Ponsonby, I'm two-thirds of the way to the grave and what have I done?" - RIP
"At least you got some stories" - James Acaster
"A little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men" - WW
Quite topical for you Reg having a Mining Bee in the garden
We go out into the hills to lose ourselves, not to get lost. You are only lost if you need to be somewhere else and if you really need to be somewhere else then you're probably in the wrong place to begin with.
We have a Greater Spotted Woodpecker nesting in a hole in one of our oaks. There's a regular Lesser Spotted visitor to our garden but never seen a Greater Spotted until yesterday. Now trying to work out how to get a motion controlled camera 40 feet up in the air....
Bearlegged wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 9:39 am
Another "badger on the way home from the pub" incident in Sheffield this week.
Ah, you have to be of a certain age/disposition
Up in Deeside (Aberdeenshire). Today's haul: woodpecker (great spotted), numerous deer inc. two big stags, mountain hare, a variety of unfamiliar birds which I can't name since I've lost my bird guide
Counting adders on the isle of Arran. Could almost be a joke!
On the off chance it isn't how many did you count /add?
No really, we were 19 in total in 4 transects in Glen Rosa - bit of an adder top spot and the NTS are doing the woodland re-generation thing (mainly by excluding deer) so they are keen to see how the adder population responds. Plus a local reptile expert is going to use our year on year data to model overall impact of climate on adder populations
Currently waiting on the tadpoles to start growing legs, so we can give them some supplement food. Only just learned they become very carnivorous at that stage...luckily the pond is chock full of Daphnia that need some predation...
Got up early this morning to watch a black grouse lek on one of our sites in the borders. Only ever seen them fleetingly before, so nice to watch them for a couple of hours while the sun came up.
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No, tis a Pied Flycatcher. We have Spotted Flycatchers but I'd not seen one of these before.
Haven’t seen a pied flycatcher in years, decades, even. There’s a good population at Ynys Hir RSPB reserve by Furnace, where I once did some volunteer work.
Also heard my first cuckoo last night, so they’ve made it to South Scotland a couple of days after Wales. They were always a feature of the Highland Trail, so I’d say they’re very early this year.
Just heard my first cuckoo as well. Thought I heard one last week but didn’t quite catch it over closer noise so couldn’t be sure.
Apparently they are quite territorial and return to the same location each year so quite possible that those in the north of Scotland can turn up before birds further south. Unlike say swallows that follow the emerging insects as they head north.
I remember being out on Skye one year and seeing a meadow pipit or skylark (couldn’t be sure as the action was too fast) harrying a cuckoo to keep it away from its nest.
Better weight than wisdom, a traveller cannot carry
I'd noted the patter of little feet (and a smattering of droppings) in the kitchen of late, so pulled out the humane trap but decided not to bait it last night as I wouldn't have time to deal with a distressed mouse this morning. In any case it's been 100% unsuccessful so I was probably going to buy a few 'little nippers'.
Anyway I came down this morning to discover this fella:
Stupid thing had gone into the trap, even though there was nowt in it. I left food and water for him (or her) and I now have a pet.
*sigh* if I put it out in the garden it will come back in and if I put it out away from the house it will probably die in any case, albeit by providing a bird of prey with a tasty snack.
What to do....
Apparently exciting news (I need to read up on this properly), the new Osprey nest in Talybont, which has had a male occupying it patiently waiting for a female, has had a female join him this week. The lady who told me, with great excitement, said that he's been trying to mate with her but not much success at that time, on account of him being young and inexperienced and it being dry windy...
But if they do, it'll be the first time Ospreys are breeding in South Wales for over two hundred years?
Something like that, anyone know any more, or better?