Re: garden birds
- From: "BAC" <casswalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 29 May 2006 20:22:14 +0100
"Sacha Hubbard" <sacha@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:0001HW.C0A0E49100229705F0284550@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Mon, 29 May 2006 15:56:12 +0100, BAC wroteexcept
(in article <1148914946.25438.1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>):
"Sacha Hubbard" <sacha@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:0001HW.C0A0B890001846E3F0284550@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Mon, 29 May 2006 14:21:23 +0100, Derek Turner wrote
(in article <447af554$0$2699$ed2619ec@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>):
Klara wrote:
Since we started summer feeding two years ago, there has been a huge
decline in the numbers of birds and numbers of species coming for the
food: a tenth the number of various kinds of tits and of blackbirds,
etc., and, most worryingly, no parents of any kind feeding young
lambs.crows, magpies, and jackdaws.
We have two active farms, one at either end of our village. At my end
the farmer is very proactive in destroying corvids to protect his
garden.At the other the farmer does nothing to control these pests. Surprise,
surprise, we have dozens of species of song-bird feeding in our
theVillagers at the other end are wondering why they have none. Forget
andcats - get a Larsen trap.
We have a very active rookery at the end of our garden and the garden
herenursery are alive with songbirds. Customers comment frequently on howtame
they are and how unafraid of the many dozens of people milling around
themat
times. We feed them all year round, we encourage them in by giving
theplenty of areas in which to nest and by using biological controls in
'naturalgreenhouses and wherever possible, in the garden, too. Our rooks (and
jackdaws) are most certainly not reducing our songbird population.
They might not be reducing the populations of other garden birds at your
premises, but jackdaws are opportunistic feeders, their recognised diet
including eggs and hatchlings.
http://www.rspb.org.uk/gardens/guide/atoz/j/jackdaw.asp
The majority of fledglings fail to make it to adulthood, through
pondcauses', including predation.
Perhaps because we encourage birds into the garden in a pretty active way,
they achieve their own balance. When we had ducklings, we netted the
for safety but none of the rooks or jackdaws showed any interest at all.We
are totally surrounded by fields and our nearest neighbour is thechurchyard,
so perhaps they're well provided for in other ways.
Quite possibly - if a preferred food is plentiful and easily available,
they'll eat that.
.
- References:
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- From: Klara
- Re: garden birds
- From: Derek Turner
- Re: garden birds
- From: Sacha Hubbard
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- From: Sacha Hubbard
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