signoftea (
signoftea) wrote in
common_nature2024-11-20 09:17 pm
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Entry tags:
Nature diary
It snowed today, and I was wondering what the beach would look like covered in snow, so I went for a walk to see it. It was very pretty!

The migratory birds are here now, and some of them spend the winter at the shore. I spent some time watching a flock of sanderlings and turnstones as they were looking for food in the mud. Some crows kept following them around. It looked like the smaller birds were scared of the crows and tried to avoid them. There were many seagulls, too. My birding app even registered the call of a loon! Loons normally live in North America and Iceland, but some of them migrate to Europe during the winter months.

The migratory birds are here now, and some of them spend the winter at the shore. I spent some time watching a flock of sanderlings and turnstones as they were looking for food in the mud. Some crows kept following them around. It looked like the smaller birds were scared of the crows and tried to avoid them. There were many seagulls, too. My birding app even registered the call of a loon! Loons normally live in North America and Iceland, but some of them migrate to Europe during the winter months.
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The small wading birds were right to be apprehensive: crows (A) will eat anything and (B) think they’re funny.
And how cool that you encountered The Voice Of The Canadian Wilderness so far from home!
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We've had our first snow here in north Shropshire in the UK too.
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I am laughing at the sudden, if tardy, realization that the Minnesota State Bird (the common loon) is much more widely-travelled than I am.
P.
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Amazing!
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What a brilliant idea and lovely picture.