Category Archives: Behaviour

New chicks, fledglings and some colourful adults

It really was a good day today. Warm sunshine, and so much to see. I gathered far too many photos so what’s here barely scratches the surface. I’ll try to keep things simple.

The day started down at Falmer Pond where I took some lovely shots of a trio of juvenile moorhens, and one or two of the heron. No room for any of those. Instead I’ll open with a photo of the male great spotted woodpecker.

Great spotted woodpecker

I did get one or two shots of the chicks high in their tree, but nothing to improve on yesterday’s photos, so I’ll leave those out.

Staying on the woodpecker theme, the much larger green woodpecker is also quite active. I saw this one (another male) in the woods at lunchtime.

Green woodpecker

The big news though is that the local colony of herring gulls have been busy and we have lots of new chicks on the roofs at work. This first photo is by the car park.

Herring gulls and chicks

And this little family group is nesting outside a window of one of the main buildings. She has three chicks, and produced a simialr clutch in the same location last year.

Herring gulls and chicks

Herring gulls and chicks

Herring gulls and chicks

We also have two breeding pairs of lesser black backed gulls. No sign of their chicks yet, but they were a couple of weeks or so behind the herring gulls in 2013. It will be interesting to see if there’s a similar gap this year.

Finally, a short sequence of blue tits, a bird I’m paying close attention to at the moment. The fledglings are getting to that very active and demanding) stage and were hopping between the feeding station and the surrounding trees. This is a very small selection from today’s photos.

blue tit fledgling

blue tit fledgling

blue tit fledgling

blue tit fledgling

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

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Great Spotted Woodpecker special

As I drew into the car park at work this morning my attention was grabbed by the incessant calling of young birds. I eventually located the source, high in one of the boundary trees. The unmistakeable home of a great spotted woodpecker (Dendrocopos major). I could hear the young, but couldn’t see them.

Woodpecker holes

I was back there at lunchtime and spent a fruitless hour staring up into the tree. The calling was continuous, and by watching the adult I eventually figured out that the young were lurking somewhere slightly higher up the branch. Cue walking round a tree for five minutes. No luck. They are certainly up there, but the higher branches are shrouded with leaf cover and I suspect the current nesting point is on the upper side of the limb. Try as I might I saw absolutely nothing.

As the end of my lunch hour approached I headed back to work, pausing by a small area at the other side of the car park. Some small birds were on a feeder, and then – finally – a woodpecker appeared. It’s the male and was busy tapping away at a tree, presumably in search of insects. Perfect!

Great spotted woodpecker

Great spotted woodpecker

Great spotted woodpecker

Great spotted woodpecker

Great spotted woodpecker

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

Also posted in Birds, Wildlife Tagged |

Spiderlings and Slow Worm

Another garden post, but not for those who don’t like spiders (or even baby spiderlings). This seems to be the time of year when the common garden spider babies are making their presence known. A host of them have appeared scattered across the garden hedge, in small balls hidden in fine webbing.

spiderlings

The clumps are varied in size, but all of them are home to a thousand eyes and at least a thousand legs. 😉 These (or a small number them) will grow into the common garden spider (Araneus diadematus), the female of which is the large orb spider often seen sitting in a large classic web during the autumn months. In the galleries there’s a short sequence of their mating ritual.

spiderling

spiderling

spiderling

If spiders aren’t your thing, I suspect legless lizards (aka the slow worm) aren’t going to be either. But I could be wrong. This beauty was crawling across the patio yesterday afternoon.

Slow worm with tongue flicking out

Slow worm with tongue flicking out

Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100mm f/2.8L macro IS USM lens, apart from the first photo which was taken with the EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

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