Eurasian wryneck

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Blaze
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Joined: Mon Jul 12, 2021 9:06 pm
Location: Ille et Villaine (35)

Eurasian wryneck

#1 Post by Blaze »

A first for us ! We found him in a water butt but fortunately he hadn't been there long. I had no idea what it was and it was definitely a glove job getting him out of the water ! My phone revealed he was a Eurasian Wryneck, probably a juvenile due to his size.
Once on the ground, he made the most peculiar movements with his neck, stretched out and almost snake-like. This is apparently what they do when they feel threatened. After a few minutes when it seemed he had suffered no damage, we put him by some shrubs where he hopped off happily.
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Liz
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Location: SW France

Eurasian wryneck

#2 Post by Liz »

Wow! Well done
How do people live without at least one dog in the house?

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Bayleaf
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Joined: Thu Sep 02, 2021 7:22 am
Location: NE Dordogne

Eurasian wryneck

#3 Post by Bayleaf »

What a little poppet! Well done for being there in time to save it's life! :clap: :)

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Blaze
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Location: Ille et Villaine (35)

Eurasian wryneck

#4 Post by Blaze »

I took a video but it would be too big a file to post on the forum. So here is a Youtube video showing the extraordinary action it takes when it feels threatened. I thought at first he was injured until googled it !
Last edited by Blaze on Thu Aug 28, 2025 3:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Yonner
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Joined: Fri Jul 30, 2021 4:40 pm

Eurasian wryneck

#5 Post by Yonner »

wow, what a find.

Trelawney
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Joined: Mon Feb 19, 2024 10:10 pm

Eurasian wryneck

#6 Post by Trelawney »

I have never seen one. Well done for a successful rescue. Great pictures!

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Loup-garou
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Location: 52 & 71

Eurasian wryneck

#7 Post by Loup-garou »

What an excellent thread Blaze. You learn stuff every day - thank you.

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Blaze
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Location: Ille et Villaine (35)

Eurasian wryneck

#8 Post by Blaze »

Thank you for all the nice words ! It was such an unusual thing to see - thank goodness I had a camera/phone or I'd never have known what it was.

Does anyone remember Chris Luck (Wildlife in France) ? I'd like to have sent him the photos but he's left FB and there isn't any way of contacting him on his website.

Pathca
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Eurasian wryneck

#9 Post by Pathca »

That’s amazing

Polly
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Location: Berkshire

Eurasian wryneck

#10 Post by Polly »

I enjoyed looking at the wryneck and reading about the rescue, Blaze.

Today we had an email from the RSPB which highlighted the 6 members of the woodpecker family. The first three were those we see regularly in our garden - the Lesser Spotted, Great Spotted and the Green Woodpecker.

Numbers 4, 5 and 6 were a surprise, as I wouldn’t have expected them to be in the same family as woodpeckers.

4. Nuthatch
5. Treecreeper
6. Wryneck.


The email gives info about where to see the various members of the woodpecker family, how to identify each and conservation status in the UK.

It said that Wrynecks are a bit larger than a sparrow and feed on ants on the ground and migrate from Scandinavia to Africa, but have been seen inland in the UK and in some lucky people’s gardens.

Apparently in the past they have bern known as ‘twister’, ‘writhe neck’ and ‘snake bird’, describing what you saw, Blaze, their ability to turn their heads, which helps them to deter predators and the patterns of their plumage helps to camouflage them.

So we have numbers 1,2,3 and 4 in our good-sized suburban garden regularly (with a smallish ancient woodland adjoining our garden - the two reasons we bought this house), number five have visited maybe 8-10 times in over 40 years of living in this house/garden and I’ve never seen a wryneck. But according to this article, I can live in hope!

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