
Brits mesmerised by outlandish bird in gardens after 'deadly rivalries' exposed
Birdwatchers should keep their eyes peeled for the pink hoopoe - a bird with pink plumage, chequerboard wings and a fancy crest that can be spotted in the UK as the mercury rises
Nature lovers have every right to feel tickled pink this spring. Candyfloss sunsets and dazzling cherry blossom extravaganzas have left the countryside glowing as if viewed through rose-tinted binoculars. Yet if anything is going to leave birdwatchers blushing with pride, it will be discovering a scarce visitor that outshines Barbie when looking pretty in pink.
The hoopoe is one of the most recognisable birds on the planet with its outlandish raspberry yoghurt plumage accentuated by chequerboard wings and fancy crest. Such is its illustriousness, the hoopoe has appeared on more postage stamps than any other bird and the ancient Egyptians used its distinctive profile as a hieroglyph.
Many a holidaymaker to the Mediterranean has been mesmerised by sight of a hoopoe strutting around hotel gardens or flapping across an olive grove on butterfly-like wings.
Each year, a few score overshoot Iberian nesting grounds and arrive in the UK, often turning up in picture postcard villages to the delight of birders and non-birdwatchers, alike.
A myth that has developed over the years is that the best places to find hoopoes are vicarage lawns, the manicured swards perfect to probe for grubs with their long, decurved bills. Midsomer Murder script writers homed in on such bucolic scenes with the Case of the Blue-crested Hoopoe that sparked deadly rivalries among members the Midsomer-in-the-Marsh Ornithological Society.
No such need for murder 'most fowl' this spring with its deluge of hoopoe sightings the length and breadth of the British Isles.
High pressure and southerly winds over the Bay Biscay in late March fanned a mass arrival likely to number more than 200 birds, including counts of at least nine individuals on the Isles of Scilly.
Such an influx has heightened hopes that hoopoes will repeat their 2023 breeding success when three young were raised at a secret location in Leicestershire. With only 30 reported instances of nesting since the 1830s, the sight of more hoopoe fledglings will leave us all feeling in the pink …
Can you identify these songbirds in your garden?
Don't despair if International Dawn Chorus Day slipped by last week (May 4) without having a chance to immerse yourself in nature's great symphony. This annual celebration held on the first Sunday in May should be regarded as merely the introduction to a joyous season when birdwatchers rest their binoculars to become enthralled listeners.
Over coming weeks, the countryside will throb to the songs of thrushes, chats and finches declaring territories under the rising sun. Baritone blackbirds and top tenor nightingales will stand out as virtuoso performers. Yet ask any birdsong purist and it is the orchestral manoeuvres of warblers in the semi darkness that bring the dawn chorus experience to a sensory crescendo.
Spring walks through a tapestry of wetlands, woods and scrub can be accompanied by the songs of up to ten species of warbler, belying their dowdy plumages with golden voices. Some, like closely-related reed and sedge warblers, create identification challenges as they chatter away incessantly hour after hour as if on diets of fizzy sweets. Listen carefully and the repeated 'churrs' of the reed warbler help separate it from its jazzier cousin.
In damp thickets, the explosive song of the Cetti's warbler is unmistakable and is said to have inspired Mozart to write the opening bars of Eine Kleine Nachtmusik. Chiffchaff and willow warbler, along with common and lesser whitethroats, are species pairs found around woodland fringes that create visual identification puzzles, although their songs are strikingly different.
The chiffchaff sings its name, while the willow warbler has a sweet, descending cadence. Scrub-loving common whitethroats produce a dry, scratchy warble compared to the plain rattle of its smaller relative. Grasshopper warblers have taken rattling to a new level by producing an insect-like trill that reminds you of a fishing reel.
