Category Archives: water birds

Untidy Birds

It’s not all that uncommon to come across a bird that has lost some of its facial or head plumage (I posted a similar shot a few years ago), but it was slightly bizarre to see two bald birds within a few minutes of each other.

The first one was a blackbird. I suspect it’s a juvenile (rather than a female). The second blackbird (in the background of the first shot) was entirely normal.

Blackbird with bald head

Blackbird with bald head

The second was a great tit, looking extremely tatty. If you look closely you can see most of the facial feathers are missing.

Bald great tit

It’s difficult to identify a cause in single sightings. One possibility is a slightly erratic moult, which is certainly feasible at this time of year. Mites or ticks can also cause baldness, though ticks are usually visible. Generally the feathers will re-grow in a few weeks, so the condition is likely to be temporary.

Thankfully not all the birds were in quite such an unkempt state, though this young thrush was having some difficulty clearing away some webbing that had become attached to it.

Thrush cleaning webbing

It took a juvenile blue tit to provide a decent photo of a tidy bird. Seems late in the season, but there it was.

blue tit fledgling

At least the herring gulls were behaving impeccably as they marched out of the pond and on to the sandy bank.

marching herring gulls

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

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The Black Gulls

The local gull population is made up predominantly of herring gulls, but we do have several other species locally. The great black backed gulls, the largest of the native gulls, tend to stay close to the coast but the lesser black backed gulls do come inland, and we’ve had two or three pairs nesting on the roofs at work. Gulls being gulls they also visit the local pond at Falmer Village, which is where I took this short sequence early today.

Lesser black-backed gull

Lesser black-backed gull

Lesser black-backed gull

Lesser black-backed gull

The lesser black-backed gull is relatively rare around here (I’ve seen plenty of them along the Thames in central London). A more numerous visitor is the small black-headed gull. They do of course frequent the coast, but they often also appear in small flocks on the Downs; and at the pond.

Black-headed gull

Yes, its head is brown, not black.

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

Also posted in Wildlife Tagged , |

Heron at Falmer Pond

Another short post, with some of my better attempts at photographing the heron that is currently a regular over at Falmer Pond. The wading and flight photos were taken on Thursday. The one of it perched in the tree was part of a sequence I took on Friday morning.

heron

heron

heron

heron

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

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