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The Geese returned this morning We heard their honking as…

The Geese returned this morning. We heard their honking as we went out to feed the Horses and Emu. The Swans know they are there and are not best pleased, staying in their protected area, not coming out for their morning feed even though the Geese were at the other end of the Lake. Seeing the Swans food the Geese went to the area and were hovering about not sure that they were safe to go close to eat it.

A week or so back we had a flock of 12 Geese land and were harassed by the Swans until they flew off. This encounter is going quite differently so it could be that there was a bit of a set to before I saw them. The Swans being only a year old may be intimidated by the older Geese, Although when the Swan swam in the direction of the Geese the Geese went in direction. Some one mentioned about the Swans mating this year. Black Swans as Emu mate in the Winter. Normally laying their eggs about late November, but not until they are at least two years old. The Geese flew off after more than an hour. They will come and go over the next month or so, making up their mind if they are going to nest on the Lake. That is of course that seeing the Swan will stop them returning. I hope they nest this year on the Lake as it had a good ending last year with the Geese producing 5 live Gosling. The first time on our Lake. Seeing them fly off when they fledged was a great moment, only exceeded when they made a quick visit with the Goslings before they flew away to where ever they over Winter.

What I hope that the Geese don’t do is to try to nest by the Pond next to the Lake. It is not protected from the Fox or Otter with electric fencing and there is no Island. Being let down with having the new lake dug out in September spoilt what I had in my mind to do by putting the Swan on the new Lake. If this dry spell continues we may be able to start the new Lake in a month or so. That will still be to late.

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Sorry there are no photographs tonight as there are only…

Sorry there are no photographs tonight as there are only one days left. If you have any send them in.

Below a bit of interesting reading.

Feeding birds ‘changes evolution’

Bird-feeders, hung in many a garden, can affect the way our feathered friends evolve, say scientists.

European birds called blackcaps follow a different “evolutionary path” if they spend the winter eating food put out for them in UK gardens.

The birds’ natural wintering ground is southern Spain, where they feed on the fruits that grow there.

Researchers describe the impact this well-intentioned activity has had on the birds in Current Biology journal.

Dr Martin Schaefer from the University of Freiburg in Germany led the research.

He and his team found that blackcaps that migrated to the UK for the winter were in the very earliest stages of forming a new species.

He explained that some blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla) would always have migrated “a little further north” than others and eventually “ended up in Britain in the winter”.

But those birds would have had nothing to eat,” he said.

It was when garden bird feeders became more popular in the UK, that an evolutionary division began to emerge.

“As soon as the British provided a lot of bird food, those birds would have had a much higher probability of surviving the winter.”

And because the UK is closer to their breeding ground, those birds would also have returned earlier to claim the best territory.

The researchers, from Germany and Canada, set out to discover if the birds that spent the winter availing themselves of garden bird-feeders were in fact a distinct group.

To do this, they studied the blackcaps at a breeding ground in Germany.

The team were able to use a chemical “signature” from the birds’ claws to identify where they spent the winter, and what food they ate.

“Then we took blood samples and analysed those to assess whether… we had two distinct populations. And that’s exactly what we found,” said Dr Schaefer.

“To a very large extent the birds only mate [with] birds with the same overwintering grounds as them.”

This initial “reproductive isolation”, Dr Schaefer explained, is the very first step in the evolution of a new species.

“This tells us that by feeding birds in winter we… produce an evolutionary split. And we have produced these initial steps in as little as 50 years.”

The team also observed differences in the birds’ beaks, wings and plumage.

Blackcaps that migrated along the shorter route to the UK had rounder wings, and longer, narrower beaks.

The scientists said these differences were evidence that the birds had adapted to their shorter journey, and to eating seeds and fat from bird-feeders, rather than fruit from shrubs and trees.

But, Dr Schaefer pointed out that the evolution of a new bird species “could take 100,000 to a million years”.

“At this stage this is reversible,” he added. “And it’s hard to envision a species change, because if there’s another economic crisis and people stop feeding the birds, the whole system might just collapse.”

Man-made change

In this case, Dr Schaefer thinks the human impact on blackcaps has been a positive thing.

“[The birds have] found a better overwintering area that is closer to the breeding ground, where they can obtain food easily.

“And I also think its positive news for us, because it means not all the changes we produce are necessarily bad, and that some species have the potential to adapt quickly to the changes.”

Grahame Madge from the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) said that this was “a fascinating piece of research” and that it fitted in with the birds adapting to a changing climate.

“Blackcaps have been able to start this behaviour because of the milder winter we’ve experienced in the last few decades,” he said.

“And because they’re getting food, this reinforces the behaviour and will enable them to survive a colder winter [in the UK].”

