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Posts tagged with "goldfinch"

Winter's Witness

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Dry ground does not betray secrets. Nor does mud that comes from rain, on the whole; you might find a footprint here or there, around a puddle or under a bush, but it is hard to make sense of such widely dispersed clues. But snow is altogether different. A cold blast of air from the east has brought us our heaviest fall since February, and it's given the robin a frosted tip to his beak...



...added an extra depth of colour to the holly bush...



...and thrown down a bewildering maze of tracks at busy junctions :eyes:



Upon closer inspection :sherlock: this pattern turned out to be the work of one roe deer and at least one fox :right:

Elsewhere, the birds are busy gathering food.

Song thrush



Goldfinch



The garden foxes haven't been at their most cooperative this evening, but I did catch the Tip Vixen with her nose in the snow.



Suddenly, her chest no longer looks pearly white! :eyes:



There is something exceptionally beautiful about fresh snow :wizard:

Directions please?

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One of the things that is so striking about foxes is that they usually seem to know precisely where they are going and why. They possess a busy and purposeful air even when they are doing something as ridiculous as, say, walking off with a broken stick. But some of my other wild neighbours occasionally seem a little...lost :eyes:



Early this morning, I rounded a corner on my usual trail to find a roe deer doe springing away from me parallel to the barbed wire fence that borders a local paddock. I'm no stranger to seeing mule deer or whitetails up close when I'm wandering around Canada, but these little roe deer are far more secretive and wary. The fawns that I photographed the other day were a good 500 feet away from me, so encountering an adult so close was something of a shock!



And she didn't know how to find her way out of the paddock. Not wanting to frighten her further, I stayed still by the fence, watching she made her way back and forth, looking for a gap in the barbed wire and finding none. Eventually she reached the far side of the paddock where the fence is much lower and disappeared into a hedgerow. I really don't like barbed wire - it can be dangerous for wildlife.
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The temperature this morning was fully 15 degrees lower than the day's forecasted high :eyes: and any earlier hints of a thaw have faded. I like the cold, or pseudo-cold anyway; after all, for all the media's excitement, this isn't exactly Snag. But I like hiking in -9c and seeing all the Downs and the Weald draped with unrelenting hoar frost.



Even if the deer are getting lost, I know where I am going: outside! It's beautiful out there :happy:



Birds are very active, trying to gather another food to fuel themselves. The garden is attracting large numbers of yellowhammers, stock doves and blackbirds (up to eight at once!) Out by the local farm, large flocks of noisy goldfinches are feeding in the trees...



...in whatever way they see best! :whistle:



As I was watching them, a rattling call alerted me to a mistle thrush.



And there's never a robin far away at this time of year.



But the biggest surprise of the morning was left to last - another animal looking rather lost, and one that I would never have imagined seeing when I headed out this morning. Or any morning, come to that. It's one of our shyest and most reclusive waders, albeit a wader that is found in woodland and is mostly nocturnal.



A woodcock!! I would never have seen it at all, but a flapping in the hedgerow suggested that something was trapped by the fence on the far side of the bushes. Its intent was probably to fly out of sight and vanish into another bush, but finding its path blocked, it flattened itself low, spreading its wings with their wonderfully cryptic markings.

I wasn't sure that it wasn't actually caught in the fence, but I backed off a little way and was pleased to see it get back to its feet and trot quickly down the hedgerow. A very cute little bird, and that's my first confirmed sighting of one in the North Downs. A new species for my local list! :yes:

Avian Surprises

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When the leaves are thick on the trees and the grass is tall enough to hide a roe deer, locating wildlife can be slightly tricky. Some days, I feel almost like I'm back in the temperate rainforests of Canada, attempting to locate things that are very good at not showing themselves. Sometimes it's just easier to wait for birds to come and perch on the balcony railings instead!



And at least there's one bird family I can always count on to be on display :wink: Here's a corvid quartet.

Jay



Jackdaw



Carrion Crow



Magpie



Finding four corvids in a morning is quite cool :cool: but pretty much everything else in the way of birdlife seemed elusive. But never say never... :wink:

I was close to home and expecting no more pictures when a mewing buzzard-like call suddenly caught my attention. High up, high, high, high up, almost over my back garden in fact, two stream-lined raptors were wheeling and diving like outsized swifts :eyes:

Hobbies!! I was shocked! :faint: A new species for my local list - and a raptor, which is always special; actually I've never seen a hobby anywhere before. They were so far above me and moving so quickly that photography was, er, difficult :insane: but I got a few rough pictures by using manual focus. Words got a better picture of a hobby about a fortnight ago.



