This morning - grey, sleety and cold - I heard my first song thrush of the year as I drove to work. What a way to start the day. If I'd had time, I would have stopped to listen... it's one of my favourite bird songs.
Yesterday I heard a wisp of half-hearted blackbird song, coming from high up in a conifer. I couldn't see the singer, who must have been tucked away on a sheltered branch, but I heard him alright. There's no mistaking that rich sound, even if the bird wasn't giving it much welly.
After the dark, cold, quiet days of the Big Freeze (TM), things have turned around quickly and our birds are getting geared up for another breeding season - even if the weather is still far from ideal.
If you open a window, stand in your garden or walk to the shops, you can't fail to notice all the singing that's going on.
For example, here at the gardens in The Lodge, there's plenty to hear (and see). Blue tits twittering. great spotted woodpeckers chattering and chasing (and the males drumming on dead branches). Nuthatches chasing around and calling at the tops of their voices. Everywhere you go there are great tits teacher, teachering, and wrens, robins and dunnocks all trilling, singing and squeaking for all they're worth.
This frenzied activity isn't limited to little birds, either. Stock doves - prettier, neater cousins of the woodpigeon - are busy going ooooOOOOO, ooooOOOOO, oooOOOOO and looking for tree holes to nest in. And soon we'll see sparrowhawks displaying over the treetops, powering up and swooping down in a rollercoaster style.
Even birds which don't breed here - like the redwings which will be migrating back to Scandinavia and Russia in the near future - will be singing soon.
And the cause of all this song and dance? It's the increase in daylight hours which has triggered off an surge of hormones, which makes the birds' gonads swell (inside, not outside).
So while it might be nice to imagine that birds are singing because they're feeling romantic and happy and it's spring and the sun's out, the truth is more mundane.
It's chemicals.
Oh well.
Regardless of the cause, now's the ideal time to enjoy birdsong - while you can actually see who's singing! There'll be more species singing come April and May, after all our migrants have arrived, but by then the trees have their leaves and seeing the singer is much more difficult.
February is also a good time to put up a nestbox - there are lots of birds out there which will be in the market for a nest site very soon. And why not pick up a box suitable for a family of robins, wrens or sparrows, instead of the traditional great or blue tits?
At home, there's not so much song but I have noticed dunnocks flirting in the bushes: lots of wing- and tail-flicking and chasing through the twigs. What have you noticed in your garden or out-and-about? Leave a comment and share!
I live in the outskirts of a seaside town in County Down NI, I have 6 nut bird feeders and 1 bird table in my garden I also hang fatballs at different locations in my garden.There are a number of trees (conifers,etc.)and I have observed 2 pair of magpies and 1 pair of collared doves this week carrying materials to build their nests in the conifers and an ivy bush..
The birds are singing in the mornings and just before dusk it is so wonderful to hear.
Our weather this week is very frosty overnight and sunny from early morning there is a lot of activity amongst all birds.
Ollie
"So while it might be nice to imagine that birds are singing because they're feeling romantic and happy and it's spring and the sun's out, the truth is more mundane. It's chemicals. Oh well."
I'm probably taking this far more seriously than it was intended to be, but I find this sort of shallow reductionism intensely irritating. The truth is never mundane. Of course chemicals are involved, just as they are in human happiness. That doesn't mean that happiness is somehow unreal or 'mundane'. I see no reason to believe that we are the only species to feel joy and that feeling is as important a part as any other of the universal process that involves sun, earth, hormones, gonads, beaks and human ears.
Tony Watts
I live on the outskirts of Nottingham and came home one lunchtime to find over 30 goldfinches in our trees ,with other smaller groups of them dotted about, all making a great deal of noise! It was wonderful to see and hear and I was so pleased to see such large numbers after the cold spell earlier this year.
They were united in their excitement and chatter, just as they are when they have paired up and are twittering and flapping on out telephone wires.
I've noticed an increase in the amount of singing going on, but the birds near me seem to do alot of singing even in the bleak mid winter!?
Who said the birds are singing? if they are feeling the way I feel at the moment, they are screaming,' when are we going to get some heat'!,
All I see are the birds screeching and fighting over the food in our garden and I don't blame them it's freezing outside. Yes! the sun is shining, but there's no heat from it. It was snowing a moment ago, although it didn't lie.
I'm praying for no more snow, I've had enough of it for a while.
I've just poured some hot water on the bird bath to melt it, although it will freeze again soon.
While driving in Thanet today we saw a very large group of Lapwings flying around. It was a lovely sight as we have not seen such a large group of birds in a long time.
They are all in fine voice here! I love just to sit and listen to them...it never fails to cheer me up. It's been a hard winter for them, lets hope we've seen the last of the cold weather.
I'm with Tony, understanding what chemicals it takes to make us happy or sexually appealing doesn't mean we don't fell that way. I have been enjoying the singing of the birds very much this week i've really noticed the difference, thrushes, robins, wrens and sparrows lovely. Of to the WWT tomorrow to see what's going on there.
Mike Graham
Of course it,s chemicals. that makes us and birds feel and act as we do. But chemicals only become active when conditions are right. I watch Blue tits starting to prepare nests in December. Incredible, I thought, Global Warming. Weather changed. Activity stopped, chemical activity of course had dropped. Food quality changed. Currently activity in my garden is not directed to breeding but feeding. Vast quantities of fat balls, mixed seed, cheese, nuts, sultanas, food scraps, buttered white bread, (more edible surprisingly than mixed grain) disappear rapidly. Pigeon, Dove, Woodpecker, Nuthatch,Robin,Blackbird, Dunnock, Chaffinch, Jackdaw,Sparrowhawk, Blue, Great, Coal and long tailed tits are active but no sign of nesting. Normally over many previous years this started on Feb 14th,(no joke). I hear many bird songs, but a long cry from the dawn chorus. Like life and death though it will happen, and I look forward to it with anticipation. Can my garden cope with 20 nesting sites ranging from standard to bizarre containers and positions. Infinite joy for me as my chemicals are synthesised and my brain exaults the wonders that I behold. The certainty of nature!!!!
I don't care what makes the birds sing, it is just fantastic to stand and listern to them. The blackbird, robin and dunnock are giving it their all. Spring is on the way, snowdrops and crocus are out in flower and there are lambs in the fields. I was hit on the side of the face by a fly of some sort today when I was out for a walk. The bees will hopefully soon be coming out as well. I think you can smell spring in the air.