Where have all the wee birds gone?

Discussion in 'Wildlife Corner' started by tommyrot, Aug 9, 2024.

  1. Escarpment

    Escarpment Super Gardener

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    Maybe someone else in the neighbourhood has just started feeding and their offerings are fancier?
    My next door neighbour has never fed before this year, now she has two feeding stations up.

    The only thing really in demand from my feeders in the black sunflower seed; the tits prefer it to anything else, presumably because it can be stashed.

    This little coal tit was being really fussy, pulling out seed after seed and chucking it on the ground. Luckily the wood pigeons were available to clean up!

    2024-10-05_08-19-18_cropped.jpg
     
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    • ClematisDbee

      ClematisDbee Gardener

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      Yes, I saw the first robin since spring 2024, yesterday. There were two in my garden last winter, which was great. They were very friendly and fearless around me, unlike the other woodland birds ( apart from the resident blackbirds who are friendly butvalways on high alert for predators).
       
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      • Songbird

        Songbird Gardener

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        @Escarpment , none of our neighbours feed the birds. Even our resident robin has deserted us and the little Jenny wren. She’s always flitting about usually but haven’t seen her in weeks.

        I did notice 5 magpies flying around above the house( babies included?) this morning , maybe they’re keeping the smaller birds away? They made a right racket too.
         
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        • Escarpment

          Escarpment Super Gardener

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          I've had a big influx of magpies too but I'm still getting plenty of assorted tits, wren, robin, dunnocks, blackbirds and chiffchaffs. They've only returned in the last few weeks though and they tend to all turn up in a mob and then disappear again - right now the garden is quiet. And most of them are more interested in the rowan berries or hunting bugs on the silver birches than using the feeders.

          I put up a new nesting box last week and within an hour a great tit was checking it out. It then headed straight to the existing box (identical box on another tree) as if to compare!

          Robin has decided to sing on the fence instead of the usual singing post high in the rowan tree.
          2024-10-02_10-31-46_cropped.jpg
           
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          • fairygirl

            fairygirl Total Gardener

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            Magpies don't prevent smaller birds being around. We have loads of magpies here, and they're a ruddy nuisance a lot of the time because they've had a very good breeding season this year, and have nested in my garden too, but I probably have far more small birds than ever. :smile:
             
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            • Songbird

              Songbird Gardener

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              we don’t see that many magpies as a rule and with seeing so many suddenly, I just wondered if they could be the reason why the smaller birds have hopped it. will keep the food going for a while longer and see if they can be enticed back. We have no berries left on the roman tree…they’ve all dropped off or rotted off already. Think it’s gone into a state of dormancy before the due time.
               
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              • WeeTam

                WeeTam Total Gardener

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                Was sitting by the pond the other day when a blur flew past at head height . Heard a Whoosh of wings as the hawk tried to take out a blackbird behind us.

                Never a dull moment as the garden seems to be home to sparrows,blackbirds,thrush,rbins,wrens,woodpigeons,owls,jackdaws and more at the moment.

                Must be the hedges and especially the small wooded glen that attracts them in.
                No better sight than seeing the thrush tucking into yet another slug.
                 
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                • WeeTam

                  WeeTam Total Gardener

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                  Could be a local hawk keeps them nervous,safety in numbers etc. Ours keep dashing into the beach hedging when spooked.
                   
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                  • DiggersJo

                    DiggersJo Head Gardener

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                    It could be @WeeTam , but we have dozens of other little birds in the back garden every day. Occasionally we do get a Sparrowhawk and less often a Kestrel , but the former we have also seen in the street where the Sparrows nest. But to be honest we see buzzards more often than the other 2 birds of prey and they seem more interested in the squirrels (or tree rats as @fairygirl said:)).
                     
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                    • roders

                      roders Total Gardener

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                      The Finches and Tits come down early morning ,they also feed the Pigeons down below.
                      I just love watching them.

                      543C195C-2181-4234-B589-F04B7F850E84.jpeg D7107E55-8EB7-43A8-961F-A2E3D2F8AFEC.jpeg 970868A0-E256-4C89-B5D1-641CB6E5ACF2.jpeg
                       
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                      • fairygirl

                        fairygirl Total Gardener

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                        Nice wee youngsters there @roders :smile:
                        They're messy aren't they! Always a benefit for the ground feeding birds though.
                         
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                        • shiney

                          shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                          There has been no change at all in our garden this year with just as many birds as ever. They do have a good habitat here with plenty of trees, hedges, shrubs and flowers giving them what they appear to want. They also get through about 25kg of no mess seeds and peanuts every four or five weeks.

                          The seeds that get dropped are hoovered up by the pheasants (a male and two females living in the garden at present), pigeons and squirrels.

                          Our three resident crows died last year after being with us for about seventeen years. Funnily enough, we rarely see a crow now.

                          Plenty of woodpeckers, robins and tits eat from the feeders. The blackbirds are always running around doing their own thing (especially pulling out plant labels and moving them to other plants) but not interested in the feeders.
                           
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                          • fairygirl

                            fairygirl Total Gardener

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                            We have loads of varied habitat here too, which sometimes works against us as many birds don't really need to come in the garden. Woodpeckers are a prime example.
                            I have a ground feeding tray, complete with green roof [now that's posh @shiney ! :heehee: ] and it's ideal for any of the bigger birds, although the sparrows, dunnocks and robins use it too. Blackbirds and thrushes tend to come in more in winter.
                            We have loads of crows/jackdaws etc in the area, but they're quite rare visitors. When the ground's frozen long term, or we have snow lying for a while, they sometimes come in though.
                             
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                            • shiney

                              shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                              The woodpeckers are always here as we have had their nests in the garden for over 50 years. They seem to love to nest in our poplar trees. They can be seen on the feeders most of the day.

                              Forty years ago the council asked us, and our neighbours, not to have any feeders but hanging ones. In those days they used to catch the field rats free of charge but said they would not do so if we still had non-hanging bird feeders. Since we stopped having those feeders the rats no longer come in to the garden but stay in the fields all around us.
                               
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                              • fairygirl

                                fairygirl Total Gardener

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                                I regularly hear woodpeckers @shiney , and we have a huge array of very mature trees of all kinds round here, and lots of little pockets of woodland, but we're also a stone's throw from a small NT garden, so they'll have plenty of room there to nest.
                                One came in the garden recently, but he couldn't get to the feeders because I have purpose built cages for them to keep squirrels out, and I felt a bit guilty! I made a new feeder which has just one small access port, and it could reach that, but it's not reappeared. The idea was to make it seem a little bit like a hole in a tree, and once the shrub it's in has grown over it a bit more, it'll be quite nicely camouflaged.
                                The great, blue and coal tits, and robins have been using it plenty though. The sparrows have had a go at it too. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that it might appear again, but it was a nice little project to keep me busy.
                                 
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