It seems too much to hope that this beautiful and uncommon falcon is actually nesting locally. I will certainly keep a close watch out for this pair, though.

I just never know what I will see when I step outside the front door :D

Unseasonal

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I did think it was summer. Last evening, staring out into the almost monsoon-like cloudbursts smearing the window panes, I wondered if winter - a rainy, British winter - had come early. Perhaps the goldfinches have the answer: it is still spring! :eyes:



At least, I'm slightly surprised to see them still building a nest, unless they are just repairing it. Their breeding season apparently ends in mid-July, so they had better hurry! :smile:

But today it is sunny again, although not especially warm for the time of year.

The cubs are fine, but still extremely skittish, and my presence in the pen tends to send them scattering straight up the wire...



...sometimes en masse!



So I try to respect their need for privacy as much as possible. Hence, apologies for the poor quality pictures but I don't want to attempt to get better ones when they are in this mood.

Field scabious Knautia arvensis on the other hand, is view for all to see :smile: This is a true summer flower, very tall, and grows in old meadows.



And here's a picture that I didn't expect to get with my little 18-55mm lens! :wink: I was quite intrigued to see this fox wandering around a local front garden (not mine) this evening. Too bad I didn't have the Tamron with me :whistle:



Finally, I would like to mention a very special milestone :happy: It's Kelly's 15th birthday today. When she was first diagnosed with cancer back in April, I really didn't believe that she would make it this far. I'm very proud of her; life with her is an adventure, and I could tell a thousand stories of her over the past decade and a half. :smile:

Timelapse back to 1993 :love:

Touch of Gold

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A sentinel was perched on the balustrade of the balcony this afternoon.



A goldfinch! I didn't see why it was perched up there so resolutely until I glanced out again a few seconds later. A second goldfinch, presumably its mate, was gathering material from the baskets. Nest rebuilding time? It's some weeks since I first saw them undertaking this activity.



The cubs have been quieter today :zzz: They've spent much of the time in a bundle behind the shed, although they have resumed play now that evening is drawing in and the unseasonal heat is dropping. Their appetites are still healthy, at any rate :wink:



Diary Notes
The hierarchy is different this morning. Chatter is always the first to approach the food dish but that is borne out of boldness, not necessarily hunger. A pale cub (probably Marion) is the first to actually put her muzzle in the dish, and with huffs and face lunges keeps Waldo at bay. Another cub peers over the hutch, pupils dilated with excitement. Soon all five are around the food bowl. Waldo feeds in fourth place, despite his size. Chatter is more interested in lying down in the sawdust.

Last night, I was standing on the lawn in the dark and heard a rustle in the hedge behind me. The Chipped Vixen, just 20 feet away! I have always handled her with kidgloves, so to speak - her tolerance is of an unknown quality and so I have taken extra care never to startle her, and certainly I have never been in the garden
with her before. But she seems calm about our surprise meeting, and casually lopes back through the hedge. I go back into the house and she returns. However, the SV was less easy-going this afternoon. I was sitting on the lawn watching the cubs when the SV leapt gracefully onto the path from the far fence...and immediately spun 360 degrees. Really, has she still not forgiven us for that little incident?? But she returns too, once I am safely indoors! Neither vixen shows any interest in the cubs. They have simply become another feature of the garden. If they were loose, I'm sure it would be a different matter...

Emboldened, I step out onto the patio when the Chipped Vixen comes tonight, and toss her some raisins. Chatter and Waldo are staring at her. If they were interested in the Old Dogfox, they are mesmorised by the Chipped Vixen. Soon all five cubs have emerged and have fixed their gazes and ears upon her, though she scarcely seems to note it. Do they remember their own mothers? Or is this just some kind of instinctive attraction? I wish they could tell me.


And I haven't actually forgotten about the foxes up the lane p: This morning I saw one far off in the meadows, apparently hunting.



A state of existence that the cubs should aspire to reach, perhaps? :smile: