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Egyptian Goose
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Just saw a strange bird in the park and rspb bird identifier says it`s an Egyptian Goose. Anyone else seen one? There`s no status on the website but it says there are 700 adults in the UK. Common in Norfolk apparently but I saw it in Bushy Park.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.redman - it`s right by Hampton Court Palace. I also saw something interesting there the other day. We have loads of Himalayan Parakeets here and I was wondering where they roost then I saw one disappear into a hole in a tree. Mystery solved.
Yes, ethandron, they are odd. I wasn`t sure at first if it was a goose or a duck.
Yes, ethandron, they are odd. I wasn`t sure at first if it was a goose or a duck.
First Egyptian goose I saw was in South Park Ilford in the early 1980s it had been recorded on the birding sites in the area for a few weeks before settling down with the resident canada geese. He was actually twitchable at that point although there are small breeding groups across the South East now... and Kew Gardens have some that wander over the fence onto the Thames...
As for the Parakeets they are almost at pest concentration in parts of london....great fun to watch though... they are moving northwards relatively quickly and I think at least one pair have already bred in Solihull
As for the Parakeets they are almost at pest concentration in parts of london....great fun to watch though... they are moving northwards relatively quickly and I think at least one pair have already bred in Solihull
Yes rowan, you`re right about the parakeets although I`m not sure whether they deprive the native birds of food. I`ve found a few cashew nut shells dotted around the lawn lately and I think someone must have put them out for the parakeets and they`ve dropped them. I think the Canada Geese are becoming a pest now. There are two many of them and with heathrow not far away they can be a hazard. They caused an incident with a South African jumbo some years ago that could have been quite nasty. They mess everywhere as well
They are controlling the Canadas by ensuring the eggs don't hatch in some places rather than culling existing birds or removing eggs from nests Main problem with the parakeets is not competition for food but for nest holes....they have the potential to affect the population of our native woodpeckers as a result also other birds that nest or roost in holes in trees....some owls and wrens could also be hit by the influx