Gransnet forums

Chat

Lovely birds and rare sightings

(106 Posts)
nanna8 Sat 03-Jan-26 10:11:12

Today I saw 4 black swans on the sea near our house. They are not rare or anything but I had never, ever seen them there before and I felt so happy and privileged. Any unusual sightings of wildlife, birds or animals, where you live?

petra Mon 05-Jan-26 12:25:16

When we lived onboard we fed a lot of Swans.
If there was no food there for them the cheeky buggers would tap on the porthole in the bathroom.
I was actually on the toilet one day when one of them decided to do this. That porthole was only about 2 foot from my face.
The we had the ducks who would rattle their feeding tin if it was empty.
One day we rescued a swimming chicken.
We have rescued 2 frozen birds. One was a sparrow hawk. It was on a fence pole and just let my partner take hold of him and put him inside his anorak.
The other frozen bird was a seagull frozen to the ground. We took him home and run a Luke warm bath.

Foxyferret Mon 05-Jan-26 13:51:03

Long tailed tits in my garden on the sunflower hearts feeders which is a bit unusual. We have plenty of goldfinch, tits and a Robin. Lots of feeders and ground food out and 3 birdbaths which I empty at night. It saves me having to break the ice in them every morning.

Cabowich Mon 05-Jan-26 14:18:22

We're lucky enough to live in an area where short-eared owls fly, and I saw one yesterday - a lovely sight.

Grandma70s Mon 05-Jan-26 14:46:35

The best thing I’ve ever seen in my garden was a humming bird hawk moth. I thought it was a bird at first! It was hovering over the valerian.

MayBee70 Mon 05-Jan-26 14:51:20

Greyduster

*MayBee70*, yes, that’s true of many birds of prey. Buzzards look huge on the wing and I always thought they were until I saw one perched on a fence post and was surprised how small it was.

I saw two buzzards work together to ambush another bird or animal once. When I lived in Cornwall I often used to see them on top of fence posts and when I see one bird flying I always look for the other one. When me and my daughter both had tiny puppies we were worried that there were more buzzards around than usual but, in my daughter’s case, the crows and rooks saw them off. Mind you, it was probably just a coincidence as they are mainly carrion eaters. I read last night that the reason why rooks have lighter faces is that they dig around for worms etc so, like vultures, they don’t want feathers around their faces as they would pick up dirt and debris.

MayBee70 Mon 05-Jan-26 14:53:13

Grandma70s

The best thing I’ve ever seen in my garden was a humming bird hawk moth. I thought it was a bird at first! It was hovering over the valerian.

We were on holiday in Italy many years ago and my son took me to see a humming bird hawk moth that he and his friends were watching. They are amazing.

SueDonim Mon 05-Jan-26 15:19:39

Your story about the swan and the porthole reminded of my DD’s experience, Petra. She was staying at a friend’s house and went into the bathroom one morning, to come face to face with a peacock peering in through the window! A peahen, to be more accurate. Even more astonishing, the peahen disappeared for a few weeks and they thought a fox might have got her. She reappeared one day with five peababies in tow! Where she found a peacock in the wilds of Scotland, no one knows. grin

TanaMa Mon 05-Jan-26 15:38:01

Unfortunately I don't get red kites around me as the forest opposite us home to families of buzzards. When they have young, they circle my fields and their cries sound like babies crying! The long tailed tit only visits for a short time during Spring, although all the other tits, greater spotted woodpecker, blackbirds, wrens, robins and many other birds are regular visitors. Costs me a fortune for feed in the Winter!!!

Witzend Mon 05-Jan-26 15:43:19

The most exciting one I ever saw was a hoopoe, pecking in the grass just outside a BiL’s place in France. Previously I’d only very rarely seen them in Cyprus. Burgundy is certainly not their usual territory! They are spectacularly distinctive birds.

Allira Mon 05-Jan-26 16:09:36

Driving on a rough road in N Queensland, a cassowary decided to stop in the middle of the road. We just waited until he/she had moved on. Best not to argue with a cassowary.

missdeke Mon 05-Jan-26 16:28:47

I had a blackbird nesting in my small garden ( only 7 metres deep and a sparrowhawk flew down to attack. The blackbird flew down and attacked the sparrowhawk and chased it away. I was sitting a couple of metres from it, magical!

madeleine45 Mon 05-Jan-26 16:40:18

I used to see great crested grebes in the lake at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park and when you walked down through the Henry Moores and Barbara Hepworths you got to this lovely lake at the bottom.

