Looks like something's taken a bite out of bunny's ear!Not quite in the garden but just over the fence. A few visitors to the railway yesterday morning.
Makes me wonder if the RSPB has a "What class of DMU is that?" topic on its forum.
Amazing the range of knowledge available on this site and I enjoy the diversions topics take. Makes me wonder if the RSPB has a "What class of DMU is that?" topic on its forum.
My apologies for a missed opportunity, getting the Box Brownie into position took too long.
Today, just before the snow at around noon, I looked up from the workbench in the workshop to be confronted by piercing, brilliant orange, eyes - about 8" above a pair of Chrome yellow claws - a Sparrow Hawk was sitting on the garden fence about ten feet from the window. I put the first sighting in January (the original post which prompted this topic) down to a bird blown off-course or out of its domicile territory... this second sighting may suggest that there is a bird (or birds) living closer to hand.
On the subject of bird tables, today I prepared the post - all 5ft 6" of it - for our new bird table:
View attachment 141682
It was headed for the scrap bin which seemed a crying shame, and will soon go a nice shade of rust.
I don't think a conventional wooden top will look right, so I need to find a suitable ferrous item to re-purpose.
On one side we have garden birds, on the other side we have the woodland species, so this one will be for the big birds.
Its heavy - impossible to lift even one end by hand - and it certainly won't blow over in a hurry!
A scale ruler attached to the feeder would be useful for sizing.
The grey beak says it's a Rook. Whilst not a usual garden visitor they are once they know there is easy food.
A Rook with a back beak is a Carrion Crow.
There's a simple Norfolk way of telling if it is a rook.
Dew yew see a rook on his own, tha's a crow.
Dew yew see a crowd 'a crows, they'll be rooks.