The fog lay thick through
the dawn swirling in the orange glow of the street lamps. As the lights
switched off one by one still the fog obscured trees and houses, a thick
blanket through which the cool blue of morning now seeped through. Thought
murky, damp and cool, the morning was still with not a breath of wind. Beads of
water droplets gathered on the branches and last few leaves of the almost bare
trees, on the spiky needles of evergreens and on the fine, black mesh of the
net. Hanging, glittering in the murky light like tiny strings of fairy lights
before they were shaken away.
Stunning adult male Goldfinch |
Even before the nets are
fully open birds were gathering in the top of the tree. Bold, brazen, perched
and looking down on the activity below, and yet cautious, not willing to go any
closer for now. Once the ringers are clear of the nets the birds venture down,
working their way through the shelter of the tree to the food hanging so
conveniently beneath its slender boughs. Inevitably and as planned, as birds
leave the feeders some are caught in the pockets of the net.
As the morning progresses
the dull and murky fog was never far away, so that the forest surrounding the
small open patch of paddocks and garden was never more than hazy shapes of tree
and branch. The gloom was only broken by the splash of brilliant colour and
character by those little feathered beauties that fell into the net. A whole
charm of Goldfinch. Some are adults, with bright bold colours and fresh
pristine feathers. Velvet black wings, clean bold white patches, vivid red,
stunning yellow and the soft chestnut brown merging into a white belly. Then
then were the youngsters, feathers a little more worn, colours a little more
muted.
Female Great Spotted Woodpecker |
It is not just the
Goldfinches that brighten this gloomy morning. The raucous cry of woodpeckers
cuts through the gloom. There is a different beauty in the bold black and white
pattern and the flash of bright red of these birds. The first two caught are
young females, there are brown worn feathers in the wing and their heads are
completely black. The third is an adult male, the wing is completely glossy and
black, and there is a strip of brilliant red cutting through the black at the
back of the head.
Male Great Spotted Woodpecker |
With lunch time
approaching the number of birds starts to dwindle and it is time to pack up and
head for home….
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