Lincolnshire Rare Bird and Wildlife Photo Album.

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Home > Common Birds in Lincolnshire

Most viewed - Common Birds in Lincolnshire
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Buzzard on Train Track.297 viewsBuzzardDon Davis
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id please290 viewsis this a blackbird its been in garden for two days John Lusby
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Merlin hunt279 viewshe got away Robert Hardy
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Common Buzzard278 viewsColin Smale
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273 viewsShort Eared OwlMick West
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Merlin or Hobby272 viewsCouldn't make my mind up which but the consensus is MERLIN. About half a mile away (as usual) chasing what looks like a wheatear which did escape.Colin Smale
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Wader271 viewstrevormlee
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Hen Harrier271 viewsRobert Hardy
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SEO269 viewsMick West
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Swan

Goose type hybrid
268 viewsThe bird people have been recording as White fronted Goose at Deeping

Lakes.
Will Bowell
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Dean Eades266 viewsHuttoft pit - SnipeDean Eades
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Canada Geese at Sunset266 viewsMick West
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Sammy the Black Headed Gull266 viewsMick West
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Dean Eades -262 viewsCovenham Reservoir 07-03-05Dean Eades
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flava wag262 viewsBarton in late April 1988--note the grey uppers including crown and the blackish rump white underparts with pale lemon yellow restricted to the chin and throat and super, the median covert bar broader than the greater covert bar but also the yellow outer web to the outermost tertial--the call was very similar to a Yellow Wag---although something of an extreme example such grey mantled flavas are not all that raregpc
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Woodcock262 viewsWoodcock on November 28th 2007 at Messingham Sand QuarryJohn Goy
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Great Spots259 viewsof recent days an enormous amount of aggressive behaviour between 2/3 Great Spotted Woodpeckers in the ash wood on Waters's Edge bordering Barton Broads--two birds drumming often in the same old ash--I have watched them on three mornings constantly chasing and falling out---both birds attempt to use the same more noisy branch in the large ash displacing each other frequently---when a third bird arrived there was pandemonium with much more noisy calling and aggressive flights and chases around tree trunks---when I eventually got some shots of the two it suddenly dawned on me that both were in fact females!---strangely I had assumed that males do most of the drumming but consulting BWP I see it states that both sexes drum and use this as an aggressive defence of territory and nest holes----I did not see the third bird well enough to see if it was a lucky male!----gpc
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Barn Owl257 viewsgpc
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Field fair255 viewsRobert Hardy
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Hen Harrier251 viewsRobert Hardy
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Peregrine249 viewsDave Bradbeer
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Merlin chase249 viewsRobert Hardy
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Barn Owl247 viewsBarn Owl Nocton FenRussell Hayes
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Kingfisher247 viewsRon Marshall
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Merlin246 viewsJust something a bit differentDave Bradbeer
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All images on this site are the Copyright of individual photographers and birders, for further information, please contact individual photographers direct, using email address associated with each image. All views expressed within the Wildlife Album are those of the contributor and not necessarily those of the Lincolnshire Wildlife Album Administrators. All images on the Wildlife Album are taken in Lincolnshire, for further information on Lincolnshire Birds, see http://www.lincsbirdclub.co.uk . The terms of the Wildlife and Countryside Act must be observed and licences obtained to photograph Schedule 1 species from the appropriate Statutory Nature Conservation Agency. The Lincsbirds photo Album does not encourage images of rare birds taken at the nest or with young - a copy of the appropriate licences must be available, otherwise your image will be removed.

The Bird Club was formed in 1979, to encourage and further an interest in the bird life, birding and birdwatching of the historic county of Lincolnshire, to collect and publish information on bird movements and bird populations, bird taxonomy, bird status, to encourage conservation of the wildlife of the county of Lincolnshire and to provide sound information on which bird conservation policies can be based.

Joining the Bird Club is a great way to make new birdwatching friends and contacts in Lincolnshire! If you are a "beginner", but keen to become actively involved in birding, you will find that learning about your county's wild birds - how, when and where to see them - is both easier and more enjoyable when undertaken in the company of our local enthusiasts. If you're already an active birdwatcher you can add another dimension to your birding by becoming involved in our varied local activities.

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