I have fed the garden birds for years, but just recently have moved the ground feeding place to where we can see them from the kitchen.
I've noticed the small birds on the feeders go quietly about things - finches, tits, even starlings seem to wait for one to finish before they fly in. But the ground feeders are a different kettle of fish (to mix the metaphors)
I put out sunflower hearts and peanuts regularly throughout the day so there is never any left by the end of the day.
We seem to have about 4 male blackbirds who will do anything to chase each other off, and two females who are just as bad. The pigeons appear out of nowhere as soon as the food goes down and there's lots of flapping about while they squabble among themselves. They all seem to be bad tempered and aggressive to their own breeds. The two male robins seem far less territorial but don't share.
On the other hand, the pair of collared doves happily share a small pile of seeds, no problem, and the little pied wagtails flit around pecking up whatever they can find out in the open.
The big surprise is the jackdaws though. I've always seen them as groups of sulky teenagers who would hang around the feeders scaring off the little song birds. But with more space and food on an old garden table, they fly in quite gently, carefully take 1 or 2 peanuts in their beaks and fly off again to eat them. They tolerate each other and ignore other species - they've definitely gone up in my estimation for good manners.
I've noticed the small birds on the feeders go quietly about things - finches, tits, even starlings seem to wait for one to finish before they fly in. But the ground feeders are a different kettle of fish (to mix the metaphors)
I put out sunflower hearts and peanuts regularly throughout the day so there is never any left by the end of the day.
We seem to have about 4 male blackbirds who will do anything to chase each other off, and two females who are just as bad. The pigeons appear out of nowhere as soon as the food goes down and there's lots of flapping about while they squabble among themselves. They all seem to be bad tempered and aggressive to their own breeds. The two male robins seem far less territorial but don't share.
On the other hand, the pair of collared doves happily share a small pile of seeds, no problem, and the little pied wagtails flit around pecking up whatever they can find out in the open.
The big surprise is the jackdaws though. I've always seen them as groups of sulky teenagers who would hang around the feeders scaring off the little song birds. But with more space and food on an old garden table, they fly in quite gently, carefully take 1 or 2 peanuts in their beaks and fly off again to eat them. They tolerate each other and ignore other species - they've definitely gone up in my estimation for good manners.
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