You're spending too much time watching this....Birds alarming a lot at 11:28 - a new mammal walked through ...
On another note, keeping an eye on the catkins developing in the centre of the image.
Badger at 00.53
It's the small white numbers in the far left hand corner of the image - eg behind the 'play' icon in RSs images on post #20.It was right at the start of the red bar - I’m not very tec savvie! I couldn’t see the toad either so we’re at cross purposes some how!
Just saw the yellowhammer - right hand side behind the grassy knoll
I looked at the spreadsheet I linked on the thread a week or two back - turns out there are loads of different foxes visiting, all named. Crazy. I guess the mammal watching enthusiasts are pretty dedicated, although I guess some are seen in the daytime when individual features to distinguish them more easily seen? Was also slightly amused that the two male pheasants had both been named Steve! (if I had that right).Assumed the foxes were a pair, but there are now 3 - siblings.?
Foxes are fairly easy to identify as individuals if you watch them closely. I use a combination of size, sex, "boots" (black leg markings, extent and any patterning), white brush tip presence/absence and extent, face markings and in cases of real difficulty I go to front of ear marginal markings. Temporarily (because they change rapidly) I also use bites and other injury marks.I looked at the spreadsheet I linked on the thread a week or two back - turns out there are loads of different foxes visiting, all named. Crazy. I guess the mammal watching enthusiasts are pretty dedicated, although I guess some are seen in the daytime when individual features to distinguish them more easily seen? Was also slightly amused that the two male pheasants had both been named Steve! (if I had that right).
Star I should think.20.36 something shiny appears in the very right hand top of the tree - can anyone work out what it is?
Looks like eye shine, but it only one and larger, but at very edge of picture!