Joseph Tobias, a biologist from the Oxford University in the UK, agreed that the UK climate may have been a more important factor contributing to the changes observed in the blackcaps.

“The study clearly demonstrates that a new lineage has arisen… [but] it doesn’t actually demonstrate that food hand-outs by humans are the root cause,” Dr Tobias said.

“It is possible that the main reason for the switch in migratory behaviour was a warming winter climate in the UK. The best we can say on the basis of the evidence is that the increase in bird-feeding in the UK may have contributed to the switch in behaviour.”

Mr Madge added that putting food out for birds in the winter was “very important” and that many birds “need the energy boost at this time of year”.

It’s positive news for us, because it means not all the changes [humans] produce are necessarily bad. Martin Schaefer, University of Freiburg.

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Starting from number one there are five new photographs on…

Starting from number one there are five new photographs on the photo page.

Only two photographs left.

Ferns unfolding, Betty Canada.

Niagara Falls, Betty Canada.

Ice looks like a whale, Betty Canada.

Closeup of falls Ice Feb 08, Betty Canada.

Sunny reflections of winter, Betty Canada.

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Starting from number six there are five new photographs on…

Starting from number six there are five new photographs on the Photo Page.

We are still very short of photographs.

Chickens silkies? Betty Canada

Beautiful clouds. Betty Canada

Unusual cloud pattern from my back window. Betty Canada

Our local river. Betty Canada

Bleeding Heart. Betty Canada

The continuous rain that we are getting is starting to concern me about the Canada Geese nesting on the Lake at Denbury next Spring. The intention was to put in another wildlife pond in the bottom half of the Horse Field. Natural springs in the bottom of the Field make it very wet. As much as we have tried to drain the area with drainage pipes, that we had buried in to the ground nearly 10 years ago, it is still lies very wet. So the natural springs make it an ideal spot for another Pond. We arranged for a local building contractor to start to dig the new Pond on the 14th of September. They never turned up to do the job on that and after nearly a month of empty promises and crap of when they would start, and why they could not do on the dates promised, and not even answering our phone calls in the end we had to find another contractor. Trouble was a week before they were due to start this prolonged spell of rain started. You can not move heavy machinery on wet ground, especially when digging a pond dig. The machinery will make the Fields extremely muddy scar the ground for years.

Our only hope of digging the Pond is if we get a long spell of frost over the Winter. We wont be able to do any digging in the Spring as the grass we be starting to grow for the Horses to graze on. Without the new Pond there will be little chance of the Geese retuning to Denbury to nest as they will fight with the Swans. we had intended to move the Swans onto the new Pond for the few months that the Geese were on the Lake. We may have even had the Geese land on the new Pond as that would also have been a good nesting area as we had intended to have an Island in it.

As the Black Swans nest in the Winter the Lake would have had interest all through the year. Although we have noticed that the Lake has come to life since the Black Swans arrived. The amount of Wildfowl using the Lake since they come has increased. Although there has always been Coots and Moorhens on the Lake we rarely saw them. Now when we feed the Swans they hang about for feed. We get the odd pair of Mallards nesting in the Spring and Summer, and although many land as soon as we went to the Lake they flew off. In the Winter we never saw Mallards, this year there are 5 pairs that look as if they might stay, with more flying in for short periods during the day. I may be wrong and the Geese will come back if we have only got the Lake for them to land on. It is possible as the Black Swans unlike other species of Swan will live and nest in groups.

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Starting from number eleven there are five new photographs on…

Starting from number eleven there are five new photographs on the Photo Page.

Pied Turkey

The Male cardinal, one of the joys of winter BETTY CANADA

Do I really want to go out and play BETTY CANADA

Looks lovely from indoors! BETTY CANADA

Winter welcome in Canada BETTY CANADA

The picture of a Pied Turkey was taken from the Internet to show you what our new editions to Denbury will look like when they are mature. We have seven of the Pied Turkey that are about ten weeks old, that is about the same age as Dennis our pet Turkey. They were transported from North Wales, arriving here yesterday. They came from a remote farm. By the nervous way they were acting they are not use to people. They will soon quieten down once they get use to the different noises. The intention is to breed from what we have. Looking at them we reckon that there are two Stags and three Hens. I will take a photograph of them for the photo page in a day or two.

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Starting from number eleven there are five new photographs on…

Starting from number eleven there are five new photographs on the Photo Page.

