Sunday, April 16, 2017

April Birds and Creatures in Carcassonne

Because it's almost Easter, a European Rabbit, eating a poppy petal beside Carcassonne's Cité, or walled castle town.

European Rabbit.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
We saw this quite small rabbit along the edge
of the castle walls. Here, it's eating a poppy petal. 
© SB
As for the birds, Pigeons are the most abundant species of birds I've seen in Carcassonne, roosting in nooks and crannies of the old castle walls.

Pigeons.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Pigeons. Carcassonne. © SB
Pigeons.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Pigeons everywhere. Carcassonee. © SB
Next, the Great Tit, whose loud song can be heard along the River Aude, below the walled city. (I'm glad these birds are now posing more cooperatively for me here, than in Paris.) 

Great Tit.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Great Tit singing beside the river, at Carcassonne. © SB
Great Tit.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Great Tit - Carcassonne. © SB
There are also many flocks of sparrows. The ones below appear to be Eurasian Tree Sparrows, with their characteristic brown heads and black cheek spots. (In this species, males and females look the same.)

Eurasian Tree Sparrows. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Eurasion, or European, Tree Sparrows. Carcassonne. © SB
And, here is a pair of common House Sparrows:

House Sparrow. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
House sparrow - male. © SB
House Sparrow. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
House Sparrow - female. © SB
Along the river, there were mainly Mallard ducks, though we saw a bright white duck that may have been a domestic breed, or -- from its curled tail feathers -- related to the Mallards...

Mallard. Duck.,Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Mallard duck - male. © SB
Duck. White Duck,Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Mystery duck - who really knows? © SB
And what would any water, much less the River Aude, be without a Herring Gull?

Herring Gull.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
There are other similar gulls, but my guess is a Herring Gull. © SB
Or a European Beaver? This large rodent looks like our North American beaver, though with a paler coat and narrower tail, but it is a completely different species, once hunted almost to extinction.

European Beaver, Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
European Beaver, in the Aude River. © SB
European Beaver, Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
European Beaver © SB
We walked through the old graveyard beside La Cité de Carcassonne, the old walled town, and saw a Greenfinch. 

Greenfinch.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Greenfinch. That flash of yellow on the edge of its wings
is typical. 
© SB
Greenfinch.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Greenfinch, from another angle.. © SB 
This bird below is also green, with a pinkish finch bill, and as that green belly colouring is typical, I think it's also a Greenfinch.

Greenfinch.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Greenfinch. © SB
The next bird was also in the cemetery. From its heavily streaked sides and yellow chest and head, it looks like a (European) Serin to me, one of the smallest of the finches. 

Serin.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
European Serin, a small finch. © SB

Serin.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
The Serin from another view. © SB
A break from the birds: in sunny spots, especially along the river through the lower town of Cacassonne, I found dozens of tiny brown lizards darting across the stones. 

Lizard..Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
I love these little lizards! © SB
Lizard..Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Lizards like this were skittering over many sunny stones. © SB
Some birds dart, too, like the White or Pied Wagtail, which I remember seeing in Ireland, too. 

Pied Wagtail.Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Pied Wagtail. © SB
Walking through a park beside the river one morning, I found a European Robin. 

European Robin.. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
European Robin. © SB
And, near the town laundromat, a European Goldfinch, collecting fibres for its nest. 

Goldfinch. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
European Goldfinch, collecting nest materials.. © SB
Goldfinch. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
European Goldfinch. © SB
The bright yellow flash of a goldfinch's wings — that's the source of this bird's name.

Goldfinch. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
Goldfinch in flight, showing the yellow on its wings. © SB
And black and white Common or House Martins have returned from their winter in Africa to their closed mud nests, tucked under the eaves and decorative cornices of many buildings here.

House Martins. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
House Martins, nesting under the roof. © SB

House Martins. Carassonne. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
House Martin, flying back to its mud nest. © SB
I've also seen and heard Starlings, and there are Jackdaws, too... And lots of new-to-me, unidentified birdsong...

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