It’s actually a female Cirl Bunting. The yellow underbelly is not easily recognisable in females. The pic could also be of a juvenile.
Kudos goes to Wing Commander Leuth though for identifying as one of the Buntings.
Cirl Buntings are in sharp decline and only a few pairs in The UK, which is its most northerly location. It can be seen in a few places in Devon/Cornwall.
It’s actually a female Cirl Bunting. The yellow underbelly is not easily recognisable in females. The pic could also be of a juvenile.
Kudos goes to Wing Commander Leuth though for identifying as one of the Buntings.
Cirl Buntings are in sharp decline and only a few pairs in The UK, which is its most northerly location. It can be seen in a few places in Devon/Cornwall.
fck me I was going to say cirl bunting … I actually was. And before any other Mention of any other bunting. But when other buntings were dismissed I didn’t bother. Someone give me a like. I knew.
3 pages in, and I'm impressed no-one's mentioned jizz yet...
(that's about the limit of my birdwatching knowledge, and even that comes from here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1H92EPyxDBk
One from yesterday. I think some will get it pretty easily, but I hope it's a reasonable test at an intermediate level.
Some sort of godwit. We have eastern bar tailed godwits visit our shores from Siberia (!!!!) every year . They fly non stop and lose a third of their body weight or some such . Longest migration on the planet . Any further and they are practically on the way back. Incredible little fckrs. Love em . They do go back at the end of summer.
This is where everyone says 'ooh ooh ptarmigan!' but it's actually a white-phase Willow Grouse EDIT no it IS a (rock) ptarmigan, viz. the following extract: the male willow ptarmigan lacks the rock ptarmigan's black stripe between the eyes and bill.
This is where everyone says 'ooh ooh ptarmigan!' but it's actually a white-phase Willow Grouse EDIT no it IS a (rock) ptarmigan, viz. the following extract: the male willow ptarmigan lacks the rock ptarmigan's black stripe between the eyes and bill.
Very good
I currently have Gold Finches in my garden - lovely little things - re-filled our feeders this morning, and they were watching me and twittering away - I imagined them saying to each ‘about bloody time, you lazy git, should have done that yesterday’ !!
A lovely bubbling call they have too. Rightly known as a collective charm. The past 20 years have seen them go from an occasional sighting to ubiquitous in suburban London
Comments
Looks like there's hundreds of the little buggers
Kudos goes to Wing Commander Leuth though for identifying as one of the Buntings.
Cirl Buntings are in sharp decline and only a few pairs in The UK, which is its most northerly location. It can be seen in a few places in Devon/Cornwall.
fck me I was going to say cirl bunting … I actually was. And before any other Mention of any other bunting. But when other buntings were dismissed I didn’t bother. Someone give me a like. I knew.
(that's about the limit of my birdwatching knowledge, and even that comes from here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1H92EPyxDBk
http://rspb.org.uk/reviveourworld
I currently have Gold Finches in my garden - lovely little things - re-filled our feeders this morning, and they were watching me and twittering away - I imagined them saying to each ‘about bloody time, you lazy git, should have done that yesterday’ !!