Thanks for all the birds not seen! If you make more videos, please - you don't need background music - the sounds of nature and comments are all we need.
Hi both, thank you for sharing your birding adventures around the country with us. Merry Christmas to you and looking forward to birding adventures 2024.👍
Just found this vid an ur channel really enjoyed it an I'll be watchin more the next few days 4sure. If ur interested theres currently a red breasted goose on Queens Park old boating lake Heywood nr Rochdale, u can get within feet of it as it floats around the margins. This yr I managed 2film my 1st Warblers from my grg window in North Manchester. Check out Rowetta the Robin I tamed n uploaded feedin from my hand and Bernice the Blackbird raising chicks inside my grg👌 Oh yeah an the recent Parakeets 👀
Hello - Merry Christmas - love your vidoe as i'm only about 21/2 years in i tick few birds as you but different places - this year 179 and 222 British lifer that not include birds i seen in Africa birds 416 that many years ago when was safari buff and into mammals - now bitten the bug - talking of Bitterns i sort of magnet cheers have happy Birding year of 2024 - Martin
What a great video looking back at so many great birds. So much amazing footage and photos. You certainly put in the road and foot miles! Still one day to get that firecrest!! So, 2024 is almost upon us...... 'Where we goin'?' ! (Sorry I couldn't resist it!) . Have a great new year and thank you for all the work you put into your videos!
Thanks for your comments and continued support, we genuinely appreciate it. not sure exactly what 2024 will bring, we still have to wait for the van to be looked at and hopefully repaired. Ultimately we are planning a big year, lots of miles, challenges, birds, megas and fun, keep watching it should be quite an adventure!
@@TheBackyardAviaryAdventures I am really looking forward to it. Thank you. I do hope the van isn't too serious and expensive. I wonder what these current storms might be blowing our way, birdwise!
Lovely overview! But isn't the first clip of the White-rumped Sandpiper a Little Stint? I see a white V over the back, miss the elongated rear end and also miss the chevrons on the side chest and flank. And it is definitely a different bird that the White-rumped in the second clip.
Smew used to be common around the Suffolk coast. Some of those birds are escapees from captivity… as some of the ones would be extremely difficult to accidentally migrate here even if caught in the winds