Showing posts with label rspb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rspb. Show all posts

Monday, April 05, 2010

Conifer Chorus


Its Easter Monday today and I'm finally off work for two days. The weather is typical for a bank holiday, wet and windy.
This bird was sat in the conifers singing away.I think he is a very musical Dunnock. He stays away from the bird feeders and prefers to dine on insects. He is singing now as I write this on the dining room table by the patio windows.
The RSPB released their big garden watch bird count results from January. It showed that the cold weather had effected the smaller birds like the Long Tailed Tits and Goldcrests .
http://www.rspb.org.uk/birdwatch/results/
Traditional country birds were seen in gardens eating from garden feeders.
The Goldfinches have found the bird feeder station which I have started to move around the garden to stop a build up of dropped seed. The Narnia lights and left raised border are recovering now. The birds normally find their way to the moved station quite quickly.
What I need to buy once we move is a cast iron Birdbath like the one that the garden has here. The birds all alight to drink and wash in it. The station has a little plastic bowl but the big birds prefer the big one.
Cat spotted a visitor the other day who alighted on a roof across from our house. I will blog about him next time. He has a long beak, long legs, and loves fish...
I hope that the rain stops enough for me to go to the allotment today to prepare the beds for planting. The weather is forecast better for tomorrow.

Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Fairburn Ings

We went to Fairburn Ings on Monday. This is the RSPB's nature reserve in the lower Aire valley. The site is 286 acres, and was developed from the mining and industry areas. Subsidence has created large lakes, and several smaller bodies of water. It has many different habitats like flood meadow, wet Fenland, reedbed, woodland, and scrub.

They have recorded the most species at any nature reserve (274). This was a Black Swan we saw at the feeding station. It was a walk through a carpark and across a boardwalk. The children could feed the Swans and Ducks food bought from the shop. They come en masse to get the food.

The sun was shining and the Ducks quacked away..

I have never seen so many Mute Swans in one place. They are so beautiful, despite their size.I love the webbed feet powering away under the water. They look serene and regal moving through the water to get some food..

There are three trails around some of the reserve. A lot of the reserve is not accessible to the public. I think the reserve manager leads walks around the closed parts of the reserve occasionally. There are a handfull of bird hides around the reserve, all facing onto the water.

The trails had some beautiful grasses, wildflowers, and masses of Butterflys. They were fluttering all over the open reserve areas. The coal tip areas were being turned into rich meadows, grassland, and marsh areas.

This was the dipping pond. You could hire nets and a box from the visitor shop to dig into the pond. They gave a card with how to identify the pondlife you had scooped up. A female duck sat at the far end nesting in the reeds.

She let the Ducklings out and they swam across the water to feed on the insects on the pond surface, and to dive below the water. Their little orange feet were flapping under the water, as they looked like fluffy pearl divers. You can see how soft they looked in the photo.

This was the view behind the Kingfisher screen. They are the jewels of the reserve. We did not see any. We will have to go back to see if we can see a Kingfisher. They are the brightest bird in the UK, but are quite hard to spot. I guess this slow moving water is ideal for fishing. The shop says you must report any sitings of Kingfishers to the reserves staff.


The river Aire runs along the edge of the Reserve. This is some water that moves from the Sluicegates, and feeds into the big Loch.

The Woodland trail was full of Mushrooms and mud. It has been the wettest July and the mud trail had been churned up. It was high up between the Loch and the River. We heard a few birds but did not see many.

The other stars of the reserve are Dragonflys. These look like biplanes when they buzz past you, then do acrobatic turns. They are very hard to photograph. The bodies and wings look like jewels. This one was sunbathing or resting for a while.

Near the visitor centre were feeders hung up. We saw Blue Tits, these Greenfinches, and a Bullfinch. We sat drinking Cafe Latte and saw a Grey Squirrel come onto the bird table and sneak off with the nuts.

The Ducks decided to sit under the Bird Feeders behind the Feeding Station. This was a hive of Activity. A board of wood hid the visitors away from the feeders. You look through the cutholes. The visitor centre had a whiteboard with what birds had been sighted and where they were seen on the reserve.

The final photo was looking Eastwards. We walked around the western half of the reserve. There is a second Car park with a further trail. We need to go back to Fairburn Ings soon.
The staff were lovely and helped us get three 13 kilo bags of bird food back to the car.
It shows how an area once damaged by heavy industry/mining can be reclaimed, and nature restored slowly. It is a very calm place, and was packed full of wildlife.
Schools visit every day during the week so the next generation is being educated about conservation, the Rspb, and nature...

Friday, June 19, 2009

Bird's And Bee's

I was reading the RSPB's magazine called Birds. I liked the pictures, writing, and stories that people write in. They are collecting stories where people have encounters with nature. Whether it is animals, birds, bee's, or insects. Whenever they have felt a connection, or a sense of awe.

I love watching Bee's flying into flowers hence the first photo. The second photo is the female Blackbird hopping along the raised beds.
I read that eighty percent of the RSPB members never visit the reserves, and do not know how to identify species.
The eighty percent that do not know difference between bird species knows they are important, and are worth saving (by paying for membership of the RSPB).
The garden is a perfect place to observe nature, to watch wildlife, and to feel more calm. One man took his family to the local RSPB reserve and payed for membership despite being layed off in the morning.
Its good that people are appreciative about nature. and feel it is worth protecting. We are connected to the natural world.
The Birds and Bee's are alive in our garden.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Late Garden Bird Watch

I sat down today at the kitchen window for an hour looking at the garden counting the birds that flew in throughout the hour. My own late Garden Birdwatch.I have submitted my results to the RSPB online. The fat balls hung by the kitchen window had seen some action.I was suprised to see the two House Sparrows fly upto it a few feet from me to feed...

