The Safari has had a couple of visits to the North Pier Starling roost to see if there was any murmuraing happening.
The first evening we were treated to a spectacular sunset and as the Starlings flew in we did our best to estimate the flock size and kept a tally in our head - we ended up with a very rough 'count' of 18,750.
The sunset wasn't quite so vivid for our visit the following evening but shaped up quite nicely for a few minutes. The Starlings put on a better performance too, bunching up quite nicely at times.
Annoyingly the best of the shapes were thrown when the flock was against the dark clouds |
Once the light had gone we walked back to the car but looking back we saw more birds arriving and making better shapes. The plan in future might be to watch more ditantly from the prom to the north to see if that gives a better vantaage point from which to watch the swirling flock. We tried that this evening but all the small arriving flocks did was to dive straight under the pier deck on to their roosting ledges. Maybe the strong wind made them disinclined to murmurate.
In other news the bird feeders at Base Camp have been quite and unusually the most frequent visitor has been a Dunnock. It's on odd one as it thinks it's a Blue Tit or maybe a Greenfinch. It's not often they use hanging feeders and even then it's by far more likely they'll use an open port feeder than a mesh one but ours doesn't seem to like the suet pellets infused with mealworms in that feeder but chooses the sunflower hearts in the mesh feeder. The two feeders are only inches apart so it's not as if one is more difficult to access from the nearest branches.
Pics taken in dreadfully dull conditions through the kitchen window so not up to much! |
Now the big question is - is this the same individual as this one from autumn 2016???
At Base Camp but we've moved the feeders closer to the windows |
Does anyone else have that do this rather than use an supposedly 'easier' type of feeder? Here's a pic my mate RL took a few years ago of one on an 'easy' feeder.
Where to next? We're rather hoping the nearby Purple Heron will be re-found so a twitch might well be on the cards.
In the meantime let us know which wrong birds are dangling off your feeders in your outback.
1 comment:
Did you know there's a 12 word sentence you can tell your partner... that will trigger intense emotions of love and instinctual appeal for you buried inside his chest?
That's because deep inside these 12 words is a "secret signal" that triggers a man's impulse to love, admire and care for you with all his heart...
12 Words Who Fuel A Man's Desire Instinct
This impulse is so built-in to a man's brain that it will make him try better than before to build your relationship stronger.
In fact, fueling this dominant impulse is so binding to achieving the best ever relationship with your man that once you send your man one of the "Secret Signals"...
...You will instantly find him open his soul and heart for you in such a way he never experienced before and he'll recognize you as the only woman in the universe who has ever truly appealed to him.
Post a Comment