Martinr36
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They are a common garden bird here in buckinghamshireThat is a Red Kite, taken on the Black Isle a few years ago. We get quite a few of them up here in north east Scotland.
They are a common garden bird here in buckinghamshireThat is a Red Kite, taken on the Black Isle a few years ago. We get quite a few of them up here in north east Scotland.
You are correct. There are a few on the west coast and islands. I have been fortunate enough to see a pair of adults and their newly fledged chicks. To describe the youngsters as chicks does not do them justice. They were huge - almost as big as the adults, but much darker in colour.Looks like a Sea Eagle to me
I saw a pair last year on the west coast in Argyll. Beautiful sight. I have photos but the quality of the photographs don't do them any justice of how gorgeous they are.You are correct. There are a few on the west coast and islands. I have been fortunate enough to see a pair of adults and their newly fledged chicks. To describe the youngsters as chicks does not do them justice. They were huge - almost as big as the adults, but much darker in colour.
Cheers, they are pretty much a common garden bird around here, after nearly becoming extinct, John Paul Getty initiated a breeding program and then released some into the wild in some woods about 10-15 miles away, nature took its course and the rest is historyAmazing close sighting.
Yaaasss! Mrs Cooper’s dad lives in Bletchley and there’s always a few red kites circling around the skies there. He occasionally returns home from work to find a load of feathers from their victims in his back garden.Cheers, they are pretty much a common garden bird around here, after nearly becoming extinct, John Paul Getty initiated a breeding program and then released some into the wild in some woods about 10-15 miles away, nature took its course and the rest is history
Another release site was near Harwood House in Yorkshire and they have rippled out from there since. We live in Wakefield and from time to time see them around our house. This one stayed long enough for me to get my camera:Cheers, they are pretty much a common garden bird around here, after nearly becoming extinct, John Paul Getty initiated a breeding program and then released some into the wild in some woods about 10-15 miles away, nature took its course and the rest is history
They tend to eat already dead animals:Yaaasss! Mrs Cooper’s dad lives in Bletchley and there’s always a few red kites circling around the skies there. He occasionally returns home from work to find a load of feathers from their victims in his back garden.
I’ll have to take your word for it, I’m not much of an ornithologist. You could tell me that it was any kind of big bird and I’d probably concur…The feathers, I think, are more likely to be left overs from a sparrow hawk's dinner.
I belive that you cut them in half and count the rings. No?