Under Rydon Hill

Welcome to this blog about my time away from the tedium of domestic management. Once called "Tits and Things", now sub-titled "Life in Quantoxia", there's plenty of bird ringing (90%), some odd bits of general birding, some local steam trains, some personal bits and occasional 'away days' in other parts of Britain. Rydon Hill overlooks the lower valley of the Doniford Stream, where most of these activities take place.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

3 years and 10 days

That's how long I've been ringing this site in West Somerset. And yesterday I ringed my 1,000th Goldfinch here.

During that time, I have had one recovery (outside a 15km radius of here, within which there are 4 local ringers) and that went 435km NNW in 7 weeks to County Tyrone, Northern Ireland.

I also have a pending control; a November bird bearing a French ring.

This works out at somewhere around £100 worth of rings for each of these two birds. It's one of the reasons we do this (to get these long-distance movements), on top of the other information that we gather, which helps to understand how populations behave (fluctuate) and what may be driving that.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Happy New Year - from the Wet Country

Two thirds through the month of January and we've aleady had 125 mm of rain on top of the 176 mm that we had in December between the 15th and year-end. That's a FOOT of the wet stuff in 5 weeks! Four dry days, that's all! Rant over.

Dawn. "Sh1t - the rain it cometh ... again!"
(looking SSE at dawn, 08:20)
EOY "paperwork" sorted and submitted; permit renewal, ready for posting, lost in the upheaval of decorating our large, rambling hallway; downloaded another copy; plumbers replaced our corroded water main; didn't win the Lottery; need to, to pay for rings.

Nevertheless, I have managed to open the main net through the old part of the apple orchard on the odd occasions, if only for a couple of hours. Getting on for 80% of the catch of unringed birds  has been finches coming to the feeders. Mine have four feed outlets and this is just as well because the bottom pair clog up pretty quickly when it rains heavily. I am for ever having to take them in, clean them, discard the 'soggy stuff', dry the decent stuff (in the microwave), and refill them. Good job I don't pay top whack for my SFH and have spare feeders to boot.

2CY male Greenfinch with renewed P6
(the wide & bright yellow one)
2CY female Bullfinch with 4 ogc
(they all have 4 this year; last year it was 3)
Last year, in January I caught 29 new Goldfinches, and 32 the year before. In 2011, when there was snow on the ground, I ringed 131. This year, although wet, looks as if it will surpass the two previous years; fingers crossed. This January there are many more females utilising garden feeders than males. So far, it happens to be 72.5% females (to 27.5% males [one un-sexed]) or roughly 3 to 1. This is a reversal of what one would expect, certainly in East Anglia, where the females abmigrate, leaving the males behind. From a study I did in Bedfordshire the males "out-shone" the females by some 4 to 1 in January, and females only surpassed males at feeders in June/July/August, during the period that young were fledging. Perhaps this winter abmigration is not just to France & Iberia, but, whenever conditions are much milder than normal (such as we've been having recently) substantial numbers decide to remain in the South-west. [I'll look at previous years here and report back]

Adult female Goldfinch
(probably 4 years old - note broad, rounded PC)

Back to business - here's what has been achieved so far this month.
Blue Tit 2
Coal Tit (1)
Long-tailed Tit 2 (3)
Blackcap (1) - male, first caught on Xmas Day (17 days)
Wren (1)
Blackbird 2 (2) - new birds were both 2CY males; re-traps = semi-resident, young females
Redwing 1 - adult weighing 68 g, fat 10
Robin 2 (1)
Dunnock 3 
House Sparrow 1 (1) - "a couple" 
Chaffinch 5 - 5F, 5F, 6F, 6F, 6M
Greenfinch 4 - all 2CY, single female
Goldfinch 30 (11)
Siskin 4 - all 2CY, singleton male
Bullfinch 5 - all 2CY female
Totals = 61 new & 21 re-traps of 15 workaday species. No more recoveries to hand just yet.

May 2014 bring a steady flow of happiness to my fellow bloggers - plus a few, gentle surprises. Take good care.

Monday, January 13, 2014

2013 EOY at last.

This is a bit late, but it will have to do. I've retained my 2014 garden ringing efforts, which have started, for another posting, due sometime after the builders have left and the water's back on. Very inconvenient but needs must.

So, back to the task in hand.
Day 1 - just shy of 54mm of rain! All-day rain at that. And gale force winds.
Day 2 - Christmas Eve; got to get the turkey, bloke-shopping, etc.
Day 3 - Christmas; another 26mm of rain once the frost had cleared.
Day 4 - visitors. Open the net; anything to get away!
And so it went on - rain, wind, drudgery, nip out and catch a couple of birds during the quiet spells (there was a target to reach, after all). Let's just say, it was big on re-traps.
As you will have seen on the TV News, the Somerset Levels & Moors are well flooded and several villages cut off - unless you have a boat!


Male (darker/brighter) & female Siskins - December
Blue Tit 2 (4)
Great Tit (2)
Long-tailed Tit (1)
Blackcap 2 (1)
Wren (1)
Blackbird 2 (1)
Robin (2)
Dunnock 1 (2)
House Sparrow 1 (2)
Greenfinch 2 (1)
Goldfinch 5 (3)
Siskin 2 (1)
We regularly get double this number of species in the garden every week; it's just a matter of setting my mind to attempt to catch some of them (but many are too high).

Hatch-year male Blackcap with more than the
usual amount of brown crown feathers

The TOP TEN newly ringed birds for 2013 were:
Goldfinch 377 - makes this No.1 bird 35 short of 1,000 in just under 3 years here.
Siskin 176 - up from 10th= place
Blackcap 124 - non-mover
House Sparrow 90 - up 3 places from 7th
Blackbird 86 - non mover 
Greenfinch 81 - down 2 places from 4th
Chiffchaff 76 - down 2 places from 5th=
Willow Warbler 74 - up 7 places from 14th
Blue Tit 62 - down from 2nd place, falling 7 places
Chaffinch 49 - down one from ninth
These ten birds account for almost 80% of my new birds. Of the 44 species handled, there were seven species where I only caught and ringed a single specimen last year.

The Dippers, Kingfishers and Little Egrets were still utilising the local stream where I ring in spring/summer, even during the current heavy discharge.
The Doniford in full spate (not full flood). Dec 2013

Usually, January provides an influx of new birds. We'll just have to wait and see.