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Birds in your garden

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  • thetefldon
    thetefldon

    Talking of colourful but common birds, I managed to get this photo about right of a White-throated Kingfisher. Rarely seen near water, happy hunting in fields etc.

  • thetefldon
    thetefldon

    Managed to get a BIF of a White-throated Kingfisher-hope you like it        

  • Goldieinkathu
    Goldieinkathu

    The Doves, Mynas and even robins in my garden love "small breed" dog biscuits. I put any mango's that fall from my trees on a table which seem to mainly attract the Bulbuls and even butterflies. I've

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58 minutes ago, Bredbury Blue said:

Loving the 'BirdNet' app to identify bird sounds.

Google Lens is pretty good for ID, then cross reference with eBird, so see if species is actually in TH. 

 

Lots of sound clips also:

https://ebird.org/explore

 

Nat. Park site is good for info, for birds & everything else:

https://www.thainationalparks.com/list-of-birds-of-thailand

  • Author
1 hour ago, KhunLA said:

Google Lens is pretty good for ID, then cross reference with eBird, so see if species is actually in TH. 

 

Lots of sound clips also:

https://ebird.org/explore

 

Nat. Park site is good for info, for birds & everything else:

https://www.thainationalparks.com/list-of-birds-of-thailand

Agree with you that Google Lens is pretty good for identifyinf fauna and flora. I've also been working overseas alot and it was excellent for helping me read signs, menus, etc (also use it to translate thai).

1 minute ago, Bredbury Blue said:

Agree with you that Google Lens is pretty good for identifyinf fauna and flora. I've also been working overseas alot and it was excellent for helping me read signs, menus, etc (also use it to translate thai).

 

I use G lens to translate extensively here, TH, for menus, as many times we eat where English menus aren't provided, since out of tourist areas.  Also when on laptop, as auto English translate doesn't always cooperate. 

Never, never feed animals in nature. It breaks the balance. Birds being the topic here are vital to remove pests in a garden like worms and similar. Feeding them artificially will break the balance of nature. 

On 2/21/2018 at 6:39 PM, Skeptic7 said:

Just for clarification...House Sparrow or Eurasian Tree Sparrow begging every morning? Quite similar, but not so much on closer inspection. If House, would you please share in which part of Thailand you're located? Also...if HOSP (House Sparrow), are Tree Sparrows also present? Which is more common/frequent? Am very curious as to the current status of House Sparrow in Thailand and how closely these species coexist.

 

These pics were taken from my lanai in BKK. The first is a pair of the very common mono-morphic Tree Sparrow. Have a bare minimum dozen in the backyard nesting and chattering.

The last 2 pix are a male House Sparrow, which is not nearly as common in Thailand, though it's range is expanding and probably rapidly. 

 

Anyone else with HOSP sightings are asked and welcomed to share your area, along with how common they are in your area.

Thanks!

 

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We have lots of those at our home in Kanchanaburi City, South side of town @ the 367/323 split. Easily 6 pairs

  • Author

New addition to my garden, Indian nightjar (นกตบยุงเล็ก (Nok Dop Yung Lek - meaning "small mosquito-slapping bird"). Only heard it once or twice. My wife (from an isan village is UNfamiliar with it). Weird call.

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Not a bird but a very special guest today!

 

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Wife and I have both noted the lack of mynah birds visiting our garden. Used to be plenty of them.

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A couple enjoying the morning sun ...

 

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It's photo time again, hold on, let me profile for you ...

... mouth open or closed.  Let's go with open  :coffee1:

 

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  • 3 weeks later...
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Just back from a walk around Suan Luang Rama IX สวนหลวง ร.9.

Saw my first hoopoe in Bkk or Samut Prakarn in my +30 years. It made my day!

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Can anyone ID this bird for me, terrible photo I know.

Best description I can give is the tail had a very distinctive pattern, like a chevron.

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  • Author

Got a couple of Brown-throated Sunbirds singing to each other across the garden. Not a bird I'm familiar with.

Being colourblind, identify birds is really difficult but using birdnet to identify their call while using my binoculars really helps.

Last week or so we've had a few koels in the trees around the house, tormenting the wife with their 24hr nonstop calling (I like it - the sound of Asia for me).

On 1/26/2025 at 9:48 PM, Oliver Holzerfilled said:

Not exactly birds.  Large colony easily viewed from the street behind the Let's Hyde resort in Pattaya. 

 

 

Went by there the other day the colony is still there. Not sure how long they will be able to hold on with all the "progress" around there these days.

On 1/19/2026 at 5:02 PM, Bredbury Blue said:

Can anyone ID this bird for me, terrible photo I know.

