
I visited an area in Pembrokeshire, Wales, on our camping trip where, several years before, I had seen Choughs. On a few miles of rugged coastline, I was lucky to see about 15 birds. This included two family groups – both had two parent birds and at least 3 juvenile birds in their group. One set of chicks had been ringed.
Unfortunately, the weather was very wet with high winds, so getting photographs was challenging.
The Chough—pronounced ‘chuff’— is a member of the crow family, but unlike any crow, it has an orange bill and legs. It is found only on the west of the British Isles. It’s a master aerobatics with dramatic aerial displays of diving and swooping. These birds are rare, with only 500 breeding pairs in the UK and the Isle of Man. They are Schedule 1 species.
They feed on short grassland and coastal heathland, where they probe the ground with their long bill for insects, such as leatherjackets and beetle larvae. Nests are in crevices and fissures, on rock ledges and cliff faces.. The female lays three to five eggs, and both parents help to raise the chicks.




Later in the morning the weather improved so did the light so my pictures improved.

Below is a juvenile bird (ringed), note the paler bill.








Lovely birds to see – and so many! We do have a reintroduced population in the east of England these days at the Dover cliffs. Early days but one chick fledged last year although subsequently disappeared in strong winds. Hopefully there have been more new arrivals this year.
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Thanks Judy did not know that hope they do well.
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Both those bills are long and match the feet. Interesting they have so many bands on each bird.
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So you record without renetting
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Wow!
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