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Showing posts with label jackdaw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jackdaw. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 August 2014

Birds of a Feather - Thematic Photography

Carmi couldn't have made a better choice of a topic for me this week.

Feathers abound on the grass by the side of the road along which I take my morning walk.

A feather down
And if that is not enough - 

Four feathers
But not from a thrush.

Tail feathers
However there is a sad tale to this as these feathers are all that remained of a wood pigeon demolished by a hawk.

Man, the worse predator of all, can also have a devastating effect.

Owl - a road kill victim
Other birds play hide and seek behind - 

The chimney pots
Jackdaw viewing spot
Discussing last night's soap
While sparrows watch the children cross
Some just watch the world go by.

Young blackbird on kitchen window sill
A much better place to be than behind glass at - 

Detroit Zoo - King Penguins
Some birds just have to pretend while - 

Waiting for the mail.
Meanwhile there is a work in progress for me - I'm trying to get a decent shot of this bird.

Nuthatch (image scanned from a bird book)
This is the best I have done so far from 50ft away and through a double glazed window.

Nuthatch clearing ivy from a nesting box


We saw this bird for the first time in our garden only last month; now it is a regular visitor.

Fortunately it's a little smaller than the bird we saw at nearby Preston Park.


However my favourite so far this year is one some of you have seen before.

Male Bullfinch
It was making itself comfortable in a hand towel while it recovered from the argument it lost with our lounge window.

Now is the time for you to recover to and fly over to see other 'Birds of a feather' at Carmi's Thematic-photographic-307.

Thursday, 11 April 2013

A-Z Challenge 2013 - 'J'



My A-Z posts this year are based on my garden – flowers, animals, the birds and the bees, butterflies - with a bit of poetry thrown in. For some letters I am expecting to cheat somewhat – a sort of wish they were here.

J – Jackdaw, Jay, Juniper, Jack, Jasmine

There is a bird who, by his coat,
And by the hoarseness of his note,
Might be suppos’d a crow;

Jackdaw
 The famous poem, The Jackdaw of Rheims, ends with the jackdaw being made a Saint; however in a much earlier Conclave than the recent one for the selection of Pope Francis.

The Conclave determin’d to make him a Saint;
And on newly-made Saints and Popes, as you know
It’s the custom, at Rome, new names to bestow,
So they canoniz’d him by the name of Jem Crow!

 When at my daughter's home in Michigan:

Blue Jay
The Jaybird he's my favourite
Of all the birds they is!
I think he's quite a stylish sight
In that blue suit of his:

But as you can see the jays we see in the local woods are not blue at all. Often all you see is the flash of their white rump as they disappear in the trees.


Many of you will know the English nursery rhyme –
Here we go round the mulberry bush,
The mulberry bush,
The mulberry bush.
Here we go round the mulberry bush
So early in the morning.

However I’ve just learnt that in Scandinavia the ‘mulberry bush’ is replaced with a:-

Juniper Bush
Somehow I get the feeling that Jack would find that rather tiring.

Jack at rest
 This year he will have a long wait to see this climber flowering:-

Winter Jasmine
Poems:
  • The Jackdaw – William Cowper
  • The Jackdaw of Rheims – Richard Harris Barham http://www.bartleby.com/246/108.html
  • The Jaybird – James Whitcomb Riley
  • Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush – An English nursery rhyme and singing game.

Photo attribution:
  • Winter Jasmine – Wildfeuer – CC BY-SA 3.0