CityCyclingEdinburgh Forum » Leisure

Wildlife highlight of the day

(7168 posts)

  1. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    I'm not fully convinced that it's the swans being removed there.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  2. Rosie
    Member

    I do like the idea of there being holes with some kind of valve at the bottom of the boat, and all those swans are paddling forcefully, while, of course, looking perfectly serene.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  3. chdot
    Admin

    'It was unmistakable': Edinburgh man maps big cat sightings in area after his own close encounter

    https://www.edinburghlive.co.uk/news/edinburgh-news/it-unmistakable-edinburgh-man-maps-19170281

    Posted 3 years ago #
  4. jdanielp
    Member

    Good to see that the Dunsapie Otter is still at large even after my extended trip away from Edinburgh, although I was mildly disappointed not to witness it take down a seagull.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  5. gembo
    Member

    Won’t take on the swans though

    Posted 3 years ago #
  6. chdot
    Admin

    Yes, today

    Posted 3 years ago #
  7. chdot
    Admin

  8. wingpig
    Member

    Buzzard out the back of the RIE. Just caught sight of it before it leapt off a post.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  9. gembo
    Member

    Goose replaced by Eagle on my bottle of Sriracha condiment

    Posted 3 years ago #
  10. gembo
    Member

    Lot of hawk action above innocent path today. Clocked chap watching them at the usual spot but didn’t stop. Looked like at least three birdies.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  11. acsimpson
    Member

    I disturbed a buzzard which I assume was eating it's dinner neat Philipstoun. It sat on a nearby fencepost looking at me until I had a camera at which point it decided that a tree was a better option.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  12. Rosie
    Member

    A pair of goosanders in the Water of Leith in Roseburn Park.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  13. wingpig
    Member

    Huge waft of well-arranged geese heading east above Seafield Street yesterday afternoon.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  14. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    Low and melodic honk-beak squadron over Findhorn Place, heading east to Duddingston.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  15. ejstubbs
    Member

    Small mixed flock of redwing and fieldfare at the bottom of our garden just now, lunching on the hawthorn and rowan berries :) Likely just arrived from the continent. There was a ♂ blackbird hanging around on the periphery as well but I'm not sure whether he was part of the same party or one of the locals checking out the visitors.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  16. jdanielp
    Member

    Possibly two otters in Dunsapie Loch this lunchtime. The usual otter was doing its thing as I was watching when something else emerged from a bush at the far side of the loch and swam out a little, accompanied by some distant squeaking noises. The otter responded to this by swimming over and both disappeared from view into the bushes. I was stood with my bicycle near to someone with binoculars who remarked to their child that there were 'two of them' at one point, although they then moved away before I had the chance to confirm that they meant there were two otters.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  17. urchaidh
    Member

    Distracted from work by a lesser (probably) spotted woodpecker flitting around the trees behind the house.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  18. ejstubbs
    Member

    @urchaidh: Sorry to disappoint, but it was very unlikely to have been a Lesser Spotted. They are scarce enough in the UK as a whole anyway (only 1,000-2,000 breeding pairs) and neither the RSPB nor the BTO distribution maps admit to it occurring north of the border. The adult Lesser Spotted is about the size of a large robin whereas the Great Spotted is more blackbird sized. Note that juvenile Great Spotteds (which are smaller than the adults) have a red crown to the head quite similar to that of the adult male Lesser Spotted. This has been known to cause confusion.

    If you sure that what you saw was a Lesser Spotted then I'm sure the BTO would be interested to know. You can report it through their BirdTrack web site, or they have an app for it too.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  19. urchaidh
    Member

    @ejstubbs - thanks for info. I wasn't really sure and didn't know the lesser wasn't seen in Scotland. It was noticeably smaller than ones I've seen previously but that just my be the distance[1] or, as you suggest, that it was a juvenile bird.

    [1]

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    Posted 3 years ago #
  20. gembo
    Member

    Llamas a plenty on way up to torduff reservoir. Had my walking meeting at Clubbiedean then walking back down the hill we saw a beautiful deer, maybe 30 yards away. It let us watch it for a long while then toddled off elegantly. Lovely

    Posted 3 years ago #
  21. I were right about that saddle
    Member

    @ejstubbs and @urchaidh

    May I urge caution? It isn't really enough in birding terms to say 'this is not the range of bird x therefor that is bird y'.

    Otherwise no one would ever see a red-flanked bluetail here. And the Derbyshire lammergeier would have been a mirage.

    So go through the evidence of the observation and key it out. The result may be 'inconclusive, spotted woodpecker of some type' but let us not rush to conclusions.

    All birds can potentially be seen in all places.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  22. gembo
    Member

    Prancing deer in foggy field, Glenmorangie road 10a.m. Boy could it prance

    Posted 3 years ago #
  23. fimm
    Member

    Three deer on a little road near Pencaitland - they were trying to get over a gate... the first one succeeded but the other two were having a panic - one of them disappeared but the other one had a go at getting over the gate, got its back legs caught and scrambled over somewhat inelegantly.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  24. dessert rat
    Member

    spotted nr WOL on Saturday, 5yr old Storm Trooper in the background is unrelated.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  25. paulmilne
    Member

    Not today but said hello to a hedgehog Saturday night on my way to the bins. He wasn't there when I came back.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  26. ejstubbs
    Member

    Encouraged by reports on this forum and elsewhere, at lunchtime today I cycled out to Holyrood Park and up the closed-to-motor-vehicles road to Dunsapie Loch to see if I could spot the otter. I'd remembered to pop my binoculars in my backpack, but I really needn't have bothered: said creature was larking about within about ten feet of the roadside shore of the loch, apparently oblivious to the attention it was drawing from human passers-by (and a few of their canine companions).

    I just hope that it's not getting just a bit too blasé, in case some ne'er-do-well happens to decide that it would be fun to indulge in a bit of mustelid persecution... :(

    Posted 3 years ago #
  27. jdanielp
    Member

    The otter was working its way along the near bank of the loch again around lunchtime today, despite a reasonable number of people stopping to watch and take photographs.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  28. Frenchy
    Member

    A bird making a sound I can best describe as that of a deck of cards being shuffled. I think it was a starling.

    Posted 3 years ago #
  29. gembo
    Member

    @frenchy was Paul Daniels nearby? Starlings talented mimics

    Posted 3 years ago #
  30. unhurt
    Member

    A bird making a sound I can best describe as that of a deck of cards being shuffled. I think it was a starling.

    Magpie also a possibility - they make some excellent rattling churring noises at times.

    I cleaned my bird feeders and once again I have all the tits.

    Posted 3 years ago #

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