Showing posts with label Woodpecker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woodpecker. Show all posts

Monday, 30 January 2023

Lambs at NT Sutton Hoo, a Late Arrival to Our Feeders ... and Seasonal Signs at SWT Martlesham Wilds

Muntjac at Sutton Hoo (two of three spotted) ...

Lambs! In January! Sheer joy. And lapwings

The wobbly stage ...

Back in the garden ... this semi-regular turned up 24 hours after my count ...


Isn't he handsome?

Time for a bit of argy-bargy. Just look at the barring on the underwing.

Back at Martlesham Wilds ... the Barn Owl's view,

and the view looking in the opposite direction towards the River Deben.

Curlew, but all at quite a distance. Over 15 counted.

The humble, beautiful Daisy.

More snowdrops in Martlesham Churchyard


My first Aconite of 2023 ...


... and my first Crocus.

 

Wednesday, 3 March 2021

Great Spotted Woodpecker (and Chaffinch)

We were drinking mugs of coffee this morning when this magnificent Great Spotted Woodpecker alighted on one of our coconut feeders. We see these birds occasionally, but usually through binoculars when they are high up in one of the trees on the edge of the local nature reserve. My thanks to David, who grabbed a camera and took the first four photographs.



 
The photo below shows the red nape of the male Woodpecker's neck, and the last photo is a record shot of our first 2021 Chaffinch, a species we seldom see in the garden.


 

I haven't checked my visitor stats for a long time, so thought I would post up the current chart. It's interesting how visitors from the UK and visitors from the US are pretty evenly matched. Thank you all for visiting my virtual corner of Suffolk, UK!




Friday, 1 March 2019

First Homepatch Woodpecker of the Season


I apologise for the quality of these record shots, but they were taken yesterday (our first grey day after the beautiful sunshine) through glass and from a distance, with my zoom extended to its limit. I am posting them, however, because it was a joy to see this Great Spotted Woodpecker from my window, the first one I have seen in 2019. 





And just because I think these birds are so beautiful, here's one I took earlier a couple of years ago...


Saturday, 11 February 2017

Another Woodpecker...

Photo: 10 Feb 2017

We are having a wonderful spell of Woodpecker visitations. This one, you will notice, does not bear a prominent red patch on the nape of the neck, making her a female. I hope there will be young Woodies on the way in due course...



Wednesday, 8 February 2017

Green Woodpecker


After the excitement of yesterday's visitor, look who showed up today! 


Do you think it was after ants, grubs or other insects? I imagine its proximity to my bug hotels was purely coincidental...


Monday, 6 February 2017

Great Spotted Woodpecker

Male - on account of red nape of neck

Look who showed up after the RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch!

The woodpeckers have started drumming. I wonder whether we will have a male and female as regular garden visitors again this year.

Can anyone tell me why we have the Great Spotted Woodpecker ('Great' as opposed to 'Greater') when we also have the Lesser Spotted Woodpecker, here in the UK, please?  



Tuesday, 19 April 2016

More images from RSPB Minsmere



The Water Vole on my previous post may have been the highlight of our visit to Minsmere this last weekend, but there were many other lovely things on offer. Spring is burgeoning and the willows and birches are bursting forth. 



We were really hoping to see Bearded tits, but it was the afternoon and like a number of other birds, they were deep in the reedbeds. Every so often we heard the distinctive 'ping', but they eluded us. We were told we should get there much earlier in the day.

Bearded tit - from last year. Such fabulous birds ...

There was quite a gathering in the woods on the way to Island Mere and we were told that the excitement had been caused by a female Blackcap, not that you can tell very easily from my photo!


We nearly always hear the Green Woodpecker's yaffle. This time we only saw one, and it was a fair distance away, almost beyond the reach of my zoom, so apologies for the blurry image below. 


This handsome Snipe had perched in the reeds a short distance from the Island Mere hide.


We were able to get a good view through the open windows.



I could award these two in the photo below the 'noisy' prize, but perhaps that should go to the Little Grebe!



A couple of Marsh Harriers were flying high over us in the thermals.


The photo below shows the view from the BBC Springwatch cabin, looking down towards Island Mere. The sea is off to the left, beyond the confines of this photo, where - unfortunately - the view is rudely interrupted by the white dome of Sizewell Power Station.


The path back to the entrance to the reserve was very muddy. How about this for a sign ...


We called in at Snape Maltings on our way home, unable to resist a quick photo of the rainbow over the reedbeds ...


Tuesday, 8 March 2016

March comes in with a lion, feeling more like winter than spring

Winter and spring compete for the upper hand ...


... while the male Great Spotted Woodpecker and the tiny Blue bit share and share alike.


But will March go out like a lamb?

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

Yesterday's Visitors ... Woodpecker and Long-tailed tit


I rather like this photo, showing that the Long-tailed tit's body
 is not much larger than the Great Spotted Woodpecker's head!

I don't think the Long-tailed tit would have continued to feed
if the male Woodpecker had arrived,
but these two seemed compatible eating companions.


This photo (above) shows the lack of red on the nape of the neck, 
indicating that this is a female. 
Look at the size of the claw on the Silver Birch trunk!