A couple of years ago , cant remember exactly when, there was quite a fuss as a pair of Bee Eaters came to somewhere near Bishop Auckland and I went to see them several times. The local RSPB people were doing a sterling job organising things so that the birds were not disturbed but were visible. They kindly brought bigger telescopes etc and I know many children were introduced to the wonders of bird watching. As an ex teacher I know how difficult it is to teach children to use a telescope or binoculars as you cant set it up for your eyes, only explain the best you can and let them try until they get the idea. So it was lovely to see so many children excited to see these lovely birds.At that time I think they were the furthest north that they had been seen.

Allira Mon 05-Jan-26 16:43:01

Oh brilliant! I've seen a sparrow taken by a sparrowhawk and also a large, fast pigeon, disposed of in a very short time just leaving a pile of feathers.

Blackbirds nest in our winter jasmine which has got some ivy (from the garden behind us) entangled in it. I should get out there and get rid of the ivy before the blackbird come back but it's a bit chilly out there.

Allira Mon 05-Jan-26 16:47:25

That post was to missdeke

How exciting, madeleine45. What lovely birds - just found this image online.

MayBee70 Mon 05-Jan-26 17:07:35

Allira

Oh brilliant! I've seen a sparrow taken by a sparrowhawk and also a large, fast pigeon, disposed of in a very short time just leaving a pile of feathers.

Blackbirds nest in our winter jasmine which has got some ivy (from the garden behind us) entangled in it. I should get out there and get rid of the ivy before the blackbird come back but it's a bit chilly out there.

At my partners the Sparrowhawk hides in the hedge next to the bird feeder to ambush the poor little birds. It often gets a pigeon, too but all we see are the remains of a few few feathers.

Allira Mon 05-Jan-26 17:08:36

fast that should have read fat!
I watched it demolish the pigeon.

Geordiegirl1 Mon 05-Jan-26 17:47:17

I’m almost sure I heard a song thrush near my daughters on two consecutive days!

DG45 Mon 05-Jan-26 20:14:39

We moved to a GFF where a big tree attracts magpies/crows
and 3 jays which I have never seen before, also 11 seagulls in september trying to peck at yellow weeds.
I'm looking forward to other birds as the new year carries on
I feel like joining the RSPB!

MayBee70 Mon 05-Jan-26 21:58:20

I have seen very few Jays in my life even though they are, I believe, quite common. Beautiful birds. I was staying at a house outside London and a Jay followed the same flight path at exactly the same time every afternoon. In fact, I think that’s the only one I’ve ever seen.

Kate1949 Mon 05-Jan-26 22:08:08

A canal runs along the top of my sister's garden. She often gets uninvited guests popping in.

Grandma70s Mon 05-Jan-26 22:34:21

Witzend

The most exciting one I ever saw was a hoopoe, pecking in the grass just outside a BiL’s place in France. Previously I’d only very rarely seen them in Cyprus. Burgundy is certainly not their usual territory! They are spectacularly distinctive birds.

I envy you. I’ve always wanted to see a hoopoe.

4allweknow Mon 05-Jan-26 23:19:42

Saw a hummingbird on my Buddleia in September.

Nannytopsy Tue 06-Jan-26 00:33:59

My dad saw a hoopoe in southern England several years ago. There is a local sparrow hawk which patrols around here. I wish it would take a few more wood pigeons - we have a growing number!

Tuinoma Tue 06-Jan-26 06:46:03

Witzend your mention of a hoopoo brought back memories. We used to get hoopoos in our garden in france and however much I got used to seeing them a cple of times most days i still got that thrill that something so exotic and outlandishly gorgeous was just there for me to see close up.
We also had a regular long eared owls which decided to nest in a small group of large conifers at the bottom of our garden. It bordered on extensive field and woodlands so they picked a good spot to hunt from. They produced 3 young and managed to rear them to nearly being ready to fly when the male just disappeared, the female struggled and then also failed to turn up. Sadly the youngsters didn't survive...nature can be cruel. It felt devastating after watching all that effort from so close up but our lives were so enriched by all this going on and now having those memories..

Greyduster Tue 06-Jan-26 07:11:24

I’ve been a birdwatcher most of my life and have seen, I think, most of our native species at one time or another but the most exciting thing I saw was a waxwing. Not on a reserve, or out in the wilds, but sitting on a tv arial opposite our last house. They are very distinctive. It stayed there for some time and then departed. It was a hard winter that year and there was a glut of berries for the birds to feed on. I haven’t seen another one since and probably never will again.