Showing posts with label Red Kite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Red Kite. Show all posts

Saturday, 4 December 2021

Naturalist Blonde: Upgrade

It has been a little quiet on the NB front, I know. But, then, it's been an odd year and a bit. While I don't want to jinx us all by suggesting that things are back to normal, for us at NB towers, a new normal is starting to develop.  

So, focusing only on the good parts of the pandemic period, we moved! To what we hope will be our forever home in rural Dumfries and Galloway. We've even found a place with our own little patch of woodland to look after, resident kites and all; it's perfect.

Orchids next door

The move is part of the reason for the downtime on the blog. We have been redecorating some of the rooms in preparation for our first Christmas at home. We've also been spending the summer patching drystone walls in the garden, taking out a few worryingly leaning trees and replanting with hazel, blackthorn and guelder-rose to increase the number of species in the wood, and shifting some turf from the new herb beds to the site of a former firepit. Otherwise, we have been out walking and getting to know the surrounding area and adjusting to returning to the real world and the onset of a new term.

New hazels planted in an area of cleared bracken

One thing that I missed over the summer was the nestbox cams. I had taken them down early at the old house in preparation for the move, then we moved far too late to put them up. While I saw lots of evidence of breeding in/near to the garden (including a lovely goldfinch nest visible from the new office, the active and successful kites and wrens, and spotted flycatchers feeding fledglings at the wood edge), there isn't that much cover and scrub for breeding birds. 

I decided that we needed a few more boxes to help remedy this. Jack was in charge of starting our bird list, and I set about matching box types to birds on the list and adding in a few for dream birds which I know breed within a few miles of us (like redstart). Then I went a little mad on CJ Wildlife and Greenfeathers! As well as increasing our breeding bird numbers, my plan for the coming years is to monitor occupancy, activity and success, and use these numbers to support my teaching. Any excuse to sit in the garden with the bins, right? 

Box Haul!
This weekend I finally cracked and got down to business with siting the various nest boxes. Firstly placing the new wireless cameras in a couple of boxes, then spacing them out through the garden and wood. I was a little worried about drilling into the woodstone box that I'm hoping the redstarts will use but it was a doddle. Lugging the heavy (but hopefully immortal) woodstone boxes up the hill and getting them into position was a different matter. I'm definitely less fit than I was before lockdown began! 

Fortunately, I cheated a little in putting up the woodstone boxes, deciding to use coated bike locks to wrap around the trunk at the junction with a handy limb rather than rely on screws or nails. I am hoping that this will minimise the chance of falling as well as avoid damaging our lovely trees. Of the new boxes, I am most excited about the treecreeper box (box number nine) and an owl box (box number 10), lovingly referred to as Granny's Palace and Nana's Nest respectively.

Upgrading Granny's Palace

First box out!

"Last" box out (I need to borrow a tall ladder for the owl box)

Since moving in we've seen plenty of evidence of wildlife in the garden. On the herpetological front, we have common frogs, toads, newts and lizards. We regularly see stoats, hedgehogs, rabbits, and voles.  There are pipistrelles in the roof (and, occasionally, the bedroom). We see the odd red and (unfortunately) grey squirrel, and have even had a water shrew in the shed, but are low on larger mammals. There was a wonderful mix of fungi too. Birds-wise, we have a mix of the common, upland, and woodland species, many of which have taken to the feeders in a big way. I even flushed a woodcock from the wet area of the woods last week (but have only put the trail cam out in there this evening - what this space). 





What I haven't done is any moth trapping. I'm not sure why. Perhaps it's because Jack put the moth trap bits in the most spider-infested bit of the porch/utility. It's a shame, moth trapping was my life-savour at the start of lockdown when we were in our rented house. Hopefully, as we get into the new year I'll get back to it (before it starts getting light super early again!). Similarly, lack of lockdown (fingers crossed anyway!) and less focus on redecorating should also enable me to get back on the bird-train. Whatever life throws at us, there should be lots going on. Watch this space!

Thursday, 4 June 2020

The view from the hill: wildlife during lockdown

For the past two months, we have felt luckier than ever before. As the restrictions came in I have been able to move my teaching online, continuing to work alongside my fantastic, adaptable colleagues and persevering students. 

When not teaching or marking, Jack and I have been trying out hand at brewing and winemaking (as well as flavouring some gin), as well as focusing on the garden and fields around it for entertainment. In the good weather, we've been sowing the seeds flowering plants in the garden, enjoying the antics of the robins, wrens, tree sparrows and bluetits nesting in the garden. 

The first brood, one day before fledging

We have also had a new patch tick (grasshopper warbler) and a new garden tick (cuckoo!), as well as amazing interactions with some of our local mammals, particularly the weasels and hares.

A wonderful neighbour has also been kind enough to give us had a number of carcasses (and some really welcome venison), and we have placed them out on the hill. In addition to giving us great images of the local kites (who are only interested in on the day the meat goes out), the spot is also a hub for a curious little badger family. The kites are wing tagged and I hope to find out a little more about them in the coming weeks.



However, my real saviour has been the moth trap, which has bought me several new species (plus numerous old favourites) as well as the creeping knowledge that I must buy a book on micro-moths. The trap (and driving Jack to work) has kept me to a fairly reasonable routine, preventing me from succumbing to daily lie-ins, and the amazing #teammoth community on twitter have stopped me pulling my hair out when I'm unsure of an ID. 

I'm not pretending that it hasn't been strange (and that I'm not longing to do a bit more long-distance birding) but there really is no place like home. So, for now, I'll leave you with some of the real beauties that have graced the trap since the lockdown started.


Small Pheonix

Poplar Hawk-Moth
 
White Ermine

Is it a bird poop? No, it's a bee moth!

Common Swift
 
No, it's not a twig, its a buff tip!

Beautiful Golden Y

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