Oh, will you look at those migrants! Bringing joy and excitement, in their brief stops, during their long journeys.
Schwarzkehlchen ♀️ (European stonechat) im Büsnauer Wiesental, Vaihingen.

seen from United States
seen from Sweden
seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Spain
seen from Yemen

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Australia

seen from Belarus
seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Sweden

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
Oh, will you look at those migrants! Bringing joy and excitement, in their brief stops, during their long journeys.
Schwarzkehlchen ♀️ (European stonechat) im Büsnauer Wiesental, Vaihingen.
Stonechat! Landscape and alcohol marker experiment
A Stonechat Feathursday
The European Stonechat (Saxicola rubicola), once considered to be a thrush, has been reclassified, along with all species in the Chat subfamily, in Muscicapidae, the family of Old World Flycatchers, following genetic DNA analysis. The common name for the bird, as well as its species name, Saxicola (which translates as "rock-dweller"), derives from its call, which sounds like two stones knocked together.
Its epithet, rubicola ("bramble-dwelling"), derives from its habit of breeding in brambles, as depicted in this wood engraving by British author and wood engraver Eric Fitch Daglish (1892-1966) from his book Birds of the British Isles, published in London by J. M. Dent & Sons in 1948 in a limited edition of 1500 copies, with 23 black and white and 25 hand-colored wood engravings by Daglish. Our copy is a donation from our friend, Wisconsin wood engraver Tony Drehfal.
View more posts from this volume.
View more Feathursday posts.
the stonechat for birbfest 2025! carbon ink & sailor fude dip pen with watercolor on 80g rhodia paper
The Stonechat is day 6 of #birbfest2025 hosted by @monkeymintaka
6.) Stonechat
A change in style for this one ^_^
Stonechat for day 6
[ID: digital illustration of a pair of stonechats, male and female, perched in a twig with lichens. The female is above the male, both are perched towards the right side but are looking to the left. End ID]
I forgot their very funny scientific name but I think it looks fine without it.
Stonechat - Cartaxo-comum (Saxicola rubicola): female
Cabo da Roca/Portugal (29/12/2025)
[Nikon D500; AF-S Nikkor 500mm F5,6E PF ED VR ]