Wednesday, 15 April 2020

Lockdown Birding

Lockdown birding is the new normal at the moment especially with it looking like our lockdown is going to be extended. The Patchwork Challenge has been put on hold whilst it's on too. Though as a lister I have still been listing on Bubo who have created a special lockdown option for the duration. 

Birding is now garden birding and what I spot during the allowed daily walk, (which if you're not in the UK is to be done locally without travelling elsewhere to do it and then only with other members of your household). I must admit I haven't walked every day as the weather has been good and i've been able to spend a fair bit of time in the garden. I usually go out early when I do so there's hardly anyone about and plenty of space to stay away from the few folks that are around. My route is around the small park behind our house, the park is mostly a football pitch, a few small grassy areas and a play park (which is closed) surround by trees and shrubs. Then home via a few quiet back streets. I've realised how much my back (still not in the greatest of shape since the op) and legs relied on my walk to work every day, they are feeling the effects from lack of use! Not the biggest issue though in the grand scheme of things at the moment. 





At the end of March I noticed the tree above our shed had a reddish look to the needles and a couple of days later it started to send clouds of seeds into the air if a strong breeze blew or mostly from birds landing on the branches. The haze in the first picture is a well spread cloud and in the second you can see it easily. 



I've been able to set up my 'office' in the dining room by the patio doors so working from home is not so bad. The first day of working from home I had a Chiffchaff calling softly from the back of the garden. It's good to see the bird behaviour at this time of year, lots of mating and courting going on in the gardens with the Starling, Sparrows, Doves, Pigeons and a pair of Robins, with the male feeding the female. Also spotted a Magpie eating a Sparrow on one of our walks - first time i've seen that! My first Ladybird this year was out in the sun.



Our gutter Starling is back, building a nest and then calling and flapping his wings madly, it looks like it worked as he had a mate after about three days, it's difficult to tell but I think she stuck around and is possibly sat on eggs as I type. Sparrows, Blue Tits, Magpies and Woodpigeons are all plucking at grass, plants and twigs for nesting materials. Unfortunately our Blackcaps have disappeared, the male first and I last saw the female on the 1st April, hopefully we'll get them more regularly over winter now?



Not doing that great with the nest building - rather large ambitions!



Magpie breaking branches off the Silver Birch


The Sparrows are spending a lot of time picking at the plants in the garden


Female Blackcap


Overhead i've added Red Kite, Heron, Buzzard, Lesser black-backed Gulls (they were mobbing a Buzzard!) some of which are year patch ticks and also Cormorant, a first from the house. In the park possibly my last Redwing of the year in the first week of April, Song and Mistle Thrushes, singing Chiffchaff, Chaffinch, nesting Magpies and Woodpigeons. Really there's quite a lot going on! 

Mistle Thrush


Redwing


Red Kite


The bird bath is getting some good use at the moment, i'm having to top up a couple of times a day sometimes. 
Starling


House Sparrow






Blackbird


We tried a different walk on Easter Monday towards an industrial estate at the top end of the street, a ten minute walk from home (but somewhere I never go and technically isn't included in my patchwork challenge patch), my husband works here (he's classed as a key worker so is still working himself) and has been seeing singing Skylarks and hovering Kestrels over waste land on the estate, so whilst even the essential businesses were closed and it was deserted we had a wander around. Of course not a peep from any Skylark and the only birds we saw were Woodpigeons and Goldfinch, no doubt they'll be singing again though when he's back in work later this week!! At least he's been able to share what they are with the people he works with, they look out for them every morning now. 

The odd evening has been nice enough to be able to sit out at dusk and i've watched a Bat over the garden and three Hedgehogs snuffling around on a regular basis. 

The warm weather has brought out a few butterflies, not in great numbers but we've had Commas. Peacocks and Holly Blues, the odd White too but they've been too far away to ID. We've added trellis to the wall for the climbing Roses, it doesn't look much at the moment but the Roses are growing fast so it should settle in quick. I've finally been able to put out some of the plants I received earlier in the year - Verbena Bonariensis, which should be good for butterflies and bees, Callicarpa Bodinieri (which I think I read about on Ragged Robins Blog) which has already flowered a little and hopefully will have lovely purple berries in autumn and some Lavender plugs, which came free with the order. I don't have green fingers in the slightest but fingers crossed these thrive. 