Best description I can give is the tail had a very distinctive pattern, like a chevron.

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Plaintive Cuckoo - Cacomantis merulinus ?

https://ebird.org/species/placuc1

  • 4 weeks later...
  • Author

Over the years we've had many pairs of yellow-vented bulbul in our garden. Currently we have lots, and they make a right racket at dusk.

Many times we've had nests, eggs, chicks, fledglings, but they never seem to make it. Something (squirrel, snake, tokay, ?) seems to have them.

Part of the problem could be where they build their nests is quite visible. One year the nest was in my cycling helmet hanging from my handlebars.

We now have a new nest and eggs. This time it's in a bush which is at the side of our carpark (so we walk past the nest multiple times per day) and right next to where we sit in the afternoons. The pair of birds sit on the telephone wire about 10m away waiting for us to go away so they can sit on the eggs. We'll see if these eggs make it all the way this time.

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13 minutes ago, Bredbury Blue said:

Over the years we've had many pairs of yellow-vented bulbul in our garden. Currently we have lots, and they make a right racket at dusk.

Many times we've had nests, eggs, chicks, fledglings, but they never seem to make it. Something (squirrel, snake, tokay, ?) seems to have them.

Part of the problem could be where they build their nests is quite visible. One year the nest was in my cycling helmet hanging from my handlebars.

We now have a new nest and eggs. This time it's in a bush which is at the side of our carpark (so we walk past the nest multiple times per day) and right next to where we sit in the afternoons. The pair of birds sit on the telephone wire about 10m away waiting for us to go away so they can sit on the eggs. We'll see if these eggs make it all the way this time.

The ones in our garden keep falling out of nest in the small shrub.

On 2/18/2026 at 10:54 AM, KhunLA said:

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Really amazed by all the birds visiting your place. Are you incredibly lucky or is there some logical reason like a good food source attracting so many species?

Or is it just the way it is in your part of Thailand?

13 minutes ago, sidjameson said:

Really amazed by all the birds visiting your place. Are you incredibly lucky or is there some logical reason like a good food source attracting so many species?

Or is it just the way it is in your part of Thailand?

We're kind of semi rural. Less than 10 minutes from everything we need, but closest neighbor is 140m away, and surrounded by pineapple fields & coconut groves. Have some fruit bearing brush & trees around, so helps.

Got decent camera, so anything I can see, I can usually get a decent snap of. Some, like couple above, were in the yard, or just on the other side of the walls. Others, within 50 meter, if not hanging out in the our garden & Greenhouse area. on other side of our soi.

Kind of blessed with daily visitors, taking up residence nearby, and nice variety of some colorful ones. Sunbird, owls, kingfishers, koels, coucals, oriels are residents, along with bunch of the usual suspects, bulbuls, mynas. Hoopoes show up every now & then.

Resident large birds also, egrets, heron, open bill storks, as plenty of water around us, small ponds. Come to think of, we do have a whole bunch of birds within 100 meters of the house.

I do the morning snake recon, before letting the dog out, and the owls are sitting on the dead palm tree, koels are yakking away, Kingfisher over by the greenhouse, bee eaters & mynas on the wires, coucal hopping around, skittishly, and take off into the brush if sees me. Sunbirds don't visit too much, or I just don't see 'em.

Always got some critter to say 'good morning' to. Wife thinks I'm goofy ... can't argue with that.

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Author
On 2/18/2026 at 6:13 PM, Bredbury Blue said:

Over the years we've had many pairs of yellow-vented bulbul in our garden. Currently we have lots, and they make a right racket at dusk.

Many times we've had nests, eggs, chicks, fledglings, but they never seem to make it. Something (squirrel, snake, tokay, ?) seems to have them.

Part of the problem could be where they build their nests is quite visible. One year the nest was in my cycling helmet hanging from my handlebars.

We now have a new nest and eggs. This time it's in a bush which is at the side of our carpark (so we walk past the nest multiple times per day) and right next to where we sit in the afternoons. The pair of birds sit on the telephone wire about 10m away waiting for us to go away so they can sit on the eggs. We'll see if these eggs make it all the way this time.

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Just back from a week's holiday at the wife's area in Esarn, and found the two eggs gone and the nest looking a little damaged. Birds still visiting the nest.

Hopefully one day my garden will successfully raise bulbul chicks.

  • Author

Just back from a week's holiday at the wife's area in Esarn, and the wife, who has a passing interest in birds, observed that we didn't hear koels in the week we were there.

  • Author

The wife, back to her beloved garden, just spotted this fledgling on the lawn. It's safely made it back to the bushes around the lawn, watched closely by an adult bird.

Common Iora?

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