Amazon Search and Bookmark
AFFILIATE SEARCH | Shop Amazon.co.uk using this search bar and support WHO!

For WHO's birders

Forum area for all things that are non-football.
Forum rules
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.
Post Reply
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

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."
User avatar
Tomshardware
Posts: 1357
Old WHO Number: 266280
Has liked: 742 times
Been liked: 343 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Tomshardware »

"Nice one. Earlier just parked up and what i thought was a leaf swirling around and then hitting car window before falling to the ground turned out to be a goldfinch fledgling. Poor little thing was startled, no sign of parents and it being next to a busy road I picked it up and took it into our garden. Held it for a few minutes and then released it and thankfully it flew off really well into neighbours trees."
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"Some flipping good spots, here."
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"Some flipping good spots, here."
Hello Mrs. Jones
Posts: 408
Old WHO Number: 224273
Has liked: 39 times
Been liked: 77 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Hello Mrs. Jones »

Saw a pair of Wheatears on a feeder in Yorkshire a couple of weeks ago
Forest Gate Ugly
Posts: 86
Old WHO Number: 11288
Has liked: 60 times
Been liked: 87 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Forest Gate Ugly »

"Passed through Eguisheim in Alsace, France where they have storks living in huge great messy nests in the middle of a very picturesque little town. Very amusing and beautiful creatures. Lovely."
SnarestoneIron
Posts: 128
Old WHO Number: 226870
Has liked: 3 times
Been liked: 1 time

Re: For WHO's birders

Post SnarestoneIron »

"Nurse Ratched 1:55 Thu Aug 10 Thanks Nurse, yes it's Merlin I am using :-) Had a Spotted Flycatcher in the garden yesterday!"
User avatar
zebthecat
Posts: 2153
Old WHO Number: 16911
Has liked: 636 times
Been liked: 364 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post zebthecat »

Nurse Ratched 1:56 Thu Aug 10 Ah shame. Thanks for the Merlin recommendation a few weeks back. It is really good at picking through multiple birds singing at once and a handy way of learning to identify the songs as well. I went on a Nightjar walk a few weeks ago in the Ashdown Forest. Did not see any but did hear them - they are bloody noisy at dusk (Merlin got them as well). Almost all of the nesting birds have gone now except Wood Pigeons having yet another go. It is definitely quantity over quality for them as their nests are a total disaster area. Did see a pair of jays and swifts swooping overhead yesterday. After all the miserable rain the bats are back and watching them at dusk is marvellous. Also the Tawny Owls have started calling to each other again. Marking out their territories and gearing up for the next breeding season probably.
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Birding doldrums. ‚ò?Ô?è
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"Snareston - depends on the app. I'm on Android, and I've probably tried all of them for our region (Britain/Northern Europe). By far the best and most accurate is 'Merlin'. After downloading it, you then download a packet of data specific to your region. I can't fault it so far."
User avatar
WHU(Exeter)
Posts: 1564
Old WHO Number: 13669
Has liked: 164 times
Been liked: 248 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post WHU(Exeter) »

"Toms, where I work in Bristol, all the offices have the usual type of plants that you see in every office district in every city, bar one place. It's a new hotel that have employed a company to come up with something different, and what they've done is used wild flowers only - it's BY FAR the best display for many a square mile and I'd imagine a lot cheaper than the other plants too. Also get loads of bees around it. I don't know why every city doesn't go in for a lot more of it."
User avatar
Tomshardware
Posts: 1357
Old WHO Number: 266280
Has liked: 742 times
Been liked: 343 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Tomshardware »

"Whu Exeter, lovely plant and will self seed and spread given half a chance."
SnarestoneIron
Posts: 128
Old WHO Number: 226870
Has liked: 3 times
Been liked: 1 time

Re: For WHO's birders

Post SnarestoneIron »

How accurate are these bird apps that record and match bird songs? Recorded for 40 minutes yesterday and had 21 different types of birds in and around our garden :-)
User avatar
WHU(Exeter)
Posts: 1564
Old WHO Number: 13669
Has liked: 164 times
Been liked: 248 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post WHU(Exeter) »

"Put quite a bit of Mexican Fleabane down in the garden a few weeks ago, now have ladybirds, which I’ve not seen in my garden for at least 10 years."
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"Yes, magpie sounds are not the most relaxing."
User avatar
WHU(Exeter)
Posts: 1564
Old WHO Number: 13669
Has liked: 164 times
Been liked: 248 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post WHU(Exeter) »

"Family of magpies with two new ones in the garden behind. I’m glad the two little ones have grown up quickly. I love birdsong, one of my favourite things, but the sound of little magpies demanding food for the best part of a day can take its toll."
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

?ü•?
lab
Posts: 1095
Old WHO Number: 220636
Been liked: 1 time

Re: For WHO's birders

Post lab »

"Keep an eye on them if you can Nurse . I once saw two Jays consume a new family of Blue Tits , nothing I could do about it . They literally tilted their head back and swallowed the poor fuckers whole . Nature eh ?"
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

The great tits have brought their fledglings to my garden to show them where the grub is. Absolute chaos with parents being run ragged by squeaking babies demanding to be fed. Happy day today.
lab
Posts: 1095
Old WHO Number: 220636
Been liked: 1 time

Re: For WHO's birders

Post lab »

"I’m out in Jersey at the mo, nothing out of the ordinary as yet although having a gentle swim in a quiet bay a cormorant popped up about ten yards from me , I dunno who was more surprised , it hung around for about ten seconds before diving . Saw a red squirrel very close this morning ."
Crassus
Posts: 258
Old WHO Number: 255728
Been liked: 6 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Crassus »

"On holiday, lovely place, hotel immaculate - funny enough remarked to Mrs C that aside of anything else, there wasn't even any bird guano in spite of gulls - transpires there is a good reason Well a first for me, got close and personal with a Harris Hawk and saw the beauty in action The hotel has a resident 'bird controller' with his 'gull operative' He periodically appears and at the sight of intruding herberts, sets his hawk loose, swooping and turning through the terraces, then returning for a reward perched on his wrist I had a good chat with the bloke and was able to observe the hawk at a 2ft distance - absolutely stunning bird, hefty beak and scissor hand talons No wonder it doesn't ever get to the terminal point with the gulls, they are off sharp at the mere sight An unexpected holiday highlight"
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

"I'm very fortunate to live in a greenfinch enclave. Beautiful, fierce-faced little things. Underrated singers."
User avatar
SurfaceAgentX2Zero
Posts: 911
Old WHO Number: 214126
Has liked: 169 times
Been liked: 274 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post SurfaceAgentX2Zero »

"House Sparrows up, Greenfinches down. Rubbish."
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Jazz is aural farm slurry.
User avatar
Nurse Ratched
Posts: 1213
Old WHO Number: 18642
Has liked: 706 times
Been liked: 696 times

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Nurse Ratched »

Jazz is aural farm slurry.
Admiral Lard
Posts: 51
Old WHO Number: 14303

Re: For WHO's birders

Post Admiral Lard »

Pesky poofy white cat from down the road murdered a wood pigeon on my front lawn yesterday event. The little white shit is in for a thorough soaking when next I see it. Has to be said it did leave the ex pigeon's feathers in a very neat pile...
Post Reply