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24 September 2014
North YorkshireNorth Yorkshire

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Audio visual garden bird spotter
A great tit
Great tit,, cute but sounds like a squeaky bike!

If you've ever wondered which birds are the regular visitors to your garden, the answer might be here.

This is a list of the ten birds most often seen in North Yorkshire gardens.

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FACTS

 Just like people, birds need water all year round for drinking and bathing.

 A birdbath should be shallow and rough inside to give birds a foothold

 Keep the birdbath clean and change water frequently.

(Information and photographs: RSPB 2003)

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Watching more birdies

Here's numbers six through ten of the top ten common garden birds in North Yorkshire.

Each small image links to a popup page with a larger image and a sample of birdsong.

6. Greenfinch

Like all finches, it has a short, triangular-shaped beak. Male is brighter and more clearly marked, with green back, greenish-yellow underparts, yellow panel on the side, which is actually the front edge of the wing. The rest of the wing has a mixture of greys, greens and yellows. In flight, the yellow edges to the tail are clearly visible. The female is much more drab with a brownish back and grey-green underparts.

7. Collared dove

These are small doves of about 28cm with pale pinkish or grey-brown feathers. They have a black half-collar, black primary feathers and a long, white-edged tail. The chances are, if you are reading this in the British Isles, you are within a mile or less of a collared dove. Yet, just 40 years ago, the closest would have been no nearer than France, Holland or Denmark.

8. Great tit

Great tits have a wingspan of 14-16cm, a body length of 14cm and weigh 14-22g. Great tits have blue and yellow plumage with a black cap. Both sexes have a black stripe running down the middle of the chest, but the stripe is much broader in the males.

9. Dunnock

A smaller, neater bird than the house sparrow, with a fine beak and brighter orange-brown legs. It is grey underneath. It hops and shuffles on the ground under shrubs and around flower beds, not usually on the bird table.

10. Robin

The bright red breast and throat make it perhaps the most distinctive bird in the UK. Despite their cute appearance, robins are aggressively territorial and are quick to drive away intruders. You'll rarely see more than one robin at a time, unless it's with a mate. Traditionally birds of the woodland, these birds live wherever there is a combination of trees or bushes and open ground.

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