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Science/nature/environment

RSPB Birdcount.

(42 Posts)
durhamjen Tue 28-Jan-14 13:05:45

Pigeons are birds and need feeding too.
On Winterwatch they asked viewers to put out cheese and apples. The birds ate the cheese but not the apples.

Tegan Tue 28-Jan-14 12:43:54

I hadn't realised that the best food for birds is grated cheese? Must put some out with the apple. Also realised that I buy cheap bird seed and they say it's mostly pigeon food and you need to buy god quality stuff [mind you, the pigeons wolf that down as well].

durhamjen Tue 28-Jan-14 12:21:43

Would you feel good about cheating, though, NFK?
Surely the whole point of the bird watch is to find out how few birds there are. If you all say I did not bother because there weren't many birds it defeats the object. I saw loads yesterday morning, but today it's raining again, so they've all gone and hidden somewhere.

NfkDumpling Tue 28-Jan-14 08:42:04

This morning the sparrows are back - two mobs, one each end of the hedge - there are three blackbirds eating apples, a couple of dunnocks and assorted tits in the walnut tree. In two minutes watching. Should I cheat and do my bird watch now?

NfkDumpling Tue 28-Jan-14 08:39:02

But at least nowadays he's in with a good chance of being taught how to manage and cope Jen - especially with you as his nan.

durhamjen Mon 27-Jan-14 23:31:24

They do it in January because then you know how many have got through the winter, and they have not started nesting yet.
Last year there was thick snow on the ground, so they needed to come to the birdfeeders. This year the weather was a lot milder, but windy, so they could stay in the woods.
I always have one or both of the grandchildren that live round the corner. This year it was my grandson, 11, autistic, so to get him to sit still for about an hour is a feat in itself. We sit on my bed and look out of the window, with birdbooks for him to go through and binoculars so he can try and count the feathers on a sparrow. Yesterday we had a discussion about what bird a vegetarian would want to come back as. Obviously he was thinking about Grandad, who would not want to be a blackbird as he would have to eat worms. We decided that Grandad could be a goldfinch, and grandson could be a greenfinch as that's his favourite colour. Even though grandson eats fish, he would not want to kill them, so could not be a kingfisher or osprey, not that we get that many of those in our garden!
It's amazing how much information you can get into your grandson's head in an hour. He could have forgotten about it today, but he does have the sort of memory to remember facts. He just does not know what to do with them when they are in his memory.

tanith Mon 27-Jan-14 22:37:57

Same here I had visitors too but the birds were almost non-existent with the rain and storm that came through as I was about to start. I gave up.

NfkDumpling Mon 27-Jan-14 22:32:45

Gave up trying. Two visiting dogs made sure the resident sparrows had moved to next doors feeders and the weather was foul. Only saw one dunnock and two blackbirds all day.

Humbertbear Mon 27-Jan-14 21:28:07

We've given up doing this. The birds always avoid our garden on the day

Charleygirl Mon 27-Jan-14 18:50:06

The birda have vanished from my garden.

ffinnochio Mon 27-Jan-14 18:46:47

IF I lived in the UK, and decided to do the bird count I would have seen this afternoon: two green woodpeckers, 4 blue tits, too many to count sparrows, 3 hungry wood pigeons and one other bird I couldn't identify - which was small, soft brown/grey and v. sweet.

annodomini Mon 27-Jan-14 18:02:50

I had a multitude of bluetits on my feeders. Difficult to count them because they fly off and come back so frequently. At the moment the collar doves are very active - lovey dovey! Perhaps they sense the approach of spring. hmm

Goose Mon 27-Jan-14 17:58:03

I do my yearly stint in the local park - there's too many cat's lurking in my garden for any life loving feathered friend to risk coming near itsad

merlotgran Mon 27-Jan-14 17:23:56

You're good, Goose. We stood at the kitchen window. grin

Goose Mon 27-Jan-14 17:17:54

I'm not sure why they pick January to do the Birdwatch. Every year I've done it the weather's been awful and all the sensible birds are snuggly hidden away, whilst I traipse around in the pouring rain and wind trying to spot them. All I saw were a few bedraggled wood pigeons and a couple of other brave folk grimly hanging onto soaked clipboards and hopefully scanning bushes and treeshmm

merlotgran Mon 27-Jan-14 17:17:07

We did but like you it was pretty hopeless this year. Our faithful greater spotted woodpecker was on the nutfeeder but all we saw was a robin, a couple of blue tits, a crow and a couple of pigeons.

Horrible weather didn't help.

durhamjen Mon 27-Jan-14 17:12:10

Did anyone else do it this weekend?
Hopeless this year. Only seven birds in an hour. However, at least Spring could be on the way as there were three pairs, blackbirds, sparrows and woodpigeons. One solitary bluetit and that was it. Usually see at least a dozen sparrows. It was raining most of the time, but I tried for another hour later on when it had stopped, and there were even fewer birds.