ChatterBank0 min ago
What were these birds?
12 Answers
This morning when I was walking my dog I saw a small flock of seagulls on the grass and there were two other birds with them. This was about 300 metres from the sea (Atlantic).
These birds were about the same size as a seagull but they had what looked like grey/brown wings. They had a different walk and their call was more like a two-tone whistle. Does this make sense? Does anyone jnow what they might be?
Many thanks.
These birds were about the same size as a seagull but they had what looked like grey/brown wings. They had a different walk and their call was more like a two-tone whistle. Does this make sense? Does anyone jnow what they might be?
Many thanks.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have yet to see a tern as big as a seagull Cetti.
Young seagulls have a different call and a different posture when they are hoping to be fed by a parent. That, along with their brown colour, would easily lead someone to think they were a different species.
All other possibilities would be a lot smaller than the gulls.
I am assuming the gulls were the large Herring Gulls or Lesser Black-backed Gulls (they are the common ones we get around here (Kirkcaldy))
Young seagulls have a different call and a different posture when they are hoping to be fed by a parent. That, along with their brown colour, would easily lead someone to think they were a different species.
All other possibilities would be a lot smaller than the gulls.
I am assuming the gulls were the large Herring Gulls or Lesser Black-backed Gulls (they are the common ones we get around here (Kirkcaldy))
Sorry Cetti, didn't mean to come across in that way.
My view is that it is highly unlikely that terns will be ashore, on grass, amongst seagulls and where humans walk their dogs. We have sandwich terns here and the closest they come is offshore rocks - even then, they fly away if a dogwalker goes near the shoreline.
My view is that it is highly unlikely that terns will be ashore, on grass, amongst seagulls and where humans walk their dogs. We have sandwich terns here and the closest they come is offshore rocks - even then, they fly away if a dogwalker goes near the shoreline.
Thank you all for your replies. I am really puzzled - I have looked at various sites and can't find them. What made me notice them was that they walked more like a pheasant and had short beaks and this funny whistling call.
Another thing puzzling me - when I logged on to AB, I forunnd that my question had been posted twice and one had the message, ' This question is banned'. Can anyone tell me why? It was a perfectly sensible question about birds. Now AB is asking me to post a video!!
Another thing puzzling me - when I logged on to AB, I forunnd that my question had been posted twice and one had the message, ' This question is banned'. Can anyone tell me why? It was a perfectly sensible question about birds. Now AB is asking me to post a video!!
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