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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  • Big Garden Birdwatch 2024

    Big Garden Birdwatch 2024

    So, not a sighting today, but more of a summary.  As usual when we do the Big Garden Birdwatch, the birds were mostly taking the day off.  We scored a total of 20 birds in an hour.  We thought that was a rubbish score, really, given the number of birds that we commonly spot during the day.  The rules of this Birdwatch are that you count the highest number that you see at any one time (in case you count the same bird twice) and you don’t count birds flying over the garden, which today included five woodpigeons, a kestrel, a heron, two carrion crows and a jay. 

    The birds that landed in our garden (top garden and watermeadow combined) were: 

    Wood Pigeon x 1 – sitting on the fence in the watermeadow.

    Dunnock x 2 – hopping around under the bird feeder and shrubs.

    Little Egrets x 2 – having been fended off next door’s lake by the mallards and moorhens, they flew over the fence to pause and reconsider their plans briefly before carrying on up the valley.  It’s been a joy to see this pair every day for the last week or so and we hope they are going to choose to nest in the valley.

    Robin x 1 – there were two of them yesterday having a bundle on our patio, possibly rivals, as they are known to be fiercely territorial.

    Sparrowhawk x 1 – this was a stroke of luck!  The sparrowhawk came to perch on our fence for a while.  The kestrel was flying around, but not stopping.

    Wren x 1 – over the other side of the garden under the shrubs.

    Blackbird x 1 – over by the fruit cage.

    House Sparrows x 6, Blue Tits x 2, Great Tits x 3 – these were flying between the bird feeder, surrounding trees and the willows and sea buckthorn in the watermeadow. 

    N.B. The rules of ‘A Year in the Valley’, my rules, include birds flying over the watermeadow, as they are taking advantage of the valley’s natural corridor, which includes our patch – and it’s not a count of population, but of diversity of species.

    Daisy D

    28 January 2024
    Birds
    Blackbird, Blue Tit, Carrion Crow, Dunnock, Great Tit, Grey Heron, House Sparrow, Jay, Kestrel, Little Egret, Robin, Sparrowhawk, Wood Pigeon, Wren
  • House Sparrow

    House Sparrow

    This was a bird that I had down as ‘unidentified brown bird’.  I have now identified it as a female House Sparrow.  I mean, I call most ‘unidentified brown birds’ sparrows by default – though I’m still convinced about the dunnock that I saw earlier.  This splashy-striped, brown bird is a female sparrow because she has a chubby beak, almost finch-like in its chubbiness.  Also, the grey throat and pale eye-stripe sandwiched between two darker lines and the pale flash on her wings. 

    You can’t see her front, but it will be grey, as hinted at by her throat, with just a touch of texture.

    The dunnock on the other hand had most definite speckles on its breast.  I will try and get a better picture of it.  There was a small brown bird with a slim dark beak in the top garden.  It may have been the dunnock.  It was grubbing around in the undergrowth, like a wren, but without a sticking-up tail.  I will keep watching and waiting.

    There isn’t much else I can do at the moment, as the watermeadow is still under water!  Will we see dry land again before March?? 

    Male House Sparrow

    Daisy D

    15 December 2023
    Birds
    House Sparrow

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