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For WHO's birders

Forum area for all things that are non-football.
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Whilst 'off-topic' means all non-football topics can be discussed. This is not a free for all. Rights to this area of the forum aren't implicit, and illegal, defamator, spammy or absuive topics will be removed, with the protagonist's sanctioned.
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Nurse Ratched
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For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"I thought you might like this video.



It's a compilation of different birds singing. Beautiful photography. If you expand the 'title' under the video it gives a list of species and the times they pop up in the video. Most of the species are familiar to us in the UK, but there are some 'exotics' (the cranes - wow, what a noise!) It was filmed in Belarus. The guy has a channel you can subscribe to. Anyway, I hope you enjoy it and maybe it'll take your mind off you-know-what for a few blessed minutes."
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"In Kent, with rellies. Over the last couple of days: mixed flocks of swallows and house martins; moorhens; coots; mallards; water rails; Marsh harriers; kestral; buzzard; hen harrier; various other BoP I could not ID; pied wagtails; BILLIONS of starlings and house sparrows; a juvenile goldfinch feasting on a teasel (couldn't open my camera app in time!); meadow pippit; bearded tit (got a bit tearful over that spot); brent geese; jackdaws; avocets; little egret; turnstones; partridges; and many more. Naturally I am in heaven."
ted fenton
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post ted fenton »

Just watched that ! God nature can be so cruel.
J.Riddle
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post J.Riddle »

"Speaking of Eagle's. Golden Eagle's picking up mountain goats and carrying them back to their nest and dropping them off the cliff. Amazing filming, worth watching to the end if not seen the like before. https://youtu.be/Yz7FFlFy8eM"
Aalborg Hammer
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Aalborg Hammer »

Lab..Tennysons monument and above the golf course above Freshwater Bay
Aalborg Hammer
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Aalborg Hammer »

Lab..Tennysons monument and above the golf course above Freshwater Bay
lab
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post lab »

"Aalborg..I’m over next week ,where did you see them ?"
Aalborg Hammer
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Aalborg Hammer »

Currently on the Isle of Wight and was lucky to see the 3 Ernes (sea eagles) over the weekend..very impressive
ted fenton
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post ted fenton »

"Why are thousands of our wild birds dropping dead? As an avian flu outbreak wreaks havoc across the UK and sparks increasing concern from the Government, GEOFFREY LEAN asks what will happen next and does the disease pose a threat to human health. Feathered carcasses litter beaches on islands off Scotland and the east coast Reserves, including one named after Sir David Attenborough, left devastated The Government is increasingly concerned that the bird flu, as it is more commonly known, may mutate and cause another pandemic in humans. Huge expanses of bare rock have appeared along normally thronged stretches of British coastline, emptied by the death of thousands of birds. Feathered carcasses litter beaches on islands off Scotland and the east coast. And, in Brighton, seagulls have been dropping dead out of the skies. A total of 23 Scottish islands have been closed to visitors. Precious wildlife reserves, including one named after Sir David Attenborough in Nottinghamshire, have been devastated. And dozens of pheasant and partridge shoots have been called off before the season has started. It is all down to an outbreak of avian flu among our wild birds that some experts say is the deadliest variant so far recorded not just in Britain, but worldwide. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds has called it 'heartbreaking' while the National Trust says the mass deaths risk 'undoing decades of hard work to restore nature'. And the Government is increasingly concerned that the bird flu, as it is more commonly known, may mutate and cause another pandemic in humans — perhaps one far more deadly than Covid-19. After all, that is what happened with so-called Spanish flu at end of World War I. It was caused by a similar strain of the virus to that now in circulation among birds (H5N1) and although estimates vary greatly, the former is thought to have killed 50 million people — about one in every 35 of those alive at the time. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11074689/Avian-flu-outbreak-leaves-thousands-wild-birds-dead-sparks-concern-Government.html"
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Niiiice
Crassus
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Crassus »

"Exciting observation 5.45 and there was a right old racket, airborne racket Screeching birds, and I mean serious screeching, woke my daughter I went to the garden to investigate and four birds, bloody great things swooped majestically over the garden and out over the fields, travelling at some pace and very agile Watching them for a few minutes it was obvious that they were a parent pursued by its two offspring with the other parent taking up the rear Never seen nor heard the like before, big birds and distinctive call. I grabbed the phone and the birdsong app, could not believe what it came up with, tried it 4 times and the same result, checked out the web for images and yep, supported the app. Still disbelieving, I searched the existence in these parts and yes, a breeding pair existed in Aylesbury, around 10 miles away Peregrine Falcons ffs in N Bucks"
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WHU(Exeter)
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post WHU(Exeter) »

"Blue tits make a right racket when they're near food which I've never really understood, I suppose it might be a call to others that foods on the go. To my next door's cat though it's more ""I'm here, try and get me""..."
plankton
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post plankton »

"J.Riddle 3:16 Tue Jun 28 Re: For WHO's birders https://tinyurl.com/2bm3ury8 The Norwegian Blue prefers kippin' on it's back! Remarkable bird, id'nit, squire? Lovely plumage!"
gph
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post gph »

Hearing is the least important sense when it comes to tits. None are in the top ten for singing. https://www.bl.uk/the-language-of-birds/articles/the-top-10-british-birdsongs
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

?üßê
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Mike Oxsaw
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Mike Oxsaw »

Ag! Ag! Ag! Where would we be without WHO posters being to knock out an innuendo on demand?
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Lee Trundle
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Lee Trundle »

"I don't think cats can even be arsed in this weather, Nursey. And thanks for talking about your great tits. *unzips*"
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Nurse Ratched
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"Hello. A young great tit came into my sitting room for his live mealworms a little while ago. Great tits mostly grab and go, compared to the robins who show more curiosity in the humans and surroundings. However, this young great tit chap stuck around a good 5-10 minutes, barely touching the worms, and doing the avian equivalent of panting. I think he needed the shade. Please be kind and put out SHALLOW dishes of water for the birds in your gardens today, unless you have a cat. Thank you."
J.Riddle
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post J.Riddle »

https://tinyurl.com/2bm3ury8
Aalborg Hammer
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Aalborg Hammer »

Currently ensconced on the south coast of the Isle of Wight. We're overlooking the sea across a barley field..we were delighted to see an osprey hovering over the field this evening. The local press have been touting it as a western osprey although my bird book doesn't mention it .Apparently they had a pair hatch in Poole harbour this year.That's one to tick off
arsegrapes
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post arsegrapes »

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-england-nottinghamshire-61707476
gph
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post gph »

Careful out there https://www.darkododig.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/shark-bird.jpg
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Tomshardware
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Tomshardware »

https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/bird-flu-seabirds-scotland-rspb-b2097369.html Very sad and worrying.
gph
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post gph »

Crows as intelligent as 7-yo humans? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aWL2iEb6y4
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WHU(Exeter)
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post WHU(Exeter) »

"That’s a fair point gph. I’ve known the cat in question for years now, ever since he was a kitten, he used to spend hours watching me gardening. He’s in his later years now and more often than not off his nut on catnip, so I do respect the fact that he’s still “got it”. Just wish he’d stick to mice… ( the robins have been back, the dunnocks haven’t :("
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Tomshardware
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Re: For WHO's birders

Post Tomshardware »

Anyone see the hedgehog eating those Skylark chicks on Springwatch? Never knew they would predate birds.
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