These are the bird photos from the trip to photograph the oaks in Sherwood Forest. It was a bit dull and the birds were quick (unlike the oaks) so they aren’t quite as sharp as I’d like. I missed a couple of Coal Tits that came down to feed, plus Blackbirds, Chaffinches and Dunnocks that lurked in the undergrowth. There were two pigeons too, but I ignored them as I don’t want to encourage them to steal food from small, cute birds.
It’s a lot better than Rufford from that point of virw, as there are more pigeons there, plus a lot of gulls which can polish off a handful of sunflower hearts like magic.
I filled three feeders in the car park and heard a clattering behind me, as birds started feeding before I’d got out of the way.
I need to work out a better way of doing this. Do I just fill one so I can stay focussed on it all the time, or do I fill six so they don’t chase each other away all the time? Even with six there were probably enough Great Tits to chase everything else off.
They were changing places so fast that once I pressed the button to take a Great Tit and ended up with a picture of a Nuthatch! OK, my frozen fingers were moving quite slowly, which would have helped.
I presume the cold was one of the reasons they were feeding so eagerly.
Enjoyable photos from your day, Quercus!
Thank you. 🙂
Good to know there’s still a robin in Sherwood Forest 🙂
Nice to know someone spotted that! 🙂
Well done for getting a photo of a Marsh Tit!
Thanks, though I prefer your Bullfinch!
😀
Fill one feeder and concentrate on that for a while with the camera and then fill the others and just enjoy watching the birds. I like the idea of an accidental nuthatch.
Good plan – I can live with that.
That would be what we English refer to as “a robin” – an example of two nations divided by a common lamguage. 🙂
https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wildlife/bird-and-wildlife-guides/bird-a-z/r/robin/
What’s the little brown bird with the rusty chest?