After setting up both the finch net and starling net, with
different foods, the usual waiting game ensued.
Finch whoosh net set for catching |
Finch site and team |
After a few flocks of finches came and went our luck finally
struck and a flock of linnet came down and we were able to capture them. After
extraction was complete there was 15 finches all nicely in bird bags. At the
end of the session we had ringed a total of 6 new linnet and retrapped 2
goldfinches, and another 7 linnet from previous sessions this autumn.
The second ringing session of the day involved some titmice
ringing at some bird feeders in the Cruikshank Botanical Gardens in Old
Aberdeen. The site seemed promising on arrival as the place was busy with coal
tits (with a few great & blues thrown in). The next hour of the nets up
proved to be a productive one and to end our catch, we'd managed a grand total
of 63 new birds (24 blue tit, 24 coal tit, 14 great tit & a robin) and
single retraps of coal & blue tit. However this session was
particularly special for myself as I handled three new species in the form of
coal, great and blue tit. For someone who has been ringing for several years, it
would come as a surprise that I hadn't come across these species before but
coming from Shetland we don't have many of these peerie fluffballs and usually,
when they do show up, it ignites a twitch!
Coal tit |
Great tit |
Blue tits, however, were a species we were particularly
interested in (not something people say very often!) due to a new national
moult project that GRG has joined, that looks at the post-juvenile moult of
blue tits. This project aims to give us a better understanding of how juvenile
blue tits moult their feathers and allow for another piece of the moult cycle
puzzle to be solved, more information can be found in the Autumn issue of the
Lifecycle magazine. As the gardens seem to have a decent number of blue tits,
it will probably see us returning for a few more titmice sessions in the coming
weeks and months.
Blue tit |
For the final ringing session of the day we decided to cross
the River Dee and head into Kincorth to locate the local flock of waxwing which
was numbering over 100. In previous winters the group has colour-ringed many
100s of waxwings and contributed to our understanding of their movements
through the UK during irruptions (see our previous blog posts). Arriving on the
site, we set up a couple of mist nets, which hopefully would get us a few of
these Scandinavian visitors. Over the space of the next few hours, the waxwing
flock did several pass overs and at one point came as close as to land in a
large tree near to the nets, but unfortunately never close enough to catch. The
group will undoubtedly be trying again to ring waxwings if they stick around
for the winter, there's enough berries in the area so only time will tell.
Logan Johnson - Trainee (Shetland RG, adoptee of Grampian
RG)