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Live for today but work for everyone's tomorrow! Any views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of any organisation/institution I am affiliated with.

Sunday 26 March 2017

Earth Hour - Badgers REV

It is 'Earth hour'. All the lights in the house are off. (I'd like to pretend that the whole neighborhood has turned its lights off as this small gesture of environmental unity, but some have seemingly  not heard.)

Out in the garden I have hidden some badger snacks under plastic pot bases. This tends to ensure that badgers but not cats find them. The badgers tend to slowly move the lids along to reveal the snacks item by tasty item. In this short video - one badger has settled down to slowly snack, another joins him and then one flips the lid and they scare themselves.



Then there were three and one clearly thinks three is too many!



A three badger night.
And a little badger wrestling here - one is stretched out on the ground munching on what she has found under a lid.... but badger two has other ideas:


And here another snippet of film showing 'food bowl' theft! The bowl holds a few left over peas and some gravy. Similar little bowls have disappeared in the past before being found in the hedgerow.


Sunday 19 March 2017

Badger meets yogurt


We have learnt previously that the garden badgers (Lardyarse and friends) will eat a variety of things (scraps from the kitchen) but really cannot be bothered with certain things, including kiwi fruit (peeled and sliced) or cucumber. 

An unwanted opened pot of yogurt was equally well received, 


The film shows no more than a couple of sniffs and possibly a  quick lick.



Two badgers are currently visiting the garden - coming in under cover of darkness.


Monday 6 March 2017

A tale of two wagtails

Pied wagtail
Do you ever find yourself looking at something that you think that you have seen many many times before and then you look more closely, and you see something new?

Wagtails come into my garden in the winter. Indeed the arrival of these little hyperactive monochrome birds, often accompanying the first flurry of snow, is confirmation for me that winter is starting to bite.

Notably they have evolved in recent years to forage on pavements and in car parks and gather in communal roosts in town centres. There is a famous tree in the middle of Bath's new Southgate shopping centre where several hundred gather each winter night. This has been going on for a few years now and they rest there quietly in the dark unseen by most passersby. These urban roosts must keep them just a little warmer than a solitary perch in the surrounding countryside.

Anyway, I am viewing my garden wagtails - who are busy chasing each other around - when I realise I am seeing two different plumages. Web-searches and bird book consultations follow and it turns out that the wagtails are complex little beasts. The classic black and white version - we call the pied wagtail (Motacilla alba -see above) is mainly British (although like all good Britains it does occasionally extend its range to the adjacent continent). It is one of a number of closely related 'sub-species' and the white wagtail with its paler back (see below) is another.
 
The grey back of a white wagtail.

White wagtail 
My old classic book - 'Complete birds of Britain and Europe' - suggest that the white wagtail (M. a. yarrellii) mainly stays in mainland Europe. However it seems to be sharing my lawn with its cousin, albeit with some squabbling.


And here a 'bonus' starling. Just because they are handsome and I am wondering how well the small flock that uses my garden in faring this winter. More about them another time.