Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Birds and Itchy Arms


I'd hoped to have video of the fox eating the boiled egg I left out, but it didn't come by again last night. I suppose I ought to throw that egg out. After sitting out more than two nights, and expired to boot, it might not do any favors even for the fox.

While digging around in the garden shed the other day, I came across the bird feeder above. We used to have it hanging in the center of the garden but as I recall it attracted too many pigeons, so we consigned it to disuse. Well, I decided to try it out again, so I put some seed in it and hung it from the mock orange in the shady back of the garden, and it has proved a major hit with the tits. I see little blue tits (above) on it...


...as well as coal tits and great tits. The tits are manic, fussy eaters, discarding certain kinds of seeds to hone in on the ones they prefer. The pigeons, meanwhile, seem content to patrol the ground beneath it for the tits' discards.

It amazes me how fast those tits can empty that feeder. For such tiny birds, they can plow through seed like nobody's business. I thought squirrels or even rats were to blame, but I've seen no sign of rodent activity at all. I think it's just those little birds.


Yesterday afternoon, as I sat out on the bench reading, I was amused by the sounds of the starlings in the trees over my head. I love their whooping, rattling, chirping sounds. It's like they're so happy they just can't contain themselves.

Some readers asked yesterday about our new upstairs neighbors. I gotta say, there's not much to tell so far. There's a man, his wife (who I have not yet met) and two boys, young teenagers I'd guess. They're from Israel, they seem like very nice people and we hear them much less than we used to hear the Russians. There is no construction, no banging, no noise beyond normal snippets of day-to-day conversation. It's such a welcome change! The dad even gave me a nice bottle of wine as a thank-you for helping him manage the stacks of cardboard boxes that came from their move. Might they actually be normal people?! That would be a nice change.

I have the weirdest medical problem. Several days ago, I began getting itchy areas on my forearms. There were no marks to speak of beyond a generalized redness, which I assumed came from sun exposure. Well, this itchiness has spread all over the top surface of both my forearms. It is intense as heck and the only thing that relieves it is running my arms under cold water. Hydrocortisone does not help. I haven't tried an antihistamine yet but that's in my plans. There are some almost invisible raised bumps or nodules but they don't seem like insect bites or anything like that. They seem more like hives. Generally speaking, aside from slight redness, my arms look perfectly normal.

I haven't changed anything like diet or soap and I haven't been out in the sun any more than usual in recent days. But I suppose I have been in the sun quite a bit this summer, overall, and I rarely use sunscreen in the UK. So this could be a reaction to cumulative sun exposure over the course of the season. I'm wondering if I have this, although as far as I know my cervical spine is perfectly healthy. It could also just be this, I suppose. All I know is, it's driving me crazy to the point where it's been hard to sleep. Sunblock from now on!

29 comments:

  1. With any unexplained itching, with bumps or redness, antihistamine is always my first "go-to". If that doesn't work then I try other things, like going to a doctor and asking for help. I agree you should always wear sunSCREEN at least if not sunBLOCK which gives heavier protection. Washing off the area with soap and water sometimes works better than cold packs because you may have just brushed against something to cause the reaction.

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  2. Lovely to see tits feeding..yes they are fussy eaters!! I have a feeder suckered onto one of my kitchen windows...they don't just pick out what they want, like you say they chuck out everything they don't!

    Definitely sunscreen when the UV level is over 3....

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  3. If you go to a chemist shop and ask to see the pharmacist they should be able to recommend something for your itchy/bumpy arms.
    I may have told you this......a few months ago I was pulling a dead plant from a pot that had been in the garden overwinter and a hens egg had been buried about 2 inches down in the soil! I was very surprised to see it as you can imagine!

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  4. You are such a caring person, Steve. Should I ever find myself in London, bereft and in need of shelter I know where to go. I won't need a bed. A deckchair in your lovely garden will do.

    Commiserations on your itch. The need to scratch is hard to resist. Takes a lot of willpower - and even then one absentmindedly does ... Once upon a time my whole body was on fire. It was so bad I didn't give in to impulse, just sat very still, riding it out, phoned my doctor, described symptoms and what do you know: Within twenty minutes an anti histamine was delivered to my door. Oh joy.

    I looked at your two links. There is another possibility but only a dermatologist will be able to say, and that is Psoriasis, an autoimmune disease. Comes and goes; takes many different forms. An uncle of mine had it. One of the "cures" he tried was swimming in I think it was the Dead Sea. Plenty of salt.

    Don't say I don't comfort people in their hour of need :)

    All the best,
    U

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    1. Seconding sea swimming...one son has used that.

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  5. There is something quite joyful in watching blue tits, or any kind really, enjoying themselves on a seed feeder. They are such lovely birds.
    Your arm rash sounds a little like what we used to call prickly heat. I hope you can discover the cause of your rash and get some relief.

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  6. Sorry to hear about your forearms Steve. When treating the condition do not make any rash decisions! (Ha! Ha!) Instead, live with it for a few days and if it is not regressing visit your G.P. or an NHS walk-in centre. Buy two bags of cheap frozen peas for the sole purpose of using as ice packs.

