Wild life near you

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  • I go swimming most days of the week in an outdoor pool where I live. I have yet to have a week go by that I or someone I am with is not rescuing bees who drop into the water. After being stung twice last year, I now keep a tea strainer on the side of the pool for any swimmers to use.
  • jedijudyjedijudy Heaven Host
    There have been a lot fewer butterflies in my back yard this year than is typical. Normally there are a lot of cloudless (yellow) sulphurs, red admirals, zebra longwings and painted ladies. However, last week I had a real treat! A black swallowtail butterfly flew back and forth in front of my kitchen window, then landed on my flame bush and stayed long enough for me to take a picture!

    I am also very pleased to see a lot of swallow-tail kites in areas I've not seen them before. Before this year, I would see a few singles near the cypress heads, but this year they seem to be in many places, including near my home, and sometimes there are four or five gliding together!
  • I just tried the Merlin bird identification app on my phone and was astonished at what is going on in our back yard. My hearing is getting dull, so I knew I must be missing a lot. I'd never heard of an Eastern King Bird before. We've always enjoyed the funny little sandpipers along the edge of the river - plenty of them. The most impressive are the eagles and turkey vultures - not many of them lately.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    House martins at our caravan in Wales. I'm always glad to see them. But the heat has silenced most of the birds. We are too far north in Wales for kites, but our daughter in Oxford sees plenty.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    I just tried the Merlin bird identification app on my phone and was astonished at what is going on in our back yard. My hearing is getting dull, so I knew I must be missing a lot. I'd never heard of an Eastern King Bird before. We've always enjoyed the funny little sandpipers along the edge of the river - plenty of them. The most impressive are the eagles and turkey vultures - not many of them lately.

    The other day I was fascinated to discover that Old World vultures and New World vultures are not actually closely related. When I picture a vulture I picture something like an Egyptian vulture, which it seems is very different to an American vulture.
  • ClimacusClimacus Shipmate
    edited July 13
    I recall that when I came across other magpies for the first time. A bit different from ours. And I believe others' males don't swoop people in spring (warning: screaming kid; and a parent who seems more interested in filming!)

    Common but a very friendly brush turkey just came up to me on a walk up a cape.
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    For quite a few years, we had a pair of parrots (pretty far in the past now, but my memory is that they were lorikeets) call in for a visit most late Novembers/early Decembers and back again in early autumn. Most autumns there was a young bird with them. They'd stay a few days, and we fed them, also leaving a dish of water out in a safe place. Our place must have been on their route between summer and winter quarters. We did buy the proper seed mix for them, not an ordinary bird seed mix. We moved homes, but told the new owners to watch out for them.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Climacus wrote: »
    I recall that when I came across other magpies for the first time. A bit different from ours. And I believe others' males don't swoop people in spring (warning: screaming kid; and a parent who seems more interested in filming!)

    Common but a very friendly brush turkey just came up to me on a walk up a cape.

    Eurasian magpies are loud, but newborn lambs are more at risk from them than people are. I must admit to being fond of (Eurasian) magpies, they are quite comical.

    We don't have any native parrots or their relatives in the UK but we have lots of feral parakeets, especially around London. Now those are loud! In many London parks they will eat from your hands.
  • DafydDafyd Hell Host
    edited July 14
    Pomona wrote: »
    The other day I was fascinated to discover that Old World vultures and New World vultures are not actually closely related. When I picture a vulture I picture something like an Egyptian vulture, which it seems is very different to an American vulture.
    Yes, although it depends on what you mean by closely. Old world vultures aren't actually a single group but are mixed up with eagles and hawks. New world vultures are a group and form the next branch along to the whole eagle/hawk group.

    Falcons on the other hand are more closely related to songbirds and parrots, while the whole hawk/eagle/vulture group is more closely related to woodpeckers and kingfishers. (Owls belong to the kingfisher group but it's not clear whether they're closer to hawks or kingfishers.)
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    And swifts are actually not closely related to swallows and martins, but are hummingbird relatives (of all things) that developed via parallel evolution.
  • BurgessBurgess Shipmate Posts: 33
    Moose numbers gone down by one third in 25 years in this Manitoba to Saskatchewan border we call home. Ticks are sucking the blood right out of them. More of those ticks for longer. We call them deer ticks. Government calls them winter ticks. Did you know that moose can swim under water? Biology guy from the government tells us they put a camera on a boat and saw one swimming to the bottom of a lake down almsot 20 feet. They go for sodium he said. I did not know what they lick the roads in spring and now I do. Its for the road salt. Moose is good to eat but we aren't eating them these days. Deer and elk mostly. Wapiti is elks' better name.

    So its raining today. This is good. Maybe slow these forest fires down. Lake here we are staying at went down almost 3 inchs from when we are here a month ago. I like the grebes and beavers to watch them. Loons too. Couple of bears come by to check if the people left their garbage and stuff out. Put it away then theres no problem.
  • Merry VoleMerry Vole Shipmate
    Been taking my better half to appointments at Salisbury hospital recently including today. Swallows nesting in the eaves of ground floor buildings and they perch on the gutters. I have never seen them close up before. Beautiful.
  • I have often seen several large lizards on my patio; today, I saw a tiny one. Baby, I think. It made me smile.
  • LatchKeyKidLatchKeyKid Shipmate
    We haven't had large lizards for a while. Occasionally we have young water dragons, but they do not seem to reach adulthood.

    We are hearing whipbird pairs in the morning , but they're hard to see.
  • ClimacusClimacus Shipmate
    I do love the sound of whipbirds...the call and the response. I'm not sure I've ever seen one.
  • EigonEigon Shipmate
    Two peacock butterflies were sunning themselves on my garden table this morning!
  • Welp. Today's morning dip was cut short by the swarming of the fried egg and mauve stinger jellyfish. They are so CUUUUUTE and I love to observe their little floaty wafty behaviours but there were too many to keep safely at a distance. The mauve stinger has a venom that will tattoo you for half a year. BZZT!

    Strange because the water was quite chilly. They normally don't mob the beach until the entire sea has reached a tepid 28 degrees.

    Just have to remind myself I am in their home not vice versa.

    AFF
  • One of my favourites seems to be multiplying this year. The yellow and green garter snakes are busy around our house, eating the bugs, I hope. They seem to be timid and harmless and I try to leave them alone, though there was once a regrettable incident involving the lawnmower in long grass.
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