Off Topic Vote for a National Bird (feathered variety)

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
The office I'm currently working in overlooks the Grand Union canal, and you wouldn't expect this to be a great habitat for wildlife, but it provides views of a surprising amount of waterfowl - Swans, Canada Geese and Moorhens are regularly seen and a Heron can be spotted now and then.
 
The office I'm currently working in overlooks the Grand Union canal, and you wouldn't expect this to be a great habitat for wildlife, but it provides views of a surprising amount of waterfowl - Swans, Canada Geese and Moorhens are regularly seen and a Heron can be spotted now and then.

The Grey Heron is a wonderful bird. Looks like a Pterodactyl in flight.
 
This is developing into a weird QPR/Springwatch cross over...I like it...

Do you feed the birds in your garden SB? Hanging feeders rather than a bird table or scattered food on the ground will stop the pigeons dominating the food, though they'll still hoover up any spillage on the ground. Sunflower hearts seem to be the best thing for getting a good mix of small birds in - my folks have a garden full of sparrows, finches and thrushes and use a mix of sunflower hearts and normal seed.

If you really want rid of the pigeons though I'd recommend a Fossa or a small spotted genet - might be less destructive than a leopard...
I'll investigate the feeding option, though our (very nice) neighbours have an extremely arrogant cat which likes to parade about in our garden winding the dog up into a state of frenzy when he's locked inside, so the birds may be at risk. I let the dog out once and he chased like a nutter, leaping over the wall into the neighbours garden, not realising that a 3 foot 6 jump on our side was matched by a 6 foot drop on the other. Undamaged, but very funny watching him with a 'what the **** just happened?' look on his face.

That fossa is an unattractive beast.
 
Brilliant! Living near the Thames, I see them often enough, I just don't seem to ever see them diving for a fish, other than that one time.
Do you ever get to see an Osprey on its summer migration? (You wouldn't miss one. as they're a very big bird of prey with a 5' wing span).

Never spotted one from the office but seen them fishing on the Severn before. I keep an eye out for them in the spring, I'm a bit of a bird of prey fan too.

You ever been to Spain or Gibraltar in the spring col? Well worth a trip.
 
Never spotted one from the office but seen them fishing on the Severn before. I keep an eye out for them in the spring, I'm a bit of a bird of prey fan too.

You ever been to Spain or Gibraltar in the spring col? Well worth a trip.

No I haven't mate.

Are you talking about Kingfishers or Ospreys that you've seen fishing on the Severn?
 
My mate wobbly Bill from Hereford had to cull Coromants because of the impact on the fish in the beautiful Wye. Not their fault because of the low sea stocks of fish but that's a long way inland .

I have caught chub and barbel with dreadful wounds

Bill ended up in court but won the test case some 15 years back to be allowed to send these bastards onto the next life

Mrs Bishop at Fownhope used to turn up with a boot full of bread each day for the swans ... At one point there was over 40 birds who over time turned on themselves ... Never seen chaos like it and again man had to redress the balance for the stupidity of one crazy woman who liked swans

My point is we shouldn't **** with nature it has its own rules and I think sometimes the RSPB has its actions wrong who were involved in the cases above
 
My mate wobbly Bill from Hereford had to cull Coromants because of the impact on the fish in the beautiful Wye. Not their fault because of the low sea stocks of fish but that's a long way inland .

I have caught chub and barbel with dreadful wounds

Bill ended up in court but won the test case some 15 years back to be allowed to send these bastards onto the next life

Mrs Bishop at Fownhope used to turn up with a boot full of bread each day for the swans ... At one point there was over 40 birds who over time turned on themselves ... Never seen chaos like it and again man had to redress the balance for the stupidity of one crazy woman who liked swans

My point is we shouldn't **** with nature it has its own rules and I think sometimes the RSPB has its actions wrong who were involved in the cases above

I presume you mean Cormorants?
These have been on the Thames in Oxfordshire for years. They are excellent predators and do take a lot of fish. However, the Cormorants are fishing to stay alive and your mate the Angler is presumably doing it for sport. As you say, we shouldn't mess with nature as the Cormorants are just doing what they do naturally.
 
I saw a Kingfisher this morning. Beautiful, very shy birds. I've only ever seen one dive down and catch a fish once. They can be very hard to spot sometimes, despite their bright colours.
Griffon Vultures are massive, with a wing span over 8' I believe. I don't know an awful lot about them but I do know they were re-introduced into France a few years back.

Griffons
Never spotted one from the office but seen them fishing on the Severn before. I keep an eye out for them in the spring, I'm a bit of a bird of prey fan too.

You ever been to Spain or Gibraltar in the spring col? Well worth a trip.

Gibraltar is superb for seeing migratory birds....been there a lot. My old man had a place there. England in the sun!!!!
 
As a small boy I would often watch the marsh warblers swooping in my mother's under croft, and I remember thinking would man ever dare do the same....
 
  • Like
Reactions: Congleton_QPR
Many years ago when my adult children were young, my wife and I took them the Movieworld on the Gold Coast.
It was a very hot day and the place was packed. The kids had just gone onto a ride when low and behold, I could see a park bench about 100 metres away become vacant.

Call it an act of God or whatever but with thousands of people between me and the bench, no one sat down on it.
Like a swimming pool in the middle of the desert, I had struck gold and sat proudly on my new throne, wearing a smug look of arrogance and contentment.

Before I could stop thumbing my nose at those walking past, a bird had decided to crap itself ............... on my head to be precise.
There were 10,000 guest in the park that day my friends and that magnificent magpie decended on me, to have a diarrhoea attack.
I can't tell you how privileged I felt. We left the park not long after.

Sorry, but this is the only bird story I can pass on.
Aussie
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: finglasqpr
This is a great thread, loving it.

If it wasn't for the small matter of an event in 1976, I feel Col and I could truly bond over this! <laugh><ok>