Two Badgers and Fox (video)

It was too good to last. The dry spell is over and it’s been raining solidly for several hours now. The week ahead looks mixed, which may be ok.

As for tonight’s blog, the title relates to the video which will come up in a moment. It features a badger making two trips into the garden during heavy rain (this was on Friday, I think). It’s limping heavily, which if nothing else shows that it’s not only foxes that suffer from minor leg injuries. The second badger clearly isn’t limping, and looks altogether leaner than the first one. The fox in the video is (I think) Shy Boy. I’ve not seen him for a while, but he makes up the fourth of our four garden foxes: Pretty, Nicked Ear, and the one with the mange-afflicted brush are the other three.

First though a couple of photos of Pretty. The first was taken in the early hours of Sunday morning when it was dry. The second just a few minutes ago in the rain.

Fox in garden

Fox in garden

Now the video.

Camera note: both photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100mm f/2.8L macro IS USM lens.

Posted in Badger, Foxes Tagged , |

Flying High

The unexpected dry spell allowed us the chance to do some tidying up in the garden. It was sunny and there’s always something to see overhead, so I’m certainly not about to complain. The gulls are a good alarm system when I’m gardening. I don’t actually have to watch the sky, just keep an ear open for sudden silences (always worth checking out), or a near exponential increase in squawking. Both say: Raptor Alert!

Here’s the first visitor of the day, a rather fine looking buzzard that flew over late morning.

Common buzzard

I missed a sparrowhawk soon after that one, but they tend to come back and I was able to get this photo a little later in the day.

Sparrowhawk

As well as gulls and birds of prey, it can be worth watching the corvids. Jackdaws chatter overhead; and the crows have their own noisy way of making their presence known, especially if they’re not happy. I spotted a small group crows in fairly frantic flight. It appeared that they were chasing an unwelcome crow out of their territory. This is a short sequence of what happened when one of the local crows caught up with the interloper.

Two crows engaging in mid-air combat.

Two crows engaging in mid-air combat.

Two crows engaging in mid-air combat.

Two crows engaging in mid-air combat.

The shots were taken from some distance and are heavily cropped, but it was interesting to see them in mid-air combat. The birds separate in the final shot and I watched as the lead bird was chased away over the valley. The several other crows in attendance (but out of shot) circled back to nearby trees.

The final sequence is of a buzzard. It wasn’t being mobbed as such, but carefully escorted away from the area by a small squadron of herring gulls. They mainly kept their distance, but one would occasionally dart closer to remind the buzzard of their presence. The buzzard itself is interesting as it has lost a number of primary feathers. Its flight seemed unaffected, and the feathers will re-grow.

Common buzzard with missing primaries

Common buzzard with missing primaries

Common buzzard with missing primaries

Common buzzard with missing primaries

Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Posted in Bird of Prey, Birds Tagged , , , |

Badger Cull Failure

The Independent Expert Panel has confirmed what we all expected: that free-shooting of badgers doesn’t work, causes suffering, is ineffective and costly. It’s now official: the badger cull failed.

Badger Cull Failed Stop the Cull

Technically the report is still to be published, but it’s leaked and is damning in its appraisal. Whether or not the government listens is another matter, so the campaign goes on.

Posted in Badger Tagged , |