A pair of Blue Tits hang onto the fat balls.I forgot to take the green netting off these and they seem to have lasted ages, compared to the fat balls with no netting.They are so quick in and out of the garden from the privet.

A pair of Female House Sparrows hopped around the right hand border. You can see the green tips from the spring bulbs growing out of the tubs.
A Robin, and a Blackbird came into the garden too, high above in the trees a Crow and a Magpie watched on.
This years bird watch surpassed last year when none appeared in the hour that I watched.Its good for the soul to sit down and watch them with a cup of coffee in hand.
I will look at the new Thompson And Morgan plant catalogue I got yesterday.They are offering plug plants and pot plants.I may cheat and buy a few from them to give the summer garden some colour and scent.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Bird Watch


I got the latest RSPB magazine that mentions that the yearly Garden Bird watch will be held on the weekend of the 24th and 25th January 2009.
Across the UK people will sit or stand for an hour and count the number of birds in the garden at the same time across an hour.
The RSPB collates all the data (from 40,000 plus people) for a snapshot of the bird population across the UK's regions.
Last year in the hour that I did it not a dickie bird appeared!
I hope they visit more freely when i am sat watching with my pencil and identification poster!
They do cheer me up when the garden is still sleeping through the winter.My own garden spirits...

Friday, November 21, 2008

House Guest


The humble House Sparrow has been in the news here with the story that there numbers are declining around certain parts of the UK.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7738798.stm
The experts attribute the fall in numbers due to changes within the gardens here. Modern garden design (think decking and patios), continued urban development, and the loss of Tree's were all mentioned as contributing.
Less green plants mean less insects.
The RSPB thinks that the lack of insects means that the baby House Sparrows do not grow into maturity.
The good news for brown thumbs is that if you're garden is slightly wild and unkempt that you will probably have House Sparrows. Overgrown gardens attract spiders and insects, the House Sparrows baby bird food..
During the Summer I had upto thirty House and Wood Sparrows dive bombing my feeders. I used my Parisian photo of the Notre Dame House Sparrow (thats a big house to live next to!).
I have seen a few today in the garden. I have not cut the privet hedge like the people on either side of me. I reasoned that the birds like some cover to execute their daily raids on my feeders, so they can hide and watch the garden.
I do enjoy the Birds visiting my garden. It is one of the greatest simple pleasures watching them from the kitchen door with a cup of coffee and a camera.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

National Treasures


I have not taken part in the RSPB's gardenwatch day yet, due to working on the weekend it was held the 26th-27th January.
http://www.rspb.org.uk/
I might sit tomorrow for an hour how many garden birds visit my garden. Then use the internet to send my data to the Rspb.
They use it every year as an impromptu snapshot of how the native birds of Britain are doing. Every persons postcode is used to log the sightings on one hour of watching. It can be done in gardens or parks, and the time length is short enough that most people can manage it.
From all the data the RSPB can calculate bird populations and abundance (or scarcity) in any given area or the UK as a whole. This can reflect their future policies and which birds need protecting if they are to remain as a distinct species within the UK.
I think the BBC will publish a news story soon about the Top Ten British garden birds sighted over this weekend, in March.
It was originally used to get children into looking at birds in natural environments back in 1979. Over 400,000 people took part last year spotting some 6 millions birds in 235,000 gardens. Somebody realised you could get adults involved whether bird experts or amateurs.
The awareness of the environment and climate change has made a whole new generation of green gardeners and nature lovers. Who appreciate the Flora and Fauna of Britain as a national treasure.
All we need now is Nicholas Cage with some binoculars and a British Garden Birds book.I have worked all weekend. From dark in the morning at 530am to finishing at 810pm when its dark again. Two Dark days but am off tomorrow. The garden is calling me.....

Saturday, December 15, 2007

The Watcher


I saw this silhouetted bird sat on a bare tree a few hundred yards from the garden.Even with binoculars he was not distinct.I think he is a crow due to his size.Black feathers, and black beak.

He makes a good silhouette against the bare winter tree. I was looking up garden birds last night and how to attract them to your garden.

In Cheltenham there were lots of garden birds visiting the bird table, and fat balls hung on the fences. It was surrounded by trees and a monster Lavatera bush.
I have moved the bird feeders about. There is a seed mix, some peanuts, and fat balls.I also put out bread and seed mix in a plastic tub on the pavers, and fresh water in a dish.
I have not seen one bird yet in the garden. The next thing I want to buy is a bird table to see if that attracts them. A pyrocanthus bush and honeysuckle are on the list too.
I wander if all the building work has displaced the birds temporarily. There is some overgrown woodland behind the hedge that sits at the back of the garden. It is a buffer zone between the building site and the alleyway.
I keep watching for the birds, as the crow is watching the world go by from his tree top vantage point. I ordered a free booklet from the Royal Society for the protection of Birds (RSPB), the British charity for all our birds, both native and visiting.
http://www.rspb.org.uk/
The camera is charged and ready, just need them to visit my garden.