| No-owl!
'When blood is nippd and ways be foul, Then
nightly sings the staring owl - Tu who Tu-whit, tu-who,' Shakespeare
was clearly a countryman: his works are full of delightfully accurate details
like this song from Loves Labour Lost. The dead of winter is one of the
times when our tawny owls are at their most vocal as they settle their territorial
rights for the coming season. Its about hunting ranges but also about nesting
territories, for tawnies are very early breeders. Perhaps we dont
immediately think of owls singing - but actually tawnies do have quite a wide
vocabulary. As well as the males wonderfully sonorous whooo and the
females crisp ke-wick, they often produce a sustained wavering hoo-ing
that almost seems to shimmer in the dusk. I remember hearing it as darkness fell
in a wood near Bolton Abbey where I was badger watching, and very eerie it was.
Youve a good chance of hearing their chorus through the night and even,
at this time of the year, during the day, in the countryside or in town. Two of
our Wharfedale naturalists whove recently moved into the centre of Ilkley
described hearing three birds calling and replying. Two of the birds had hoots
just a semi-tone apart which made for some musically challenging chords as calls
overlapped! The other winter singer is that star of the Christmas card,
the robin. Both males and females sing in winter and are fiercely possessive about
their territory; after all, its a matter of life or death to have a reliable
food supply. All our small birds are tested to the limit by the cold and wet and
there are few hours of light in which to forage so they need all the help they
can get. Providing a variety of food in our gardens not only sustains them
but also gives us hours of pleasure. What garden ornament can outshine your very
own charm of goldfinches? A niger seed feeder is pretty well guaranteed to bring
them in alongside tiny olive-green and yellow siskins and, if youre lucky,
the rarer redpolls. Peanuts are the quick energy booster for all kinds of tits,
and feeders with sunflower and other seeds attract finches as well. Fat is an
important energy source too, and if you cant afford the seemingly endless
supply of commercially produced fat-balls needed, then home-made mixtures of fat,
a bit of seed, a few sultanas and brown bread crumbs are just as welcome. If you
want to give a special treat to that friendly robin, you might buy some live mealworms.
For the more squeamish among us, dried ones are also available and dont
give a nasty surprise to family members raiding the fridge for a late post-Christmas
snack! [Back]
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