A Year in the Valley

A Year in the Valley

Discovering the flora and fauna in a small square of Portmellon Valley

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  • Mistle Thrush

    Mistle Thrush

    Friday was a good day with herons and sunshine.  I also managed to get a photo of a mistle thrush.  It came to land on our shed roof and at first I thought it was the female blackbird, but then I saw spots!    I noticed it again this morning on next door’s lawn which gave me a chance to see it hopping around.

    There are two main types of thrush, given that it’s unlikely that the winter migrants – the fieldfare and redwing – would be spotted this far south. 

    That leaves us with the Song Thrush and Mistle Thrush.  This is why I think it’s a mistle thrush:

    1. I originally assumed it was a blackbird, which is around the size of a mistle thrush.  The song thrush is slightly smaller.
    2. The c-shaped markings on the side of its neck are more pronounced on a mistle thrush, together with a slightly pale cheek patch.
    3. The spots on its breast are rounder and more club-shaped than the angular arrow-head spots on a song thrush.
    4. The spots are also more random on a mistle thrush and tend to join up at the flanks to form dark patches.  On the song thrush they are arranged in roughly vertical lines.
    5. The mistle thrush has a more upright stance than the lower crouching song thrush.  When it was standing on the sloping shed roof, it was more difficult to tell.  But on the next door’s lawn, I could see that it was tall and lean-looking.
    6. Also, in flight the mistle thrush has white underwings and tail edging, whereas the song thrush has a slightly orange tint under its wings (not like the red flash of the redwing though) and a shorter dark tail.  Here’s an edited version of the above photograph, which is a bit clearer:

    In the garden today, I’m still watching the plants in the mud to see if they flower or grow a bit more so that I can properly identify them.  So far, they are not doing anything much.  The cyclamen-type plant is still not flowering and is getting buried under mulchy grass.  I noticed bees flying around today, both large fluffy ones and smaller ones (not close enough to identify).

    Out of the kitchen window, I saw a large bird of prey flying up over the house; the kestrel perching on the power line; magpies and crows over on the hillside; and seagulls flying up the valley in groups and singly.  The valley is a busy corridor for birds, especially gulls and it appears that they are using it all day long, not just at the morning and evening rush hours. I saw a great thrashing and splashing in the stream and got quite excited, but it was only Mr Mallard, who had to rest on the bank for half an hour afterwards.

    Daisy D

    24 January 2024
    Birds
    Mistle Thrush

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