Garden Birds and wild birds thread.

Just stood outside Greggs on Piccadily and this pigeon was literally doing a hoverbird trying to each someone's sausage roll or whatever they was having.
Couldn't believe what I just witnessed, never seen that before.
 
Just stood outside Greggs on Piccadily and this pigeon was literally doing a hoverbird trying to each someone's sausage roll or whatever they was having.
Couldn't believe what I just witnessed, never seen that before.
It’s usually gulls that do that. Once on the ferry to Mull a gull kept pace with me as I gifted it parts of my sandwich. He picked them off the rail.
 
Sadly this wind turbine has done been taken down. It hasnt worked in decades and was home to two peregrine falcons. These use to visit my garden regularly I hope they have found a new home.

 
there seems to be more and more garden birds now given the rate my feeders are being depleted - roll on Spring - I love seeing and hearing the new arrivals. I am not a birdwatcher but to just sit in the garden in summer and hear the birds and insects in the sun is - as you get older - one of lifes great pleasures - and its free
 
I had no idea that crows or corvids in general murmered like the starlings do. I have been watching the spectacle now for a week, as they finally gather for their final roost in the "top field".

Ok maybe not quite a murmer but certainly a roost on mass and thousands upon thousands of them, and I find it facinating how they all know to congregate at a given cordinate and always .. give or take a minute or two at the same time. It's like a scene from out Alfred Hitchcocks the Birds.

How do they even know its time for the gathering as it's pissing down Right Now! with dense cloud cover so they're as sure as heck not get their signals from the sun or moon.



The crow murmerations are a fine sight but not quite as amazing as a starling murmer and one of the best places to see this locally is on Blackpools North Pier.

 
I had no idea that crows or corvids in general murmered like the starlings do. I have been watching the spectacle now for a week, as they finally gather for their final roost in the "top field".

Ok maybe not quite a murmer but certainly a roost on mass and thousands upon thousands of them, and I find it facinating how they all know to congregate at a given cordinate and always .. give or take a minute or two at the same time. It's like a scene from out Alfred Hitchcocks the Birds.

How do they even know its time for the gathering as it's pissing down Right Now! with dense cloud cover so they're as sure as heck not get their signals from the sun or moon.



The crow murmerations are a fine sight but not quite as amazing as a starling murmer and one of the best places to see this locally is on Blackpools North Pier.


Waxwings do it too
Here’s some recent returns to the Valley, a couple of Snowgeese
IMG_9590.jpeg
 

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