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Any Swallows, Swift...
 

Any Swallows, Swifts or House Martins yet?

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22nd of March last year down here in South Wales, I'm yet to see any yet this year, are they coming back?


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 7:32 am
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Geese just went past here.

Swallows, Swifts and House Martins, none seen yet.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 7:34 am
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The swifts are all still here in Cyprus, shedloads of them


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 7:50 am
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Think I saw some sand Martin's last week in Scottish borders. I remember thinking "hooray".


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 7:54 am
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Along with the clocks going forward it has signified summer is on the way for me since being a child,

I still remember doing the regular Saturday morning road loop with the club one late March and after a desolate winter riding through the Vale and along the coast seeing a Swallow swooping over the pond opposite the Lamb and Flag in Wick gave me a massive inner grin.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 8:01 am
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Still waiting for the swifts here. And I’ll know, they’ll be nesting in the eaves again with any luck! Last year it was swallows That turned up first here in West Sussex.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 8:24 am
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Date is in my calendar from the past 20 years. I think around 13th April would be our earliest swallows which was in fact last year. I look forward to it every year. My faves, the Pied Wagtails, came back about 2-3 weeks ago, though I am not sure how far they go from here in Winter. And once the swallows arrive, the cuckoo is never far behind.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 8:29 am
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My faves, the Pied Wagtails, came back about 2-3 weeks ago, though I am not sure how far they go from here in Winter.

Plenty of winter residents here in Sussex, so perhaps not far at all.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 8:32 am
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Yeah, just been Googling them. Seems they are resident. Our rural upland population must go on a city break somewhere as they are definitively absent all winter 🙂


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 8:33 am
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The swifts are all still here in Cyprus

Just managed to snap a couple:


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 8:49 am
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There was a Cuckoo that nested behind my old house and woke me up at 6am every morning a few years back, lovely alarm clock. I reported it to the BTO at the time as they're starting to get quite rare in these parts.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 9:10 am
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Still seems early for them. I did wonder if some would have arrived with the southerlies we had last month when it was really warm and the Saharan dust was in the air.
The Pembroke swifts are definitely in decline; we used to have 20 or 30 belting around in high summer but there were only 5 last year.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 9:18 am
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@cb200 - those look suspiciously like swallows to me, not swifts. I always thought they usually migrate all the way south of the Sahara, but there are reports of a very few over-wintering in the south of England this year. Which means you could very well have them in the Med all winter.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 10:19 am
 IHN
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Geese and curlews are back here as of about two weeks ago, they are later than last year though.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 10:25 am
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We had a largeish murmeration of swallows at Gronant Beach about a month ago.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 10:28 am
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Nowt yet, fire/goldcrest (won't sit still long enough for me to identify) nesting in the roses next to the front door though.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 10:33 am
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Saw my first Swallow yesterday, just the one - Stafford.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 1:20 pm
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Saw first swallows yesterday in the Chilterns. Brightened the evening no end!


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 1:29 pm
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I was just thinking about this over the weekend. No sightings yet, but I reckon they'll probably have set off by now.

I can't wait for the eye-watering luminous greens of late May, early June.

😀


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 1:57 pm
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Passerines are my favourite type of bird too. Evolved to be perfect in the air, to the point of being useless elsewhere. No compromise evolution.

When on hols in Portugal a few years back we went to a nearby town for a day. My wife thought I was crazy when I spent ages watching the Alpine Swifts around the sandy cliffs. If you can't stop to watch the world's fastest bird (nearly) in level flight, what can you do?

Peregrines? Yes, super impressive, but it's just falling really!

😀


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 2:26 pm
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Martins are usually the first to arrive here in north Notts, typically around April 4th. Saw my first martins of the year today so maybe a few days late or maybe I just didn't spot them


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 4:18 pm
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We get loads here. None yet though.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 5:10 pm
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Saw our first swallows today darting over the Arun near Amberley. Also spotted a Peregrine near an old quarry.
Sunny windy day out with the kids. Super day!


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 8:15 pm
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We get swallows on our street, usually on May Day, give or take a few days.
Loads of Curlews and Lapwings about.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 9:11 pm
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Passerines are my favourite type of bird too. Evolved to be perfect in the air, to the point of being useless elsewhere. No compromise evolution

Sparrows are Passerines, pretty good anywhere. Over 50% of birds are Passerines.

My mate saw 2 Swallows over his house near Leyburn on Saturday.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 9:15 pm
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Saw our first swallows today darting over the Arun near Amberley.

Had my eyes peeled at Chichester today - dunno why but felt like they could arrive any minute. You’re about 10 miles away so
I wasn’t far wrong!

