What If Birds Left Tracks in the Sky?
Photographer: Xavi Bou
An arctic tern creates an unusual shape as it takes flight.
A beautifully ornate pattern made up of a flock of Northern lapwings.
A group of corn buntings seem to erupt out of the ground.
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from Russia
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Switzerland
seen from Italy
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Canada

seen from Australia
What If Birds Left Tracks in the Sky?
Photographer: Xavi Bou
An arctic tern creates an unusual shape as it takes flight.
A beautifully ornate pattern made up of a flock of Northern lapwings.
A group of corn buntings seem to erupt out of the ground.
The Corn Bunting (Emberiza calandra) is not a bird that will cause many walkers or even nature lovers to stop in their tracks, but we can never resist stopping to observe and photograph. Partly because it perches so photogenically, but mostly because this is a bird that has almost disappeared from English landscapes thanks to our modern day industrial style approach to farming.
The steep decline was in the 1970s/1980s, with some areas seeing local extinctions. The decline has slowed in recent years, but it still continues and consequently this is bird rarely seen in England. Scotland is doing a little bit better, and the decline is slowly being reversed in some areas but overall the UK population has decreased by more than 50% since the 1970s. Corn Buntings (Trigueirão in Portuguese) are though still common here in Portugal, and also Spain. As Matt Merritt, a bird-watching expert recently wrote to see them so regularly and in such large numbers is wonderful, and also ‘evidence of a landscape that still has room for the marginal, specialist species that are fast disappearing elsewhere.’
One of the collective nouns for Corn Buntings is a decoration, and I thought that perfect for these group shots. Another fact I was delighted to discover is that in the UK the Corn Bunting is so sedentary (ie not migratory) that males who are just 30km apart sing with different ‘dialects’. I wonder if that is also true in Portugal? Not sure I can tell from these two Portuguese recordings on the superb Xeno-Canto website!
https://olhaohiddendelights.files.wordpress.com/2018/11/xc416641-corn-bunting-emberiza-calandra.mp3
https://olhaohiddendelights.files.wordpress.com/2018/11/xc416635-corn-bunting-emberiza-calandra.mp3
What do you think? I have sent a note to the recordist Peter Boesman to see if he has noticed Corn Bunting dialects, and will keep you posted on his response.
PS My title is inspired by “A Trace of Wings” from Edwin Morgan’s Themes on a Variation (1988) and Collected Poems.
Shy but perky The Corn Bunting (Emberiza calandra) is not a bird that will cause many walkers or even nature lovers to stop in their tracks, but we can never resist stopping to observe and photograph.