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#corn bunting
alonglistofbirds · 1 month
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[2700/11080] Corn bunting - Emberiza calandra
Order: Passeriformes Suborder: Passeri Superfamily: Emberizoidea Family: Emberizidae (buntings)
Photo credit: Lior Kislev via Macaulay Library
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kavohh707 · 2 months
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I start my Portugal bird posting with this cute fluffy little corn bunting. I saw corn buntings a lot, but they were really fast at leaving the focus of my camera, but not this one.
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blogbirdfeather · 2 months
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Corn Bunting - Trigueirão (Emberiza calandra)
Vila Franca de Xira/Portugal (16/02/2024)
[Nikon D500; AF-S Nikkor 500mm F5,6E PF ED VR; 1/250s; F5,6; 640 ISO]
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vintagewildlife · 1 year
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Corn bunting By: J. Gilléron From: Éditions Rencontre Cards 1977
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dansnaturepictures · 11 days
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Some memories from the phenomenal Scotland trip we went on last year, which we began travelling to a year ago tomorrow. I don't know where that year has gone! What a fantastic and wild time it was. The photos in this set are a mixture of some I still hadn't got around to processing and did so this evening and some key ones from the trip that I processed at the time, each bringing back fond memories. The photos are of; Corn Bunting at Banff in Aberdeenshire, view at Findhorn Bay and Long-tailed Duck at Burghead Harbour one of the birds of the trip both in Moray, another of the star species of the trip and one of the main ones we wanted to see Otter at Dervaig on Mull, a view on the Aberdeenshire coast, Lapwing at Lochindorb, Black Guillemot on Loch Eil and view on Mull.
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tesserasnake-blog · 2 months
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I love corn buntings, such pleasant guys
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calochortus · 2 years
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Grauwe gors - Corn bunting - Emberiza calandra
flickr
Grauwe gors - Corn bunting - Emberiza calandra by Pieter-Jan Alles Via Flickr: Ardèche, France
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squawkoverflow · 2 years
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A new variant has been added!
Corn Bunting (Emberiza calandra) © Francis Orpen Morris
It hatches from big, brown, common, dark, fine, inconspicuous, indistinct, low, male, narrow, open, outer, overall, plain, uncommon, white, and whitish eggs.
squawkoverflow - the ultimate bird collecting game          🥚 hatch    ❤️ collect     🤝 connect
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sitting-on-me-bum · 5 months
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What If Birds Left Tracks in the Sky?
Photographer: Xavi Bou 
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An arctic tern creates an unusual shape as it takes flight.
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A beautifully ornate pattern made up of a flock of Northern lapwings.
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A group of corn buntings seem to erupt out of the ground.
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crochetraptor · 6 months
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Just finished the Halloween garland today!
It's quite the mix of patterns because I wanted candy corn but not just that.
Most of the pieces came from this free pattern. I did everything but the cat with my own amounts ( I started going a little insane by the ghosts).
I then used this free pattern for the candy corn. I just changed the colors to be more like candy corn. (These were my favorite to make)
Finally the string is just a long foundation crochet line!
I used an E 3.5mm hook for everything except the string, that's an H 5mm.
All was yarn I have that I suspect was a normal worsted weight I had already.
