What wildlife did you spot today?

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A wonderful flock of about 15 long tailed tits visited my bird feeders today. Little fluffy ping pong balls with lolly stick tails. Just wonderful. I was so busy watching them I didn't dare move and try to take a photo. So I just sat and watched.
 
A wonderful flock of about 15 long tailed tits visited my bird feeders today. Little fluffy ping pong balls with lolly stick tails. Just wonderful. I was so busy watching them I didn't dare move and try to take a photo. So I just sat and watched.
one of my favourite sightings. delightful things. x
 
A sea eagle flew above the house this morning. All the geese scarpered and I expected the eagle to move on since there was nothing to interest it, I was so sure it was about to leave that I stubbornly didn't go inside to get binoculars. In fact it circled and glided for 15 minutes, the sun catching its white tail. After 5 minutes my neck became cricked and I got pins and needles in the hand shading my eyes so I lay on the picnic table to enjoy luxury viewing. With the sound of waves breaking to my left and a wren proclaiming ownership of everything to my right it was a marvellous start to the day!
 
She looks preggies.

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As posted in another thread…


For some reason we get between three and five Mallard ducks in our garden each year. Usually two drakes and one hen. We don’t have any open water to speak of, apart from some bird waterers - upturned dustbin/recycling bin lids set in the ground. We do feed the songbirds and so of course the ducks feed here, and we do so reliably, so perhaps that explains their presence.

Most years the hen makes a nest in differing sites in the garden. This year it’s a repeat use of our osteospermum bed under the lounge window. The flower bed is south facing and a warm corner. We have noticed that the hen bird will stay on the nest, only leaving it perhaps once a day to feed. Once the ducklings are starting to hatch she will shorten her outings for food and stay on the nest until all of the viable eggs are hatched, and the ducklings are big enough. Then she will march them off across the garden, fending off the magpies, crows and the like, and disappear into the hedge, and presumably the field beyond. That’s our last chance for photos if we catch them leaving. My wife is setting up a trail cam to see if we will get any better record this year.
 

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