jones jones;1413597 wrote: Although its your winter now, it must be awesome to hear them on an early summer morning!
Actually I'm inclined to curse them on a Summer morning at 5:00 am...

Usually I sleep through.
That's good to hear and I imagine you're enjoying the birds as much as they're enjoying the extra chow! Are the parakeets escapee pets? How do you go about discouraging them from visiting the feeders?
It is believed that soft hearted stage hands working at Shepperton Studios released some after the making of Carry on up the Khyber (which was set in India) perhaps 40 years ago now. The parakeets are native to the Himalayan foothills so the British climate is ideal and there are now thousands of them. They have started culling, I think. Sad, but probably necessary.

There are a number of successful recent animal colonists - grey squirrels from Canada and wallabies from Australia are a couple of examples.
The feeder that the parakeets have worked out can be fitted with a cage which allows small birds in but keeps out anything larger than a sparrow. Handy.
Nicely done
Thanks. Having Richmond Park 5 mins walk away means the garden is sort of like a service station just out of town from the bird point of view, as far as I can make out.
We love to feed the birds and have both a large flock (40+) of English sparrows and black headed finches, and a small flock (10) of wild Doves that winter with us. (New Mexico has especially mild winters.)
They are a blast to watch, but they sure eat a lot in the winter!
Yes, the money is a bit of a concern, but it's not been too bad so far. I don't have your number though. At least not yet. I know a very little about American ornithology - aren't you on the path of a huge migration route somewhere down near you? We get winter visitors from the Arctic and Siberia, which gives us one of the world's great wildlife spectacles on the East coast - millions of overwintering wildfowl. If I have a bit of money left after Xmas I'm hoping to go up and see it this year.