Yes I've wondered this myself. Chris Packham was gravely announcing on Winter Watch the shocking extent that bird populations have declined, and while I don't doubt the decline for a second, I do wonder how the data is compiled and whether it takes into account things like the sample timescale. Because as you say, one weekend of high winds across the nation and all of a sudden those gardens are probably looking very different indeed to how they normally do.
Well it looks like the bird feeders have hardly been touched ! There doesn't seem to be the same numbers of birds around .
Is it the weather ? Saturday morning was a complete wash out as the wind was too strong . Any birds that were flying were having trouble . The afternoon brightened up but the birds didn't return .
Yesterday birds visited our garden but the numbers weren't representative of what we normally get. On a normal day our bird feeders would be half empty . The Blackbird and Goldfinch numbers are down . The Goldfinches could be feeding elsewhere but the Blackbird numbers are half of what we usually get . Wagtail numbers are non existent. We used to get 3 to 4. Only 1 Robin ! Hardly any Starlings or Sparrows.
So what are they going to get from these figures ? Should they hold it again ?
As I clicked the 'reply' tab, I've got 3 to 4 (it's varying), BLUE TITS on my feeder outside my bedroom-balcony.
More Blackbirds than I've ever seen here too, which is a result, as they use a 'Suet Block' Feeder - (not the same as above)
But the MAIN reason I clicked-in here, is.....
Good News ; I've just seen our FIRST fully fledged Baby Blue Tit , wings "shivering" (as young new fledglings do)
It's like, she's fanning her wings 'a million times a second', to attract her Mum & Dad to feed her - Really CUTE !!!!
We've got an acre, much of it heavily wooded, not far from the North Sea, but still inland, overlooking open fields.
Terrain-wise, it's really just a bit of everything, with a 1,000 yr-old Church across the road, so we get all sorts
Bizarrely, Blue Tits & Great Tits aside, my most commonly seen bird, is a HUGE RED KITE
We've been lucky to've had a HUGE population 'explosion' of them round here, over the last 15-years.
There was talk of re-introducing the 'Sea Eagle' 10-miles down the road, at Snettisham Scalp, but it's been temp' shelved !
Depresses me tho', when I hear that other parts of the U.K have NOT been so productive, bird-wise.
They definitely brighten up the scenery around here & we've no shortage of 'bird-reserves' nearby
I've even got one of the R.S.P.B Wardens that lives at the back of our field (& helps me to I.D some of the rarer species.
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