Well if anyone wants some extra Starlings, they can have a few dozen from here - we get loads of the little blighters! In fact, I often go out to shoo them off the feeder and let the Spadgers get a look in. They make a racket, too, and they are generally little bullies.
We saw a note on the local Spar board from some geezer up the road, wanting people who have flocks of Starlings in the vicinity of their home to let him come round and count them, because they are endangered. We had a good chuckle over that one - there are hundreds, if not thousands of the little bleeders in the whole area! Here's a few, enjoying a communal bath on our old shed roof:
Talking of racket - I agree with you, Dave, that Magpies are a pain and should be deported! They make a huge racket and kill nestlings - so out with 'em, I say. We used to have several pairs nesting in the orchard behind our garden, but thankfully, they've disappeared in recent months. We do encourage our feathered friends to come into our garden (which they do, en masse) but yobbos are non grata! Long-tailed tits are one of our faves, and once a year we get a visit from a huge flock of Redwings and Fieldfares. But there's all sorts here, as you can probably imagine, on the border of the Fens. We even had a Moorhen set up camp in our conifer hedge for a week or so one year.
Long-tailed tits, after the many berries in the trees out the back:
Some of the Redwings & Fieldfares on their annual visit:
We also suffer from Sparrowhawk attacks. Such as this little blighter:
We don't like seeing our little Spadger friends being taken - and they don't half shriek, but I guess the hawks need their food, too.
As long as they don't take the rare ones, like this little (in body only - he has a very shrill "peep" sound that winds up SWMBO) Ceti's Warbler:
We aren't exactly ornithologists, but there are so many of the little things around here, you just can't help getting involved!
