Install the app
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

Wildlife in your Garden

If you keep putting out meat scraps, it`ll keep coming back ( if you want it too ).

They learn very quickly that there`s a reliable food source.
The Buzzard has been coming for a few weeks now, first time onto the table though ;)
We put out loads of seeds, nuts and pastry out for the smaller birds, 10 feeding stations in the front garden and 26 in the back garden.
 
The Buzzard has been coming for a few weeks now, first time onto the table though ;)
We put out loads of seeds, nuts and pastry out for the smaller birds, 10 feeding stations in the front garden and 26 in the back garden.

I’m surprised you haven’t got a Sparrow Hawk too, with the amount of birds that lot must be bringing in lol
 
I’m surprised you haven’t got a Sparrow Hawk too, with the amount of birds that lot must be bringing in lol
We do mate, one visits about every two or three days, but we have a lot of bushes so the little birds are able to find cover.
The Sparrowhawk often lands on one of the trees and affords us some glorious views of it.
 

They're everywhere now, I saw one just before Christmas off the A1 just outside of Leeds.
Really? They were on the edge not too long ago. The were introduced back into the Reading area a few years ago an now have made their way west as far as Bath.If you drive down the M4 you genuinely see more Red Kites than Crows it is mad.
 

Really? They were on the edge not too long ago. The were introduced back into the Reading area a few years ago an now have made their way west as far as Bath.If you drive down the M4 you genuinely see more Red Kites than Crows it is mad.

All over Wales now, the rural Midlands and rapidly heading North.

They haven’t really got any natural predators other than man when you think about it. So once man decided to leave them alone and a few people decided to try and save them, they started spread back out to where they’d always been.

In Victorian times they were common scavengers in London !
 
All over Wales now, the rural Midlands and rapidly heading North.

They haven’t really got any natural predators other than man when you think about it. So once man decided to leave them alone and a few people decided to try and save them, they started spread back out to where they’d always been.

In Victorian times they were common scavengers in London !
The mid wales population thrive due to a local tip I heard, not sure if true.
 

Welcome

Join Grand Old Team to get involved in the Everton discussion. Signing up is quick, easy, and completely free.

Back
Top