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frank095 · 11 months
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Corn Bunting Bird Portrait Watercolor Painting
This watercolor painting of a corn bunting bird is a stunning example of the incredible potential of artificial intelligence in the world of art. With lifelike textures and vibrant colors, the painting captures the beauty and essence of the subject with breathtaking realism and precision, making it a true masterpiece. -------------------------------------------------------------------- GET THIS ARTWORK ON MERCH AND AS PRINTS! ►On Society6 HERE ►On ArtStation HERE ►On ArtPal HERE ►On Imaginekind HERE You can also find my AI prompts on PromptBase HERE -------------------------------------------------------------------- I BELIEVE ART SHOULD BE SHARED FREELY.  Unless I'm working with clients or projects, I want all my creations to be freely available for digital download and personal use. If you wish to personally support me, I appreciate every donation with PAYPAL HERE. Unless specified, all my creations are made using artificial intelligence with MidJourney. -------------------------------------------------------------------- IF YOU HAVE ANY SPECIAL REQUESTS, FEEL FREE TO CONTACT ME! 🙂 ►Instagram ►YouTube ►PayPal Donations -------------------------------------------------------------------- USEFUL LINKS TO FIND ME: ►OpenSea (NFTs) ►DeviantArt ►Behance ►ArtStation ►ArtPal ►Imaginekind
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ovaruling · 16 days
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no one asked, but here’s my detailed bird seed update since this blog has become not only a record keeper of my fitness but also my bird friends:
adjusting my budget severely for the elaborate bird feeding i’ve got going on. to recap, i feed about 200+ wild birds per day, mostly doves, grackles, blue jays, cardinals, catbirds, warblers, mockingbirds, and woodpeckers. sometimes i get a rare painted bunting! the number may possibly be more, my counting when they swarm is not reliable.
when i first started feeding, the birds were all terribly thin—the development in my neighborhood has been devastating to the general health of the bird population, as well as the sweltering heat of recent years. growing up, i remember it being a common sight to see birds milling about on the ground, scavenging for food. you almost never see it anymore, bc there IS no more ground. if its not paved, then it’s all tightly mowed grass with no chance for food to even have a chance to be there. based on the cityscape, my guess is that they have had to fly further and further distances in search of somewhere to forage. which, in this climate, must be utterly sapping them. they haven’t moved away, they still nest right here bc there are still thankfully lots of sheltering trees. but they are having to go further and further for food—not good.
the adjustment is worth it. i did find one store online that sells very cheap whole corn kernels by the pound, which the squirrels and jays love.
there is a female squirrel who is very obviously and very definitely nursing some babies. i am trying to keep supporting her bc she unfortunately picked a very bad place to give birth (landscapers and horses and vehicles nearby tear through almost daily on the other side of my hedge).
i don’t want her to have to go far, especially with the heat getting more intense, and so i’ve been making sure she has corn cobs every day at the base of her tree. but those get expensive, so i’m excited to have found whole corn kernels so cheap.
also found one decent price for halved peanuts which all the birds are absolutely obsessed with.
and the rest i’m still reliant on Tractor Supply for. i’d love to stop giving their murderous animal agriculture supporting asses money, but i’d need to find a better priced Fruit and Nut seed than they offer, and i haven’t yet.
as for seed cakes for the woodpeckers—which, the vegetable gelatin ones i buy are the most expensive per unit that i’m spending on rn, bc there is absolutely no way i’m going to conscience animal gelatin—my experiment in making them myself is ongoing. i used too little agar agar powder in my last batch (and also didn’t get it boiling enough) so it just ended up being a sticky crumbly treat that i put on the ground for the scavengers.
i’ll try again this week bc i’d really love to keep supporting my native red-bellies, especially as it gets hotter and hotter into the summer and the birds get more exhausted at a much faster rate.
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outofangband · 2 months
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Birds of Thargelion
After this I just have Maglor’s Gap and that will complete my series on birds in the Fëanorian realms pre Amon Ereb!
Flora, fauna, geography and environment of Arda Masterlist
Thargelion was the realm of Caranthir, located in the north east of Beleriand just north of Ossiriand and bordered by the Ered Luin, the eastern stretch of mountains that divided Beleriand from the rest of Middle Earth
As always this is not a definitive list! Please feel free to ask more or give me a more specific category!
Around Lake Helevorn and the rivers: Red-breasted merganser, mute swan, white tailed dipper, whooper swan, smew, little grebe, red throated loon, common crane, mallard, common white eye, northern shovler, green winged teal, corn crake, spotted crake, black winged stilt
Mountains: bearded vulture, water pipit, golden eagle, kestrel, peregrine falcon, Rock ptarmigan, common siskin, alpine accentor, northern wheatear, ring ouzel, white tailed eagle, chough, spotted nutcracker, Citril finch, griffon vulture, common redstart, common raven, wallcreeper, common jay, boreal owl, white winged snowfinch, crag martin, common redstart, black redstart
Foothills and forests: black grouse, wood grouse, goshawk, grey white fronted goose, hazel grouse, little bunting, meadow pipit, tree sparrow, hedge warbler, Bohemian waxwing, common kestrel, long eared owl, little owl, marsh tit, coal tit, mourning dove, rock pigeon, woodchat strike
World building notes
-Like most of the Noldor in Eastern Beleriand, many of Caranthir’s scouts keep birds of prey. In Thargelion these are primarily peregrine falcons and kestrels. Hunting with birds was less common however.
