Thread: Non-observant!
View Single Post
  #2   Report Post  
Old 02-09-2013, 08:33 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Martin Brown Martin Brown is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,262
Default Non-observant!

On 01/09/2013 23:30, Sacha wrote:
We take quite a keen interest in the wildlife around us and like to
think we're reasonably observant of what is going on in our garden.
About a week ago, I was woken, panicking, by terrific scrabbling noises
outside our bedroom window at about 4.30am. I jumped out of bed, peered
out, saw nothing, shut the window, back to sleep. Next morning, I took
a harder, closer look and where I had often seen what I thought was just
a rather dumb and dozy pigeon, sitting around being a pigeon, there was
a nest with two little heads poking out of it! They cannot be more than
4' away from our opened window but they are in among some quite heavy
growth of a climbing rose and are well sheltered from weather and
predators, I would think. The babies now sit up and look around all the
time but seem unfazed by us opening or closing the window, or walking
past it and chatting to each other. I noticed tonight that they're
stretching and fluttering their wings, so I imagine it won't be long
before they leave the nest. I am still just astonished that all this
was going on so close to our noses and until recently, we hadn't even
seen it! Now we know why that irritating pigeon spent so many mornings
outside our window, making a helluva racket.


Slightly surprising. We have had them nest in our clematis and hydrangea
petiolaris most years and the nest is almost silent. They didn't seem to
care about proximity to the front door at all.

Not so the large roost of starlings in our hedge at the moment which is
starting to make it smell a bit funny. They all panic and fly off to the
village hall roof every time anyone closes the door with a bang. The
hedge makes an interesting cacophony of starling noises when they are in
residence.

--
Regards,
Martin Brown