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How many dishcloths do you have in?

Nope, it ain't an owl & I'm also aware that DEFRA & the BTO disagree on the matter (although their top 10's are not that different overall).

Scottish populations also return a different set of results compared to UK studies! :p :D

I fear you have been wasting your company's money on unreliable research spoffs here my dear pogs.

Everyone knows that the Teet Owl is the most commonest of them all.

Boom tish;):o
 
Where does the pied wagtail sit Pogofish?

On it's arse duh :p And that joke was BAD :rolleyes:

I detest collared doves. Flying rats imo. I like chaffinches. They're lovely.

eta: we seem to get quite a few of the red list birds in our garden. Goes off to check amber list too.
 
Not in the top 10 I'm afraid, although I think it sits somewhere in the top 20 of at least one survey. More common in the south IIRC, Friday night & my head is mince again.
 
none ;d





i just throw em all away ffs dishcloths! get a life ;d



seriously, no i just get manfriday/saturday... to do stuffs like dishcloths ;) in a loin cloth...
 
Not in the top 10 I'm afraid, although I think it sits somewhere in the top 20 of at least one survey. More common in the south IIRC, Friday night & my head is mince again.

:D who needs birds on a friday night hey:rolleyes::D
Me and the kid are both twitchers.:cool:

She started it:mad:
 
On it's arse duh :p And that joke was BAD :rolleyes:

I detest collared doves. Flying rats imo. I like chaffinches. They're lovely.

:D

At the school where i work we have a sparrowhawk that's impacted on the schools population of collared doves. The kids love it because every now and then it's killing stops one of their science and maths lessons:cool:
 
:D

At the school where i work we have a sparrowhawk that's impacted on the schools population of collared doves. The kids love it because every now and then it's killing stops one of their science and maths lessons:cool:

:D
We have one of them too, unfortunately she doesn't seem to 'do' collared doos :rolleyes:

Dunno if it was her or a pal left the remains of a rock dove at the bottom of the hedge the other day though :rolleyes: (normally she frequents the back garden)
 
Yes a Sparrohawk used to hunt over my garden - you could set your watch by it for an entire summer. the kestrel used to haul its prey under the bike to eat & one time I looked-out to see a very surprising hawk perched on the clothes pole (forget what)

See them less now I have two cats but the odd bit of evidence still appears.

Its al Ospreys & Eagles where I fish, with Otters & Bats after dusk. :)
 
I have 0 dishcloths. I dont even have one of those plastic racks to put dishes in. I did have one, but one day i noticed it was covered in black mold, so i threw it on the floor. I dont even have a bin.

I do have a fragment of an old sock that i use for washing up. Its quite a good system; if you wring it out carefully and leave to dry after each use it stays bacteria-free for years. It doesnt scour as well as a 'proper' scourer, but puring boiling water from the kettle on the dishes loosens just as well. (i dont even have hot tap water)

E2A: i do have a bin. dont know why i said that :o
 
Well, the unthinkeable has happened - and I've run out of dishcloths! I cleaned the oven and used three. So it appears I only had three. :(
 
Yes a Sparrohawk used to hunt over my garden - you could set your watch by it for an entire summer. the kestrel used to haul its prey under the bike to eat & one time I looked-out to see a very surprising hawk perched on the clothes pole (forget what)

See them less now I have two cats but the odd bit of evidence still appears.

Its al Ospreys & Eagles where I fish, with Otters & Bats after dusk. :)

Sounds wkd:cool: where you at pogo?
 
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