Hi Araminta, I'm brand new on this site, but I have been doin' birds for ages. This one is a little beauty, a lovely little bird.
Blue Wrens used to visit my garden quite regularly, then the Noisy Miners arrived and the magpies, now sadly I have no wrens . I fear for them when one occasionally drifts into my large yard. I live in the New England Tableland area and near ovals so am at a bit of a disadvantage there. I do know Wrens love thick shrubs and more dense places. So I'll enjoy your pictures until some changes are made. Thanks Margy
Your hope that there's a place for your "surplus" wrens to go is interesting, Araminta. If there are neighbours who are doing ecological restoration work in their backyards then there'll be somewhere for some of them. It also shows the value of wildlife corridors so that "surplus" animals can get from natural patch A to natural patch B. Keep that ecological restoration work going, folks.
Hi Araminta, I'm brand new on this site, but I have been doin' birds for ages. This one is a little beauty, a lovely little bird.
Blue Wrens used to visit my garden quite regularly, then the Noisy Miners arrived and the magpies, now sadly I have no wrens . I fear for them when one occasionally drifts into my large yard. I live in the New England Tableland area and near ovals so am at a bit of a disadvantage there. I do know Wrens love thick shrubs and more dense places. So I'll enjoy your pictures until some changes are made. Thanks Margy
Margy
Nice work, back to his boring winter self!
Cheers, Owen.
Thanks Owen for the nice comment.
And welcome to the forum Margy, hope to hear and see more from you, and I'm glad you like my Wrens. I wish I could send you some, I have so many.
M-L
It looks delightful against your pale green background
I've never seen these wrens. They are so sweet.
Karen
Brisbane southside.
Your hope that there's a place for your "surplus" wrens to go is interesting, Araminta. If there are neighbours who are doing ecological restoration work in their backyards then there'll be somewhere for some of them. It also shows the value of wildlife corridors so that "surplus" animals can get from natural patch A to natural patch B. Keep that ecological restoration work going, folks.