These
beautifully marked and colourful finches have been increasingly reported in
gardens in
In
the wild these birds favour the smaller seeds of dandelions, thistles,
groudsels, ragworts, and other members of the plant family Compositae. They tend to move into gardens in spring to
exploit feeders, when seed supplies in other habitats are exhausted. Foods such as sunflower hearts and
Watch
a Goldfinch feeding and you will see how agile the bird is. With
its long narrow beak it can access seeds that other finches cannot reach,
including those of teasels. Goldfinches can be quite aggressive towards
other species when at bird feeders.
If
you do get them on your garden feeders, look at the extent of the red on the
face and this will help you identify the gender of the bird in most cases. The red in males extents in a bulge, back,
above, and beyond the eye. In females,
it is the white that bulges forward into the red, so that the red does not
extend back beyond the eye. Young birds
can confuse, because although they have the black and gold wings of the adults,
they do not have the red and white face, instead they have a finely streaked
grey white head.
Interestingly,
the movement of Goldfinches is not confined to in and out of gardens, these
birds are also partial migrants. While a
proportion of our breeding population remains in