@cb200 – those look suspiciously like swallows to me

Agree they’re swallows. Fast camera work to grab them!

Sparrows are Passerines, pretty good anywhere. Over 50% of birds are Passerines.

More fun bird facts for gardentiger: swifts are largely unrelated to swallows and martens. The latter are indeed passerines, as are sparrows. But swifts are apodiformes (had to look that up), not passerines. Also in the order of apodiformes are hummingbirds!


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 9:28 pm
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Well, I've been genuinely schooled here. Good knowledge STW.

We've seen swifts disappear from around us, sadly. They used to be a staple of mid to late evening in the summer, absolutely scorching through the sky after insects. Loads of swallows still, though.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 10:12 pm
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Spotted Sand Martins on the River Lochy by Fort William about a week ago.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 10:19 pm
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Just put up two swift nest boxes on our barn. Call system about to go in to try to attract them.

No swallows yet (Aberdeenshire).


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 10:23 pm
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@mikejd do you have any resources for the kit you’re using for that please? We had swifts check out our gable end a few years ago but they didn’t stay…I wonder if they would with some help?


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 11:00 pm
 Drac
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We’ll see none for a few weeks yet. I was confused by the geese, lap wing and curlew spottings but that’s because they’re resident here.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 11:07 pm
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We’ve seen swifts disappear from around us, sadly. They used to be a staple of mid to late evening in the summer, absolutely scorching through the sky after insects. Loads of swallows still, though.

Swifts are in massive decline. Use of insecticides & habitat loss mainly to blame. New houses aren't bird friendly in the least, although I heard that Barrat homes were using 'Swift bricks' in some of their builds.
It's not good is it.


 
Posted : 11/04/2022 11:34 pm
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Just seem a pair of house martins...Gower.


 
Posted : 12/04/2022 3:53 pm
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@lister

We have a local swift group in Huntly who sell the boxes and have loaned us the sound system. Unfortunately I don't know where they resource these from.

You could try  https://www.swift-conservation.org/Local_Swift_Groups.htm

There might be a group local to you


 
Posted : 12/04/2022 9:50 pm
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So i saw my first Swifts (2) on Sunday, followed by my first Martins (4) on Monday - have seen a few more Swallows since, but they all seem very sparse still.

Are they more evident elsewhere?


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 12:01 am
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Swallows are back on it gable end. They seem to like shitting on my cars rear quarter too for some reason.


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 3:48 am
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We have small numbers of swifts most afternoon’s & evenings at the mo. (rural mid-Suffolk) Lovely they are too.


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 8:10 am
 IHN
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First swallow spotted about a week ago, first swifts seen yesterday.


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 8:11 am
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Swallows or Swift's not sure which screaming around in Chichester these last few weeks. Love sitting in the garden and watching them smash around the sky.


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 8:16 am
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If they're charging around the sky, screaming madly, it's swifts.


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 8:29 am
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The storms we had a few weeks ago were slowing down the birds progress. Wind was blowing the poor things off course.

As mentioned, too many houses are renovated and repaired, meaning many birds now have loss of habitat (mentioned above). Many barns or out buildings now converted and these were the type of building that nests were built in.

We heard swifts screaming last night in the centre of Macclesfield, but worryingly these along with the curlew cry, are going to be rare sounds in the future.
We are part of nature, not in charge of it. We can change things, it's in our capability to change things and we must do this before it's too late.


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 9:51 am
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Bit of a poor showing for our housemartins at work this year, only 2 nests so far, however I think some maybe nesting inside one of the roof spaces. When I started working there 3 years ago we had about 12 nests then gradually fewer each year since


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 9:55 am
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Swifts are back in Hurstpierpoint, maybe not so many yet, but weather still quite cool. They've never taken to our swift box, may be that it faces the wrong way for their approach.

Cycling on Underhill Lane yesterday, a swallow came v low over my head and then dipped down and followed the surface of the road (10cm altitude?) for 20 meters and then upped and over the hedge. Great sight.

We have noticeably fewer insects these last few years, so food sources for swifts and swallows dwindling


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 1:15 pm
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You can get this CD to attract swifts to nesting boxes.....

www.amazon.co.uk/Vogelstimmen-Mauersegler-Gezielt-Ansied-Kaiser/dp/3935329407


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 1:18 pm
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Swifts are back at mine, which is good because the flies were getting to be a PITA. I find it times exactly with the arrival of the St Marks flies, which given they're only around for a week or so a damned fine act of timing on the Swift's part. St Marks day came later this year than I think it normally does, which would explain the lack of swifts too.


 
Posted : 26/05/2022 1:21 pm
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