For me, the supreme choristers are two of the plainest members of the warbler clan. The blackcap has a thrush-like quality to its voice while the garden warbler's song is full of mimicked notes purloined during its travels between Europe and Africa.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Record
5 hours ago
- Daily Record
The 'peaceful' Scottish city hotel you can book for almost half price
The accomodation has been praised as "beautiful" and "quiet". A stay in a Scottish city hotel can currently be purchased for approximately half price. One recent visitor described the accommodation as "peaceful and comfortable". The Landmark Hotel is located on the outskirts of the centre of Dundee. It is situated within a converted 19th-century mansion in six acres of gardens. The hotel is currently offering a one-night stay for two for £69, plus a small admin fee, through Wowcher. This is a discount of 47 per cent, as usually an overnight stay is priced at £130. Included in the Wowcher deal is a stay for two people in a "chic guest room". Also included is a glass of Prosecco each upon arrival and a full breakfast in the morning, as well as a late 12pm check out. Visitors at The Landmark Hotel can make use of its heated indoor swimming pool, steam room, and fitness centre. Meanwhile, all rooms feature plush bedding, a flatscreen TV, and an en-suite bathroom with complimentary toiletries. Guests can also choose to upgrade to add a two-course dinner each at the hotel's Garden Room Restaurant. The restaurant, which looks out over the surrounding gardens, specialises in fine dining with a focus on local and seasonal produce. Outside of the hotel, Dundee has no shortage of exciting activities. Visitors can browse the shops around its bustling city centre, as well as check out top attractions such as the V&A Dundee, RRS Discovery, and Dundee Science Centre. Most guests have given The Landmark Hotel positive feedback. The hotel has an overall rating of 3.5 out of five on Tripadvisor based on 316 reviews. One visitor posted: "For the price of this place, it is excellent. The pool is lovely (the chap on the pool desk in the morning was so friendly and chatty—honestly exactly what I needed in the morning to set my day off to a good start!) "The rooms were nothing to complain about, but my favourite thing was the surroundings. Loads of lovely trees everywhere meant that birdsong filled our room." On the other hand, a one-star review described the hotel as an "absolute joke of a stay". They added: "Stayed at this hotel a couple of times over the last few years, but this will definitely be my last!" Another positive review described the hotel as "peaceful and comfortable", adding: "The hotel is very beautiful, comfortable, and quiet. "The area around it is also calm with lovely gardens. The staff were friendly and helpful. "Everything was clean and well-maintained. I really enjoyed my stay and would definitely come back again. Highly recommended!"


Time Out
6 hours ago
- Time Out
It's good, but it'll send your arteries straight to hell
Going for dinner at a hotel is A Very American Thing To Do. Most Brits will only eat at a hotel if they are actually staying there and can't be arsed to leave the building in order to get fed. It's fitting then, that the NoMad's newly revamped in-house restaurant is a high-octane tribute to the big, ballsy American brasserie. Previously known as the slightly more descriptive 'Atrium', the roomy, well, hotel atrium's rebrand as Twenty8 NoMad also reeks of flashy New York, utilising the kind of chaotic jumble of letters and numbers that brings to mind Manhattan staples Bungalow 8 and Eleven Madison Park. It's brash, even grating, but we'll give it a pass, as it fits the aesthetic bang on, which is all Manhattan-by-way-of-the-Marais, an extravagant Yank take on the French brassiere, complete with excessively high ceilings, balustrades and balconies. 'Intimate' it is not, but cosy is overrated, and we're struggling to think of anywhere else in London that seems at once like peak Studio 54 and the ideal date spot for Romeo and Juliet. Into this truly special space steps a lavish 'raw bar', supersized-steak frites and an entire menu devoted to the martini. Our dirty vodka offering comes with a whole second helping, courtesy of a sidecar on ice, as well as three blue-cheese stuffed olives. It's the first in a carnival of oversized (read: American) offerings. A starter of crispy artichokes, which, though deep fried, are surprisingly light, and also very big boys. It's easy to see why our prawn cocktail doesn't arrive in a bowl; it's their sheer size. Veritable baby arms of seafood (even with the heads taken off), and served with a pot of humming horseradish cocktail sauce. Then comes a bowl of mussels (all of them fastidiously turned face up), in a creamy green curry sauce accessorised with bubbly, burnished roti. It might seem inconspicuous on a menu dedicated to brassiere classics, but it works through sheer dint of its deliciousness - and yes, they also seem larger than your average bivalve. Mains too are mighty, and a glossy lobster pasta is almost demonic in its execution. Using what we can only assume is an entire block of butter, a hearty grind of black pepper, smattering of chives and huge lumps of lurid lobster, the chef has created a dish worthy of beelzebub's own dinner party. It's good, but it'll send your arteries straight to hell, is what we're saying. Did we have room for dessert? Did we heck. A minty grasshopper cocktail stood in for an actual pudding, and, in true bountiful American style, we were packed off with a small box of chocolate bon-bons. Bigger isn't always better, but it certainly seems to be when you're at Twenty8 NoMad. The vibe A very good-looking hotel restaurant. The food Epic portions of French/American bistro classics. The drink There's a whole martini menu as well as classic cocktails and high-end, high-price wine. Time Out tip Far be it from us to intentionally undercut a restaurant, but the starters here are sizable. If there's two of you, it wouldn't be out of the question to order one each and then a main to share along with a side.


