Entries in Birds (207)

Friday
Jun242005

A Common Tern

This morning at 06:40am a common tern, swallow-like and red-beaked, flew along the Kennet loop, eastwards past Reading prison.

I have occasionally seen common terns of the Kennet before. Once, I was with Zoe when one did a spectacular dive into the river and then flew up and off again.

Tuesday
Jun142005

Coots Building 'Second Nests'

Over the last week, I have on two occasions seen coots on the river Kennet building what appeared to be 'second nests'. 

The first time I saw this was when I saw one of the pair that had brought up two chicks on the nest near Highbridge Wharf started piling up strips of greenery under the boat traffic light just east of the Duke Street bridge.  The pair's two chicks seemed to be joining in, well one of them was standing on top of the pile.  At first I thought they had decided to move nest but after a day or so I saw that the new nest had disintegrated and they were back at their old nest again.

Then, this morning I saw that one of the coots from the nest at the mouth of Gunter's Brook was carefully draping strips of greenery over a log that had become fixed near the river bank.  It was placing the strips apparently quite deliberately, while its solitary chick looked on.

My first thought was this building of second nests could be the way that the parents teach their chicks how to build nests.  Another possibility is that these piles of greenery are food stores, however, this is less likely because there seems no reason to build them away from the main nest. 

Monday
Jun132005

Four Herons

This evening I saw four herons standing in a group on the west side of the lake near Frimley station.  They were only a few metres from each other.  Maybe they were a family?   One of them looked smaller and darker than the others.

Friday
Jun032005

Carrion Crow taking an Ant-Bath

Yesterday I noticed a carrion crow (Corvus corone corone) behaving rather strangely on the lawn at the front of our flats.  It was sitting down in the grass with its wings slightly extended sideways, as if it was sunning itself -- but the Sun was not shining.  I though it rather strange, but I had other things to do, so I soon forgot about it.

Well, today, what I presume was the same bird was doing exactly the same thing but in a slightly different spot.  Then a car slowly drove past and the crow stood up and ambled further away from the road, waiting until the car was gone before returning to precisely the same patch of grass to sit down again.  Then it occurred to me that I had often seen ants in the grass down there, so I went downstairs to take a closer look.  Sure enough there was a concentration of ants in precisely the place where the crow had been sitting.  Presumably, the crow was using these ants to de-louse itself. 
When I came back in, the crow went back to the same spot to resume its ant-bath.

Thursday
May192005

A Black Wagtail

On Monday, just after mid-day, I saw a strange wagtail beside one of the wooded lakes near Farnborough North station.  It was definitely a wagtail: it was the right size and shape, and it behaved like one bobbing its tail up and down as it perched on a branch.  However, its head, neck and upper part of its chest were all black.  Its back was grey and the rest of its body was mostly black with whitish streaks here and there.  While I was watching, it repeated the call "chi-chee" several times and then it flew off into the woods.  I suppose it could have been an unusually dark pied wagtail, maybe a juvenile as these tend to have less well developed white patches than the adults.