Since moving in 9 months ago, visitors to the garden feeders have grown. Robin redbreast was the pioneer (isn’t he always), followed closely by a couple of Coal Tits, 2-3 Blue Tits and a pair of Great Tits. Occasionally, a tinkerling flock of Long-tailed Tits flutter through and 3-5 Starlings peck at the fatball thingy. 8-10 chirpy House Sparrows quickly became regulars.
Then came the Goldfinches and, currently, I have a daily flock of 16-18, all messily gobbling sunflower hearts as quickly as I can refill the feeders. Two pairs of Greenfinches often accompany them...
8 of the Goldfinches & a Blue Tit |
At least 14-20 Chaffinches, 2-4 Pied Wagtails, 3+ Blackbirds, 2-3 Woodpigeon, a pair of Collared Doves and a Dunnock or two hoover up the leftovers under the feeders
12 of the Chaffinches (one hiding behind the sprigs of green) & 6 of the House Sparrows |
And, on the 1st January, a single Siskin perched in the neighbour’s garden with the Goldfinches and transformed my day! Since then, at least 2 birds, a male and a female, have visited sporadically, mainly when the weather is at its worst. There’s a row of Alder trees just up the road, so I had been hoping Siskin and Redpoll were a possibility but you just never know.
Finally, on the 26th January, a Goldcrest came to sample the goods on offer. He/she didn't seem all that impressed and took its sunny mohican elsewhere. But, these tantalising one-offs keep you curious and engaged and wondering what else might pop in to say hello. Perhaps those 2 Brambling at Warwick racecourse could flit a mile or two down the road... The one and only time I had Brambling visit my garden in Hemel Hempstead was also the first time I’d ever seen the species. Dreams do come true! At least 6 of them turned up, late afternoon, at the end of October 2010. I was so excited that every photograph I took was out of focus! After that, it always felt like the possibilities were endless. If it had wings, it could conceivably land in my garden…
Brambling, Hemel Hempstead garden, 24/10/2010 |
A great finch fest there Lucy. A small antidote to your feelings I know, but hopefully helpful. We will soon be basking in warmth, flowers and butterflies!
ReplyDeleteIf I could plant a swathe of instant Yew or Hornbeam trees, I'd be sorted ;-). Thanks Steve, the warmth, flowers and butterflies sound pretty good.
DeleteThe simple pleasure of garden feeder watching takes a lot of beating. It brings home the importance of such activity when completely unexpected visitors are always a possibility. A Greenfinch would be "bird of the year" in 2018, such is the current status of the species on Thanet. If the garden feeders are your only link with the outdoors, then keep them filled and your eyes open, the possibilities are endless, the encounters always very personal.
ReplyDeleteLike Steve, I also look forward to the coming warmth and the change of seasons - hoping that your health improves with the passing of time. Take care, you're in my thoughts - Dyl
Thank you Dyl. Very much appreciated. Yes, visits from Greenfinches is great. They were a regular bird along the Bulbourne in Hemel but only occasional to the garden.
DeleteHi lucy. Great blog! You could really do well writing for a wildlife mag or the like. Yoj have a very engaging way of getting your observations across. Perhaps when you've crossed rfhe line from feeling awful to normal. Hopefully not too far away!dave
ReplyDeleteHi Dave from Hemel, nice to hear from you! Very kind of you to say re: the writing. Hmm.... As to garden birds, I saw the reports and photos of the Black Redstart that's been in/around gardens in Leighton Buzzard all February. I wouldn't say no to one of those here...
DeleteIn this cold weather, you have the right idea. Cup of tea comfy chair and watch away at the spectacle.
ReplyDeleteThanks for dropping by Marc. Ah yes, the birds do all the hard work...
DeleteJust discovered your engaging blog and I shall add it to my morning round up of blog-land.
ReplyDeleteSome lovely pictures and words Lucy, and I too know the allure of the feeders We have them outside our bungalow bedroom window for that period of a first cup of coffee and a look at who's come to visit, then there's the one's out front for the rest of the day.
The snow brought all manner of bonus birds and whenever the snow or temperature falls yes, we do get brambling.