Scottish Sun
a day ago
- Scottish Sun
End-of-terrace house looks normal from the outside but hides bizarre secret in sprawling basement – would YOU move in?
The house has nine en-suite bathrooms SECRETS BENEATH End-of-terrace house looks normal from the outside but hides bizarre secret in sprawling basement – would YOU move in? A BLACKPOOL guest house has undergone a jaw-dropping transformation and now contains a private nightclub, cinema room, and space for 24 guests. Wayne and Katie Anne Mylroie have spent nearly two years converting the modest semi-detached property into a high-spec holiday home. 7 Wayne and Katie Anne Mylroie turned the Blackpool guesthouse into a private nightclub Credit: Facebook 7 The house has a cinema room, pool table, hot tub room and private basement nightclub Credit: Facebook Just a short walk from the promenade, the couple named the property The Fun House. Announcing the launch on Facebook, the couple said: "After almost two years in the making, we're finally live and we have had our first guests." Described by the owners as "the perfect party house", the property boasts a "large sociable lounge with custom seating and pool table, a cinema room, a hot tub room and your very own exclusive private basement nightclub." Inside, the house features nine en-suite bedrooms with 15 beds, offering space for large groups looking to celebrate in style. "The Fun House has 9 bedrooms all en-suite with 15 beds that sleeps 24 guests," the post reads. One standout feature is a uniquely designed bedroom with dramatic lighting effects: "It also has the coolest kids/adult room with a light-up lightening clouded ceiling." Every inch of the property has been carefully designed and finished to an exceptionally high standard. "It has been completed to the highest standard so you would never want to leave!" the Mylroies added. With its bold interior, private nightclub and close proximity to Blackpool's attractions, The Fun House is already turning heads as one of the seaside town's most striking new holiday rentals. The couple might have their work cut out to win the locals over though who claim Airbnbs and short term lets are "ruining" the town. People living in Blackpool, Lancs, say their lives are being blighted by anti-social behaviour. They raised their concerns as tens of thousands of holiday-makers are set to flood Britain's resorts and tourist hot spots for the Easter Bank Holiday weekend. In England, the short-term let sector is unregulated, except in London where there's a 90-day per year cap on letting out properties. Blackpool City Council says it's received just one complaint about short-term lets since 2019 – but the council doesn't know how many are in the area. A total of 16 planning enforcement notices have been issued in the same period. Residents of the seaside resort town, known for its traditional B&Bs, tell a different story. One resident said she has operated three hotels in Blackpool's town centre for eight years. She says the proliferation of Airbnbs and other short-term lets, where owners are not present, have brought the character of the street down – with rooms being used for parties until the early hours of the morning and even prostitution. She said: 'The ones now, there's nobody there. If somebody's booked a double room, they know the code. 'If they meet friends with a girl, they use that code, go in, use the room, and go out. 'It's like one person's booked the room, a couple who's out for the night and give the code to another couple. 'They use the room and just go out after an hour.' B&B owners Sandra Spriggs, 52, and husband John, 69, have owned the Bianca Guesthouse on Blackpool's Palatine Road for 20 years. The couple says they have heard loud stag and hen parties inside unattended AirBNBs. Sandra said: 'My friend lives next door to an AirBNB. It's bloody noisy, especially in the summer – she actually goes to her daughter's for the weekend so she hasn't got to put up with the noise.' 7 There is a hot tub room with bright green LED lighting Credit: 7 The cinema room offers up a variety of films for guests to watch Credit: 7 Katie Anne said that the house had taken the couple two years Credit: 7 The couple said it had been finished to the 'highest standard' Credit: Facebook