The mouse has been visiting the window feeder often and I managed a little video. An odd thing with the window feeders, we've had one for a few years now and it got cracked and a little shoddy, so we got a new one. The new one had a blue roof instead of a clear one and the birds would not go anywhere near it. I sat and watched them land within a foot of it and it was like they couldn't see it. So I put the old one back up and within ten minutes they were on it?! So we got another new one with a clear roof thinking perhaps it has some to do with that? Or not. Maybe about 3/4 birds landed on it over the next week so up went the old cracked one again. I've kept the new one up next to it and the Sparrows will sometime eat from it but still nowhere near as much as the old one. I can't figure it out! 


Some of the garden visitors

House Sparrows





Blackbird


Goldfinch


Great Tit



Collared Dove


Magpie


Blackbird 


Feral Pigeon & Collared Dove


Blue Tit



10 comments:

  1. Great series of pictures accompanied by a fine narrative. It is interesting that you mention how your legs let you know that they have not been getting their regular exercise, and I wonder how many people will come to treat being confined to home as their new norm. I have noticed that my wife, who was always up for a good walk, accompanies me less and less frequently, especially if the weather is even a little inclement. I still get out every day, without fail, but more and more she is content to stay at home. Will this be her new practice? Only time will tell, I suppose. Stay well, Pam.

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    1. Thanks David. Hmm hopefully not, I desperately miss my walk to work every morning and not just because of my stiff legs. Of course it is easy to find a lack of motivation at times especially in these particular times. We'll see what happens... You too.

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  2. A lovely post Pam and so good to see all your photos and read about all your garden wildlife. You certainly have a great selection visiting :) Pleased you have somewhere you can walk - OH was walking locally but there seem to be about a lot of people about so I have made do with the garden. So pleased you managed to get a callicarpa - I hope it grows well. It is worth the wait for the purple berries we had quite a few last winter but sadly no Blackcaps! I've been watching a blackbird too collecting nest material. She is building in a laurel by the house and I suspect magpies have already noted the location :( Stay safe and well.

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    1. Thank you :) Yes the walking is fine as long as I go out early in the day. I made the mistake of going out about 6pm and there was just too many people! I got a pack of three and so far they're doing well, fingers crossed. We just had a Blackcap in a couple of days ago on the Cotoneaster. Hopefully the Magpies stay away :/ You too

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  3. Lovely to see what's going on in your garden, great blog post and photos.
    Amanda. X

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  4. Such a lovely post, I've enjoyed seeing all your garden visitors and you have lots of different ones. Glad you still have hedgehogs and the little mouse is cute. We are seeing fewer birds at the feeders at the moment I think they are all busy with nesting and sitting on nests. One evening earlier this week the male bullfinch arrived to feed, robins are taking the nibbles, eating one and then taking two back to the nest. Stay safe:)

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    1. Thanks Rosie. Yes it's definitely quieter on the feeders at the moment. Lovely to get the Bullfinch, I spotted a three on the road at the end of the houses last month but i've not seen on ein the garden since last year! You too :)

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  5. So nice to have all these wonderful birds right in your own backyard it is good to be able to walk every day...I may not have an official walk but I do some sort of activity every day. Since so many here allow their dogs to go loose I don't go around the block anymore. Because they run out and threaten to bite...
    I hope your plants and shrubs do well for you. I just spent the afternoon cutting one my flowering shrubs back as I have to get a ladder in that spot to make a repair to the soffit of the house.
    The mouse video is really cute!!

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    1. Oh gosh I don't think that would go down well here, you're supposed to have your dogs under control! It is lovely to be able to watch all the goings on in the garden. I tend to go for plants that look after themselves then cutting back when they're really far too big!!

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