Friday 26 April 2024

Pied Wagtail

I recently mentioned the Kestrels unusual behaviour of perching on the gravestones in the burial ground over the road - rather than where they are normally seen - higher on a telegraph pole or a wire.

Looking out of the patio doors the other day I noticed a 'something'  on the neighbours roof. I zoomed in with the camera and found it was a Pied Wagtail and that's unusual too as they are usually seen on the ground walking and wagging their tails.




The Illustration from the book" A Sparrow's Life's as Sweet as Ours" by Carrie Ackroyd. 


They were once considered a bird that lived close to water and are often seen on sandy beaches but now can be seen anywhere from city streets to country gardens. It's ability to adapt to urban living has made it more successful than other Wagtails - The grey, which is also a permanent resident and the yellow which is a summer visitor . Numbers of the yellow seen in this country have halved in the last 30 years (I've never seen either).

No one knows why they are constantly tail wagging but it makes them easy to spot on the ground.

John Clare, the nineteenth century poet wrote a poem for children

Little trotty wagtail he went in the rain
And tittering, tottering sideways - he never got straight again
He stooped to get a worm and he looked up to catch a fly
And then he flew away e're his feathers they were dry.



Back Tomorrow
Sue

11 comments:

  1. One of my favourite birds, they are such busy little things. They also seem to love running up and down our roof - must be plenty of insects up there - or it could be they have become wary of our cats.

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    1. I often see them over the road on the grass of the graveyard and on the shingle driveway this side of the road . Not usually sitting still enough for a photo.

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  2. Your wagtail has black up to his eye…have had to look it up…could it be a white browned one? I have never noticed one like it before.

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    1. I assumed it was just an ordinary Pied Wagtail. Might it look odd because it was so high on the roof and I'm on the ground but if it was a White Browed wagtail it would be here from India - long way from home! I could share the photo maybe twitchers will arrive to find it - what a mystery.

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    2. Think I may have been three parts asleep this morning. Now I can see it's eye and it's not surrounded by black!!

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  3. We've noticed lots of Pied Wagtails in motorway services car parks - plenty of food for them I guess. I love those Carrie Ackroyd sketches - so simple, yet so effective, I think they're beautiful.

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  4. I haven't seen a wagtail for quite a while.

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  5. The wagtail is a handsome bird. Some birds do seem to easily adapt to new locations. Our seagulls that were always seen by the ocean now are seen in parking lots an hour away from the ocean.

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  6. What a nice looking bird.

    God bless.

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  7. We have a couple that visit the garden, if the bird table is empty they parade up and down past my door in a bid to let me know. I do love the way they walk.

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  8. Such an interesting bird.

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