Winter from our bedroom window BETTY CANADA

Rosie the cat having a snooze in our bedroom, for all you cat lovers. BETTY CANADA

Rosie the cat having a snooze in our bedroom, for all you cat lovers. BETTY CANADA

I knew they were there somewhere!! BETTY CANADA

Black Squirrel finding his nuts in mid winter BETTY CANADA

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Starting from number six there are five new photographs on…

Starting from number six there are five new photographs on the Photo Page.

Humming bird heard me coming so she tilted her head BETTY CANADA

Male cardinal in winter BETTY CANADA

Ruby throated humming bird at the feeder BETTY CANADA

Female Ruby Throated Humming bird at the feeder BETTY CANADA

Winter from our bedroom window BETTY CANADA

I put the Swan back on the Lake this morning. He seemed pleased to see the two Pens and hasn’t left them all day. He has eaten bread that I fed the Swans this afternoon. At the moment he doesn’t seem to be having trouble eating, but there is a chance that his oesophagus. may narrow with the scarring and stop him from eating.

The person at the location of the new webcam has got the flu and is not able to fit the camera until next week. It will be worth the wait.

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Starting from number six there are five new photographs on…

Starting from number six there are five new photographs on the Photo Page.

The first three were taken last winter, one day when it was snowing heavily. The tree with legs is my husband carrying our Christmas tree out of the tree farm where we cut it down ourselves. The other three are pictures of the Mississippi River taken from Frontenac State Park in Minnesota last fall. The river is all iced over now, except for a few places where the eagles still can fish, mostly by the dams. Penny Chicago Chicago chicago

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Starting from number one there are five new photographs on…

Starting from number one there are five new photographs on the Photo Page.

We still have lots of photographs left to go on the Photo Page from the middle of the month, None have been forgotten.

The evening light ,St Mawes,Cornwall.Lindsay.

Atlantic Grey Seals laid out on the island of Yell in the Shetland Islands.Lindsay.

A good surfing sea at Woolacombe,North Devon.Lindsay.

St Mawes,Cornwall.Lindsay.

My Favorite Canada geese. Karen Stoke.

Little Grebe visit our Lake every year but only in the Winter and early Spring. Don’t know why but we rarely see them in the Summer months. I have never seen them land or take off from the Lake, they are just there or not. It could be that the small Fish that they dive for are easier to catch in the Winter in our Lake than from where they came from.

These past few weeks have been the longest cold period that I can remember since we have lived at Denbury. It has been a lot colder, so cold one year that the Lake froze over. We also had a lot of snow that year. The snow started to thaw, just as it turned to water it froze over again making our driveway a sheet of ice. On a small incline even our Land Rover that we had at the time struggled. I believe that the only way that I managed to get out was to reverse up the incline.

I don’t really mind the cold as long as it is not wet with it. Working on the farm in the cold and wet is miserable and the animals don’t like it either. Prolonged cold spells I have been told helps to get rid of Rats and there are a few big ones around the Badgers Sett. I really need to put poison around the Sett area, but after seeing a Tawny Owl take a Rat few weeks back I cant as we are liable to kill an Owl if it eats a poisoned Rat.

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Starting from number eleven there are five new photographs on…

Starting from number eleven there are five new photographs on the Photo Page.

Here are a few pics from my collection.

A fallen silver birch tree in Epping forest. Jill.

A twisted truk of a beech tree. Jill.

The Harbour, Whitstable, with fishing boats. Jill.

Pooh’ Bear’s picnic. Jill.

Glistening Ink cap fungi. Jill.

As I was feeding the Horses this morning a pair of Geese flew in along the Valley and landed on the Lake. For over two weeks one Gander has been visiting on and off. We never did find any signs of the last pair of Geese who nested and disappeared without a trace, it could well be that this is that pair. This pair have also used the same places on the bank of the Lake, that could also be of course that they are the easiest places to land.

I had decided that I would try to stop any Geese from nesting on the Lake next year, but now that I have electric fenced to stop the Otter from taking the Fish from the Lake, it will quite easy to put extra strands of wire on the posts to stop the Fox that is of course if it was a Fox that had taken the Geese and Gosling’s. After seeing the Otter in the Valley making its way in the direction of the Lake, it could have been an Otter that had taken them.

It has been busy on the lake today, the sun seems to have brought life to it. As well as the Geese’s there were a pair of Little Grebe, a few pair of Mallards and Coot. But best of all and the first time that I have seen one in the Winter on the Lake was a Kingfisher. It was perched on a branch of a tree that we planted on the side of the Lake a few years back. As the tree has got bigger some the branches have started to hang over the Lake making them a good vantage spot for the Kingfisher to dive from. I cant imagine that it managed to catch any Fish today, most of the Fish will be at the bottom of the Lake as the water is so cold. Some Kingfishers do move to different locations during the Winter. Those on our Lake must still be here.