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  7. I for one will miss the Russians because every time you brought them up, Warren Zevon's song Lawyers, Guns and Money always came playing in my head and I like that song. I don't have a mental song about Israelis.

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  8. That itching sounds awful. I hope you get some help with that soon. I’m glad the new neighbors have so far been no problem. The Russians left plenty of room for improvement.

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  9. Try gently applying the affected areas with the chalky, brand name; Prickly Heat Powder. Just smooth it over after shaking some on the areas.

    The Russians did make good blog fodder. Normal non renovating neighbours won't so much.

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  10. E45 Itch Relief Cream may help - it's available at all pharmacies.
    The titmice are such busy, acrobatic little birds. It's surprising how quickly birds find new feeders.

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  11. Everyone else has given such good recommendations, and I will only suggest you see your GP or a dermatologist if the itch persists!

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  12. Every so often after working in the yard, I will get an itch on the underside of my forearms and it drive me nuts. I surmised that it was a reaction to one of the plants I'd been trimming and started wearing long sleeves on those garden days and the itching and redness stopped.

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  13. I think Andrew's Prickly Heat is another good diagnosis, so much more homely! Much better than the Wiki 'this' and 'this.

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  14. If cold helps, try keeping a bottle of aloe vera gel in the fridge. It was a little trick I figured out during radiation. It was so soothing.

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  15. It could also be from the stress that you are going through with the loss of your beloved Dog.

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  16. I would wonder if you'd brushed up against something that irritates the skin (like Mike has in our yard), but a) I think it would have happened before now since you're busy in the garden ALL THE TIME and b) when Mike had it there were more pronounced raised welts.

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  17. It's possible to develop a new allergy after repeated contact, so there may be something to look out for in the garden. Meanwhile I second, or maybe fifth, the antihistamine idea.

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  18. Hope you get relief from the itchy arms and glad the new neighbors are not bothersome (so far)! ;)

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  19. Weird about the itching on your arms. Sounds like an allergic reaction. That would be bad if it was an allergy to the sun. My mother had that later in life but then she had far more exposure to the sun than you have had. I went to a lecture on birds a couple of years ago and the person was talking about bird seed. Check contents for milo, red millet, oats, wheat. The birds won't eat those things and they are just filler. Blue jays here are notorious for flicking seed out looking for what they prefer.

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  20. The little tits love the feeder. The small birds seem to share a feeder easily, unlike the Starlings and Bluejays.
    If the rash on your arms persist, I'd visit a walk-in medical clinic to get a definitive diagnosis and treatment.
    An itchy rash is distracting and unrelenting until it goes away.

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  21. Well, Steve, you and I are living parallel lives right now. I woke up last night with itching so bad but on my knees and up the thigh of my right leg. It was horrible. Big welts, little welts. Red, red, red. I tried some lotion that generally helps with itching and that did nothing. I finally gave up and took a Benedryl. Blessedly, that worked. Like you, I went through the list- no changes in diet or soap or detergent. I had not been exposed to anything like poison ivy. Especially not on that part of my body. WTF?
    Today all seems normal except where I could not help myself and scratched to the point where the skin is irritated. Sheesh!
    Thanks for the update on the neighbors. Maybe they ARE normal. Wouldn't that be wonderful?

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  22. Sorry to hear about the itching, there is nothing worse is there. I do hope you get it sorted, maybe go into a pharmacy and speak to the pharmacist, he may be able to prescribe a specific cream to help you.

    We don't feed the birds at this time of year and seeing the bird table mostly bereft of birds is sad, but they have to teach their young to forage in nature for food and not just to rely on easy pickings from bird tables, this is mostly as we live in a small town near lots of fields, farms as well as the canal and the river. Once the cooler weather starts we (or rather my husband) will go back to spending a fortune on seeds and meal worms of every description to keep our feathered friends happy again, and we'll have the usual little visitors instead of just seagulls manically flying overhead.

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  23. Steve there is a Benedryl gel (at least the in the states) that can be used topically, works like a charm for me. Good luck!

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  24. I really enjoyed listening to the birds while I read your post. Those are cute little birds at your feeder.
    So you have itchy arms and I have itchy legs. I'm going to try the Benedryl gel recommended above.

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  25. Itching is so painful and can be mysterious also. It does sound like you touched or picked up something (with your forearms) that your skin didn't like. The neighbors sound very nice--what a relief! Your readers did enjoy stories about the Russians though. :)

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  26. My sister has a similar condition when she's had her skin exposed to the sun and/or when it's been hot - even without her being in direct sunlight. Could it be some slight allergic reaction to some plant or other you've been working on in your garden recently?
    I am amazed the boiled egg left out didn't attract large colonies of ants, or even just a rat or two!
    As for blue tits, they are among my favourite birds, but I don't see them around here; we seem to have only coal tits. This time of year, I want them to eat mozzies and flies, so I don't put bird food out right now, but I make sure to keep a flat bowl of water replenished, which gets visited by doves and other birds and occasionally by a red squirrel.

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    1. PS: Glad to hear your new neighbours seem to be as normal as you could wish for!

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