The sound of the first cuckoo? Joyous. Listening to a nightingale on a warm evening in May? Sublime, obvs.
But let’s be clear - there’s nothing more warming than the see-see-see-see that preludes an encounter with long-tailed tits.
Long-tailed tits are invariably on the move, and constitutionally incapable of doing so without making a minor racket.
Amid anonymous tiny tweets and beeps, their insistent, mouse-like see-see-see-seeand their gossipy tsuuurrrppp calls are quite distinctive.
Once you’ve heard one or both of those noises, the next question is: how many long-tailed tits are you about to meet?
In the early spring, it’s likely to be a pair of birds. They may well be in the business of collecting lichen and spiderwebs for their cocoon-like nests.
It’s the nest’s shape that is thought to have inspired the long-tailed tit’s alternative name: ‘bumbarrel’. It’s a remarkable domed construction. Am I alone in wanting to shrink down to Borrower size, climb in and spend the night?
From early May the fluffy-headed youngsters emerge to form noisy travelling parties with their parents, and perhaps with other adult birds that may have helped to rear them.
It’s not unusual to encounter double figures of long-tailed tits hanging out together. Counting is best done as they cross a gap between bushes, in sporadic ones, twos and threes.
For the rest of the year it’s these sociable troupes that thread their way through woodlands, along hedges and across gardens, churring and whistling as they go.
And as the summer progresses these Roving Tit Flocks (TM) often draw in other species - blue, great and coal tits, goldcrests, treecreepers, chiffchaffs - to form kaleidoscopic, loosely-connected parties of many birds. Bumping into one of these groups can transform an otherwise quiet walk into an immersive, surround-sound experience.
Another good reason to tune into your bumbarrels.
Next week: Lapwing
Birdsong Academy events this spring
Because it’s peak birdsong month, we have two free Up With The Birds sessions, on Friday 13th May and Saturday 21st May. On the Saturday session we will be joined by naturalist, photographer and birdsong educator Ben Porter, who will be aiming to bring us live sounds from the woods of North Wales, such as pied flycatcher, wood warbler and redstart. Find out more and book your place here.
Meanwhile if you’d like the join me for a morning’s walk and talk near Brighton, we have a half-day event, also on Friday 13th May. Last month we heard and saw a wide range of woodland birds, including nuthatch, woodpeckers, goldcrest, raven and treecreeper, and ended with excellent brownies at the One Garden cafe. More details and tickets here.
Recommended: for a birdsong-rich stay in Kent
I’ve recently had the pleasure of staying a couple of times at Clavertye Shepherds Huts, near Canterbury. Found along the narrow lanes in one of Kent’s surprisingly quiet and hilly corners, Clavertye is a special place, loud with skylarks, linnets, tawny owls, bullfinches and more yellowhammers than I can recall hearing anywhere for a long time.
There are just a few huts and tents dotted around the site, so you feel you have the place to yourself. Walk in any direction and there are woods, rewilding meadows and country lanes to explore.
I’m not on commission, and I don’t have any prior connections with Clavertye - I just think it’s a lovely place that deserves to succeed, and would like others who support wildlife-friendly enterprises to discover it too.
Until next week - enjoy the birds.
~ Charlie
Credits:
Nest image by nottsexminer, reproduced under CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Long-tailed tit image by sdm2019 on Pixabay
Long-tailed Tit