WAR... in the backyard

Feathers were flying!! 

 

The territorial magpies holding their position.  Enemy attack from on high.  Counter attack.  Dive bombers. Soaring. Gliding. Swooping.  May day, may day.  Bail out.

 

Back to peace and quiet with my 2 maggies just warbling.

 

DEB

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WAR... in the backyard

WAR... in the backyard

i have some magpies i feed a couple of times a week, much to the dogs disgust they think all meat from the fridge is theirs.

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WAR... in the backyard

I have three groups living around me.  I am in a mini rain forest with dense huge native trees)   No  territorial problems as each group stays in their's. .

From time to time when two groups have nestlings leaving the nest of test flights around the same time, the babies meet up mid flight and swoop around each other and play,  while the parents watch from separate trees.   I have been watching them for years and the wonder never fades

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WAR... in the backyard


@freshwaterbeach wrote:

I have three groups living around me.  I am in a mini rain forest with dense huge native trees)   No  territorial problems as each group stays in their's. .

From time to time when two groups have nestlings leaving the nest of test flights around the same time, the babies meet up mid flight and swoop around each other and play,  while the parents watch from separate trees.   I have been watching them for years and the wonder never fades


They sure can provide some good entertainment  😄

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WAR... in the backyard

The magpies at my place are fine it is the pigeons that leave all the feathers about.

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WAR... in the backyard

A few days ago, as we drove into the carport, I made eye contact with a bird who quickly flew away. It took a moment before I realised that it was a falcon. I have never seen a bird of prey around here before so perhaps it had been displaced by habitat loss - fires, clearing - or I;m not very observant. It came back, after we went inside the house, to collect its prey - a pigeon.

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"There is nothing more; but I want nothing more." Christopher Hitchins
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WAR... in the backyard

Hi, yes, it's more than likely that the fires have had an impact on the "food cycle" of the wildlife.  

 

But what an experience to see the bird up close. 

 

Shame it was a pigeon and not a dreaded indian mynah.

 

DEB

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