Feeding the birds

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pwa
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by pwa »

I have a tortoise whose hibernation I have to manage, and if I encountered a hedgehog whose hibernation had been disturbed I would do as I would with a tortoise in the same situation. I'd not re-hibernate them immediately. Instead I would keep them warm for a week or two, feeding and watering to build them up, then gradually decrease heat and light to induce drowsiness, with a nest available for them to resort to when the urge to hibernate takes over. Then store them in a location where coldness is guaranteed but actual freezing cannot happen. A refinement for tortoises is to monitor weight loss during hibernation and rouse them if it reaches a pre-determined limit.
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by Vorpal »

pwa wrote:I have a tortoise whose hibernation I have to manage, and if I encountered a hedgehog whose hibernation had been disturbed I would do as I would with a tortoise in the same situation. I'd not re-hibernate them immediately. Instead I would keep them warm for a week or two, feeding and watering to build them up, then gradually decrease heat and light to induce drowsiness, with a nest available for them to resort to when the urge to hibernate takes over. Then store them in a location where coldness is guaranteed but actual freezing cannot happen. A refinement for tortoises is to monitor weight loss during hibernation and rouse them if it reaches a pre-determined limit.

I wasn't too certain what to do with it, and didn't really have a good place in my garden for a hedge hog to hibernate, so I called a wildlife rescue center, and they said to keep it warm, offer it food & water, and bring it to them as soon as I could. So that's what I did. They sent me little updates about him, when he hibernated, and when he came out in the spring.
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Mick F
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by Mick F »

Never seen a hedgehog here in over twenty years at this address despite being surrounded by woodland and fields. Never seen a dead squashed on the roads either.

Reason?
Badgers I reckon. They eat all the stuff that hedgehogs eat.
Mick F. Cornwall
pwa
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by pwa »

Mick F wrote:Never seen a hedgehog here in over twenty years at this address despite being surrounded by woodland and fields. Never seen a dead squashed on the roads either.

Reason?
Badgers I reckon. They eat all the stuff that hedgehogs eat.

I don't think hedgehogs particularly like woodland. More a hedgerow beasty, hence the name I suppose.
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Mick F
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by Mick F »

Loads of hedgerows here.
Surrounded by them, plus all the lanes have them both sides.
Mick F. Cornwall
pwa
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by pwa »

Mick F wrote:Loads of hedgerows here.
Surrounded by them, plus all the lanes have them both sides.

Bit of a mystery then. I think they actually thrive on traditional suburban gardens, but they are a bit less hedgehog friendly than they once were. Only yesterday I talked to an elderly couple who were, with the help of relatives, replacing the front lawn with a rectangular bed of gravel over a mat. That is another source of earthworms gone.
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Mick F
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by Mick F »

Just chatting to the font of all common sense - Mrs Mick F :D - and asking why we never see any worms in the garden.

She said it's because we don't have any soil, just lots and lots of stones.
I remarked that things grow well - trees, grass, shrubs, daffodils, primroses ........ plus brambles and bracken and thistles.

She asked if we could dig a trench and plant potatoes in it.
No we couldn't, but we could dig a hole and fill it with soil.
She replied that all that would happen is when it rains, all the stones would rise the the surface and you'd be back to square one.

That's it.
We have no soil, so therefore no worms, and therefore no hedgehogs.
Mick F. Cornwall
NickWi
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by NickWi »

I've also been feeding our local Sparrowhawk family. Well not directly, but since they nested earlier in the year in a neaby wood we've seen a lot of them (particularly the male). I guess they've learned our garden birds come ready stuffed!

Serious, they have learned that they can fly in low over the adjacent field, then come up and over the side hedge and suprise what's in the garden. They only ever do it coming in from the right and the male is particulary good at it. When they were feeding the youngsters the spring I felt pretty guilty about putting food out for the Sparrows and others knowing what might happen, but took it as just part of the cycle of nature.
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NATURAL ANKLING
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by NATURAL ANKLING »

Hi,
Yep if its not cats and leaving the pigeon carcase probably in tact.......its a sparrow hawk sitting on its prey a pigeon eating it alive :)

Feed the birds and 40 % will be pigeons.

Just come back from shopping..................bargains galore........1kg mealworms for £7.99....now they are out of season for sparrows.......black birds luv em.
Er indoors spots a keen customer with a trolley full of bird food :? .......She says to shopper wow I'd love to live in your garden if I was a bird..................answer............ but you'd struggle to take off again :lol: .......Pet shop not 50 yrds away and full price.
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JohnW
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by JohnW »

NickWi wrote:I've also been feeding our local Sparrowhawk family. Well not directly, but since they nested earlier in the year in a neaby wood we've seen a lot of them (particularly the male). I guess they've learned our garden birds come ready stuffed!

Serious, they have learned that they can fly in low over the adjacent field, then come up and over the side hedge and suprise what's in the garden. They only ever do it coming in from the right and the male is particulary good at it. When they were feeding the youngsters the spring I felt pretty guilty about putting food out for the Sparrows and others knowing what might happen, but took it as just part of the cycle of nature.

Luckily for us, we have a hawthorn in our backyard, and the sparrows retreat into the heart of it to escape from the sparrow hawks and kestrels. We don't get many sparrow hawks nowadays, since the building took place, but the kestrels seem to be adapting.
kwackers
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by kwackers »

We've no shortage of pigeons and doves, had over a dozen doves wondering across the lawn earlier. For some reason they also seem to be the one's most likely to kill themselves on the windows.
When they do I usually put the carcass out on the lawn where either the fox or a local cat finds it, either way it's gone the next day.
Very occasionally one gets taken out by a sparrow hawk although I don't seem them round here that often.

Today we had a starling attack, I tried counting them and there were over 40 on the bird feeder and many more marching around the lawn and drive. Lasted about 20 minutes and then they all disappeared as quickly as they came. The noise they made was incredibly. Mrs Kwackers reckons they're the 'louts' of the bird kingdom.
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by Cyril Haearn »

The Grauniad has an interesting article about Eurasian Wrens
A wren weighs 6-10 grams
In Scotland they are even heavier, they store fat to survive the winter
The smaller Wrens in the south can manoeuvre better, that helps them survive too, being heavier would disadvantage them
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mercalia
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by mercalia »

3 floors up I get visited by lots of Tits - blue tits, great tits and a couple of long tailed tits. There is a Robin who comes dont know what to do with it as it dont like the feeders ( they are ground birds?) shame as its song is better that the squeaks from the tits.
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fausto copy
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by fausto copy »

Perhaps your Robin is just a slow learner or not hungry enough.
Ours has adapted to the nut feeder, fat balls and even the seed feeder this year and no longer bothers with ground feeding like the chaffinches (some of which also use the feeders) and dunnocks.
Maybe (like me) it doesn't like heights and ain''t comfortable three floors up. :wink:
mercalia
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Re: Feeding the birds

Post by mercalia »

fausto copy wrote:Perhaps your Robin is just a slow learner or not hungry enough.
Ours has adapted to the nut feeder, fat balls and even the seed feeder this year and no longer bothers with ground feeding like the chaffinches (some of which also use the feeders) and dunnocks.
Maybe (like me) it doesn't like heights and ain''t comfortable three floors up. :wink:


well it sits on the wall of the balcony looking around hopefully so dont seem to be averse to heights
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