--There are populations of Green Elves who live in Thargelion, primarily in the mountains and near the border of Ossiriand. Though they also do not use birds for hunting, certain species are kept as companions or messengers.
-Chicken breeding as an art and science developed during the Watchful Peace. Chickens in Thargelion are appraised for long plumage and colorful feathers. Their eggs are eaten but they are not often used for meat.
-Chickens, peacocks and quails were kept by the Noldor of Thargelion, techniques of raising and breeding them were learned from Sindar and Silvan cultures of Eastern Beleriand. Indeed the Noldor of Thargelion were one of the only Noldor populations to keep quails.
-Bearded vultures appear on the crests of some of Caranthir’s lords and were even kept by a few of them
-Feathers of various mountain birds especially eagles and ouzel appear in wood carvings as an architectural motif during the Watchful Peace in Thargelion
-Out of all the Fëanorian realms, water birds appear most often in art and other cultural references in Thargelion as Lake Helevorn and its wildlife are a central facet of life there especially in times of peace. Wading birds like crakes, cranes and stilts are especially Valued.
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blogbirdfeather · 3 months
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Corn Bunting - Trigueirão (Emberiza calandra)
Vila Franca de Xira/Portugal (5/01/2024)
[Nikon D500; AF-S Nikkor 500mm F5,6E PF ED VR; 1/800s; F5,6; 400 ISO]
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pupmusebox · 5 months
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CuZilla corning Caster, since it's been a very long time. "Well, ... I am home."
Cue the soft uff from Caster when seeing the other home and pouting a bit when looking up at Cuzilla, "You big wolf... had me wondering what happened to you, mrmm..." softly bunting yet glad to see the big mate again after so long and papping at Cuzilla, "I missed you..." dearly so from how Caster was acting right now and fussing of Cuzilla being away so long.
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dansnaturepictures · 1 year
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14th April 2023: Aberdeenshire 
Photos taken in this set: 1. Razorbills, Guillemots and Kittiwake in a wonderful seabird nesting colony fix right at the end of the Heatherlea Spring Into Scotland tour at Troup Head one of favourite places to be with some of the species I love best and captivate me the most. 2. Konik ponies I enjoyed seeing at RSPB Loch of Strathbeg I’ve heard a lot about them before. 3. View from Cairnbulg. 4. A Corn Bunting we saw extremely well including singing nicely at Banff, one of the revelations of the trip for me seen on the last day of it and a bird I love seeing. 5 and 6. Gorse dominated coastal scenes at Troup Head I did love the bright gorse of Scotland last week it was so good to take in. 7, 8 and 9. Fulmars, Gannets and Puffins respectively the other half of my super six seabirds alongside Guillemot, Razorbill and Kittiwake the birds that first inspired me and I first really took to my heart in my early birding days that it was a pleasure to see last Friday really heartfelt experiences seeing them and nice to see them at a colony further north than I ever had. The Fulmars were elegant wonders dominating those last two days of the tour, the Gannets were heartening to see and be immersed in after their struggles generally last year and the Puffin a bird I have such a strong connection to and love for was the surprise but perfect ending to our trip such charismatic and colourful birds to observe always. 10. View from Kinnaird Head on a great sunny visit there. 
That day I also enjoyed seeing Sandwich Tern, Pink-footed Geese, Marsh Harrier, passerine birds like Yellowhammer and Tree Sparrow seen well at Loch of Strathbeg and Skylark that day too, Hooded Crow, Common Seal, Roe Deer seen from my hotel room in the morning at Nethy Bridge, scurvygrass and lesser celandine. 
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