Sep. 24th, 2023

luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
This weekend I went birdwatching with my dad and two of his cousins; we were at Falsterbo in the southernmost part of Sweden, where the migrating birds are funneled out to the tip of a cape. Much of the waders are long gone, and so are the warblers, who fly invisibly at night. The huge flocks of pigeons and jackdaws have not begun yet. But we saw plenty of starlings, flying in purposeful and tightly coordinated flocks, their wings beating regularly. Just as purposeful, but less coordinated, are the flocks of finches, who fly in bursts: a moment of effort, a moment of rest.

But my favorites are the tits, who are not purposeful at all: they come in loose, chaotic flocks and, when they reach the shore, go: 'oh noooo, it's the sea, how scary it is! are we really sure we want to do this?!?' And then they dive down and take shelter in the bushes, which were seething with them. After a minute, they rise again, take aim at the sea...and then often chicken out again at the last moment, even though you can see the white cliffs of Dover Stevns Klint on the horizon on the Danish side. Until they successfully set off. I do feel for them! Many of the blue tits stay year-round in Sweden, but the population is so high that many of them also leave, and this is the largest sea crossing they have. Tits are not made for the sea. Meanwhile, the gulls glide casually by in ones and twos, in their element.

There were also plenty of birds of prey, mostly sparrowhawks, coming in low to the ground against the headwind--I could see their banded wings and bellies. In the afternoon, they rise in the thermals above the large heath inland from the cape, then leisurely glide south and out to sea: common buzzards, sparrowhawks, red kites, common kestrels, western marsh harriers. We also saw a white-tailed eagle, but I don't think it was on the move.

I only saw one bird new to me: the egret (I'd seen it in England but not in Sweden). But also a few I'd only seen once or twice before: a flock of common pochards (ha, not so common), a few ruffs (currently without their ruffs), a Sandwich tern, and some brent geese.

Other birds seen (an incomplete list): Teal, wigeon, northern pintail, gadwall, shelduck. Common ringed plover, grey plover, dunlin, common greenshank, common redshank, pied avocet, curlew, bar-tailed godwit. And a number of herons, of course. : D
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
So, Yuletide! Perhaps the Broster and Jacobite-associated fandoms should coordinate our nominations? This year I thought I might request fic for Broster's Mr Rowl--all my ordinary fandoms are in fact Yuletide-sized, so in order to keep to the spirit of Yuletide it would be nice to request something new, for which there is currently no fic at all! Anyone else interested in that? I would be most interested in Raoul des Sablières/Hervey Barrington, but I would be happy to nominate Juliana Forrest as well, if anyone wants to request her.

Things I am potentially interested in requesting:
Mr Rowl - Raoul des Sablières, Hervey Barrington
Flight of the Heron - Keith, Ewen, Alison, Lachlan (any others?)
The Wounded Name - Laurent, Aymar, Avoye
Flemington - Archie Flemington, James Logie, Captain Callandar
Kidnapped - Alan, Davie
Bonnie Dundee - Darklis, Lady Jean
Jill - Jill, Kitty
Think of England - Archie Curtis, Daniel da Silva

Obviously I can't nominate all these (and not request all of them, either). Anyone planning to nominate any of them? (I assume [personal profile] regshoe will nominate Alan and Davie...). Has anyone posted about any of these fandoms at the Yuletide promotion post? Is anyone planning to do so?
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