Links
Blog Archive
-
►
2011
(1009)
- Dec 2011 (62)
- Nov 2011 (89)
- Oct 2011 (88)
- Sep 2011 (96)
- Aug 2011 (82)
- Jul 2011 (74)
- Jun 2011 (91)
- May 2011 (77)
- Apr 2011 (96)
- Mar 2011 (89)
- Feb 2011 (89)
- Jan 2011 (76)
-
▼
2010
(1100)
- Dec 2010 (50)
- Nov 2010 (103)
- Oct 2010 (88)
- Sep 2010 (99)
- Aug 2010 (79)
- Jul 2010 (105)
- Jun 2010 (92)
- May 2010 (91)
- Apr 2010 (96)
- Mar 2010 (106)
- Feb 2010 (103)
- Jan 2010 (88)
-
►
2009
(1137)
- Dec 2009 (81)
- Nov 2009 (96)
- Oct 2009 (104)
- Sep 2009 (113)
- Aug 2009 (103)
- Jul 2009 (112)
- Jun 2009 (85)
- May 2009 (100)
- Apr 2009 (99)
- Mar 2009 (107)
- Feb 2009 (74)
- Jan 2009 (63)
-
►
2008
(991)
- Dec 2008 (65)
- Nov 2008 (81)
- Oct 2008 (77)
- Sep 2008 (75)
- Aug 2008 (60)
- Jul 2008 (97)
- Jun 2008 (80)
- May 2008 (87)
- Apr 2008 (130)
- Mar 2008 (74)
- Feb 2008 (87)
- Jan 2008 (78)
Sunday, 26 September 2010

Blue Tit
Evidently, from the phenomenon dating back to the 1960s of Blue Tits teaching one another how to open traditional British milk bottles with foil tops to get at the cream underneath, the Blue tit is a small, but clever bird.Characteristics
The blue crown and dark blue line passing through the eye and encircling the white cheeks to the chin, give the Blue Tit a very distinctive appearance. The forehead, eye streak, and a bar on the wing are also white. The nape, wings and tail are blue; the back is yellowish green; the under parts mostly sulphur-yellow with a dark line down the abdomen. The bill is black, and the legs bluish grey. The young are much more yellow than the old birds.
HabitatOriginally a woodland bird, the Blue Tit will nest wherever there is a suitable small hole, in a tree or nesting box. As a rule the bird roosts in ivy or evergreens, but in hard weather will shelter in a hole.
BehaviourThe Blue Tit is a valuable destroyer of pests, though it is fond of young buds of various trees, and may pull them to bits in the hope of finding insects. No species, however, destroys more coccids and aphids, the worst foes of many plants. It takes leaf miner grubs and moths.
The song period lasts almost all the year round, but is most often heard during February to June. It has a large vocabulary of calls and songs consisting of two or three notes followed by a rapid thrill.
Blue Tits are talented gymnasts in the slender twigs. A Blue Tit will often ascend a trunk in short jerky hops and display perky acrobatic performances when feeding on nuts or suet. It swings beneath the holder, calling tee, tee, tee or a scolding churr.B.A.B.
www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife
Labels:
face-of-waveney,
rspb,
waveney,
waveney-wildlife,
wild-birds



