I'm particularly fond of birds but apart from those that are very common, I'm lost when it comes to giving them a name.
The back garden regularly hosts --- Robins, Blue Tits, Coal Tits and wood pigeons.
We also have to suffer the flying rats that are seagulls on occasions.
At various times we get starlings but not many.
I'm ok with this and if anything else comes into sight I try to identify it using 'old faithful', British Wildlife.
So, yesterday morning I went to the kitchen to do some washing up.
Out of the window I saw, out of the corner of my eye, a wood pigeon standing on the back fence.
So I carried on washing up.
Hang on though.
That's no right.
It's wearing 'trousers'.
It had heavily feathered legs almost to its feet.
And they weren't feet but talons.
And that beak belongs to a raptor.
And that's no more a wood pigeon than I am.
I called my Wife into the kitchen to see it but she wasn't impressed.
Firstly she couldn't spot it. Then when it moved to a different spot and she did she just said that it was a regular.
Is she right OR is she too confusing it with a wood pigeon?
I went to get my camera, but by the time I returned it was flying off, (towards Backhouse Park).
I THINK it was a Peregrine Falcon.
So, my question to anyone with a knowledge of our feathered friends is -
Could this have been a Peregrine Falcon, (or any other of the raptors), and might it be living locally?
The back garden regularly hosts --- Robins, Blue Tits, Coal Tits and wood pigeons.
We also have to suffer the flying rats that are seagulls on occasions.
At various times we get starlings but not many.
I'm ok with this and if anything else comes into sight I try to identify it using 'old faithful', British Wildlife.
So, yesterday morning I went to the kitchen to do some washing up.
Out of the window I saw, out of the corner of my eye, a wood pigeon standing on the back fence.
So I carried on washing up.
Hang on though.
That's no right.
It's wearing 'trousers'.
It had heavily feathered legs almost to its feet.
And they weren't feet but talons.
And that beak belongs to a raptor.
And that's no more a wood pigeon than I am.
I called my Wife into the kitchen to see it but she wasn't impressed.
Firstly she couldn't spot it. Then when it moved to a different spot and she did she just said that it was a regular.
Is she right OR is she too confusing it with a wood pigeon?
I went to get my camera, but by the time I returned it was flying off, (towards Backhouse Park).
I THINK it was a Peregrine Falcon.
So, my question to anyone with a knowledge of our feathered friends is -
Could this have been a Peregrine Falcon, (or any other of the raptors), and might it be living locally?