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- Mar 1, 2010
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Nobody saw any owls.
Nobody saw any owls.
Sorry chaps. Daytime survey = joke.
Actually I do like owls and kept them before you needed a licence Clive.
How close was that Raven? They are big and shy aren't they? They seam to be extending their range as we get them honking over the house on the outskirts of Stourbridge. Also saw a Red Kite and Osprey recently over the garden. Buzzards nest in a tree nearby. We used to have to travel to Wales in the 70's to see those.
Plenty of Red Kites along the M40 Clive. There's a feeding station somewhere along that route.
They ain't no ravens Clive. They sound like hooded crows to me. Ravens are huge and very shiny black all over. If they took food out of your hand they would take your hand as well. Sometimes, obviously in a Raven area, they will kill a sheep if it's got stuck on it's back. They just tear it to bits. A friend of mine lost several sheep this way in Cornwall. Isolated area so he waited and shot a dozen. Long time ago and he died so no come back now.
There's an old country saying to tell the difference between Crows and Rooks Clive, dunno about Ravens though,Happy to accept they’re not Ravens Frank, maybe hooded crows,
.Good pictures of great tits Clive. Very clear.
Yes lots of owls in France Steve. Plenty of nesting sites and also their food both of which we are running out of in England. When we drive through France we often see both Tawny and Barn owls dead at the side of the road after being hit by cars.
Steve you might have Golden Orioles where you are. Difficult to spot. If you google their call you'll find it very distinctive and if you memorise it you might well hear it especially by poplar plantations off rivers but more especially by rivers or water. You can wait quietly and they may be coming towards you. If so you'll probably see the female first followed by the DAZZLING gold and black male. 2 seconds and they've disappeared. Now is the time of year they'll start to call.
Rooks also have the walnut as we call them on the base of the beak. Carrion crows as you rightly say are normally lonesome birds or hunt as a breeding pair. Trapped and shot hundreds over the years whilst keeping my shoot.There's an old country saying to tell the difference between Crows and Rooks Clive, dunno about Ravens though,
A Crow in a crowd is a Rook and a Rook on its own is a Crow.
There is another way but you'd never get close enough to tell, one has smooth legs the other has rough legs
One of Clive’s passions I believe…Good pictures of great tits Clive. Very clear.