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Birdwatching webchat with Peter Holden MBE, 28 May 1-2pm

(64 Posts)
Pamaga Thu 17-May-12 17:39:57

Do birds have colour preferences for feeders? We had one green feeder and one silver-grey feeder hanging from our bird table. The birds (tits, sparrows, robins, finches) all fed mainly from the silver-grey one. The perches on the two models were different so we assumed that this was the reason for the preference. We bought another feeder (gilt effect) with the same sort of perch as the silver-grey one but they STILL preferred the silver-grey one. We even swapped them over so the new one was where the old one had been hanging and vice versa. However, all varieties of bird seem to make a beeline for the old feeder, generally only going to the new one if all the seed has been exhausted from the old one. Any information on what draws them to one feeder over another and how we can persuade them to use both equally?

whenim64 Thu 17-May-12 11:44:59

I think your robins are living down here Joanall. They're nesting in my outhouse, and their relatives are swanning around in my friend's garden - she had five at once last weekend, dotted around her big garden. We seem to have more wrens this year, which is such a treat - they like to potter around in my strawberry beds and under the rosemary bush.

Joanall Thu 17-May-12 11:03:44

Is there a reducing population of Robins? We used to have two little pet robins that appeared every year round about Christmas- but no more! I know they may have passed on, very sad! but it just makes more conscious I don't see as many.
I live in Northumberland in www.alnmouthvillage.org, and we used to be absolutely surrounded by them in every garden.

NannaB Wed 16-May-12 23:16:24

I heard a cuckoo yesterday about 6.30 am. I thought it was a pigeon cooing at first, but it definately was cuckooing.

Hankipanki Wed 16-May-12 13:53:52

Last year we changed one of our bird boxes, which has been used by bluetits for several years, to one with a webcam, since then this site has not been used. Are the bluetits camera shy?

artygran Tue 15-May-12 19:34:36

We have not lived in this house for long but we have a bird that often sings outside our house at about 3.30 in the morning when it is still dark. It sounds like a blackbird. I have never heard a bird singing this early, before dawn. Is this unusual behaviour?

eGJ Tue 15-May-12 17:07:16

Wow; can rember Peter Holden from the young RSPB junior section years ago when my DDs were young!
Is there a specific time related to dawn that the Dawn Chorus to start each day?

Annobel Tue 15-May-12 16:31:41

I saw some strange behaviour between a collared dove and a wood pigeon. They were sitting side by side on a neighbour's trellis and the dove was cosying up to the pigeon. Suddenly the dove put his wing over the pigeon's back and then tried to mount it. Was this a frustrated collared dove?

nanajan Tue 15-May-12 16:21:03

The tree outside our living room (which is up high above the garage, so when we look out we are level with the top of the tree) is daily full of about half a dozen beautiful goldfinches, presumably all males as they are so colourful. We have lived here 11 years and this is the first year I can remember seeing so many every day. Do they have an predators, as they are so colourful they are not very camouflaged so must be easy to spot ?

whenim64 Tue 15-May-12 15:45:17

I had a bluetit that played on my car windscreen for a few mornings last year. It would flutter to the top of the windscreen then appear to slide down to the bonnet, then do it all over again for about half an hour. I assumed it was trying to attract its reflection, but not sure now, given what GrandmaH has said.

GrandmaH Tue 15-May-12 15:35:48

I've lived in this house for 20 years & have never seen this before this year.
Bluetits are queueing up on a buddleia bush outside our living room window to flutter at the glass. I put up a window feeder to try & discourage them as I was worried they may hurt themselves & they now sit in the feeder & tap at the window(& help themselves to the food before they fly off). After a few days they started doing it to my kitchen window & also cloakroom & front door- which are frosted- so doubtful it is because they can see their reflections & think it is a rival bird to be attacked.
We have nest boxes in the garden -although I don't think they are being used this year- but they are nesting in a vent outside the kitchen.
We have no wooden frames so they cannot be after anything living on the windows & it is only the glass they peck at. It cannot be the food as it started before I put the feeder on the window & there are plenty of bird feeders in the back garden anyway.
It started with just one bird but now we have several.
It's amusing the grandchildren & driving the cats potty but I'd love to know what it going on if you have any idea.
Thank you
H

whenim64 Tue 15-May-12 15:30:13

Can you give me some idea of what will attract robins to nest in the beautiful des res robin nest I have provided for them? It doesn't face the sun through the day, is at a suitable, safe height, isn't accessible by cats, isn't near the feeding station, has some cover from a pear tree and laurel bush, isn't brightly painted. I could go on....

Instead. they prefer to squeeze through the slightly open door of my out house and nest precariously in the well of an unused galvanised bucket! I converted this room to make a potting shed and house my garden hose reel, so can't go in there now until they fledge.

What can I do to attract them to their purpose built nest nest time?

jeni Tue 15-May-12 14:24:20

Why do the great tits in the garden build a nest, lay eggs and then abandon it? This has happened for the last two years running.

GeraldineGransnet (GNHQ) Tue 15-May-12 14:21:05

Ever wondered why birds build their nests the way they do? Why they sing at dawn? Whether two months of rain could upset their breeding patterns? Peter Holden MBE, author of the RSPB Handbook of British Birds and RSPB Handbook of Garden Wildlife, will be joining us on 28 May for a live webchat. We have 10 copies of his latest book, Birds: A Hidden World to give away to gransnetters who post on the thread.