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http://www.rspb.org.uk/birdwatch/
Anyone doing it ? I am so lucky that the garden i look after at work has an abundant and varied bird life. Among the guests in the garden are a very large colony of blue and coal tits, Jenny wrens, Robins which follow me around for food, lots of blackbirds, mistle thrushes, collared doves, wood and ferral pidgeons, a family of crows which follow me around when i feed the fish and a large colony of noisy Jays.
I also have a very large Herring Gull which eats all my goldfish and there has been a little egret land there too.
No best answer has yet been selected by andyjevs. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks for the reminder Andy, i certainly will have a crack at it, i'am lucky enough to have some ancient oak and hornbeam woodland to the back of me and some open farmland to the front and a few small wetland areas. have a well stocked bird feeding station in the garden, which i have recorded up to 20 species of birds in some years. I think the rarest bird i ever saw was a black cap, a couple of summers ago.
Jules, I hope the birds soon get used to your new table in your garden, with plenty of tastey treats, they have been going mad for sunflower seeds in my garden lately. Happy spoting folks..
Thanks for the reminder andy. Yes I will be doing it, my garden is getting busier by the day now, although the sudden dip in temperature has made it feel like spring is still a long way off. I can bet I'll be seeing, amongst a varied assortment of visitors, the four young, fine, dandy blackbirds who are battling it out at the moment. I've noticed they are here very early & stay much later in the afternoon now & they're taking it in turns to stand on tiptoe on the window sill to attract my attention when the currant supply has run out.
I'll be patrolling the area before I start with a loud hailer warning all the local moggies that they'd better scarper or I'll be after them with a monsoon force water pistol!!
I'll be taking part again. The RSPB send me a reminder as I have previously supported it. Unfortunately, I don't think it will be as exciting as last year as I havn't seen any finches for several months now and no long-tailed tits have been seen all year. I think the milder weather has meant that ample food is still available in the countryside and they haven't been driven into town gardens to survive. I could go up to the local park and do it there but all my previous submissions have been for my garden, so I'll stick with that.
Here's hoping for good weather.
Always do it. And dont forget Springwatch either!!
Bird population hasnt been so high this winter though did have a goldcrest drop in yesterday. Think that there has been plenty of food elsewhere. So much for the hardest winter in living memory that was predicted. The RSPB reserve where I do volunteer wardening hasnt anywhere near the usual number of overwintering wildfowl this winter. Still- looking forward to August when me and the missus will be on a working holiday on the RSPB reserve Ramsey Island- only forty visitors a day allowed and when they have gone home in the evening you get a whole island to yourself!