Category Archives: Birds

Fine Feathered Friends – August 11th

Taking pictures of hawks and other birds near sunset yesterday, I originally thought this was a mockingbird. We’re lousy with mockingbirds this summer (including this nest which gave us three more) and there were a couple others sitting on the wires nearby.

But something wasn’t right for a mockingbird. The beak’s wrong, for one.

And when he turned I could see some yellow color on his belly, which definitely rules out a mockingbird. So maybe it’s related to one of the hooded orioles that comes around sometimes?

But while they’re yellow on the belly, they’re also yellow on the back, tail, and head . So what was it?

Yeah, not a mockingbird, not an oriole. The August mystery bird! Maybe the Merlin app from Cornell University can help?

(Image: Merlin Bird ID app)

And that makes sense, because I recognize that name! The Merlin Bird ID app also has an excellent function for IDing birdsong, and late last year it had ID’d one of these!

(Image: Merlin Bird ID app)

There are a handful of species that the app has heard but I haven’t seen or photographed yet. Check one off of that list!

The fact that I last got a hit on this song almost ten months ago makes me think that it’s migratory and this is just the time of year for it to be passing through. Lucky me to catch it as it was in the area!

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Fine Feathered Friends – Winnipeg Version

The parks and grounds along the river and near the Parliment Building were absolutely infested with Canada geese.

Noble beasts all, and fortunately calm.

I knew they were big, but while I’l see them off in fields in the distance from time to time, it’s rare that I’ve seen thim this close. They may not be “osterich big,” but they’re not “chicken big” either.

Not only on the shore, but also flocks of dozens of them at a time out on the water when we took the river tour of the city.

Much like the legendary Chicken Man, “They’re everywhere! They’re everywhere!”

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Day 532

The convention is winding down so I took a hike off between panels and concerts to find large government buildings, statues, parks, and critters.

Louis Riel got hanged for being a traitor back in the day, apparently for insisting that EVERYONE had rights instead of just the the white, male, French-Canadians of Ontario and Quebec. Today he’s a Founding Father out in Manitoba with a huge statue.

Plus ça change…

Soooooooooo many Canada Geese! There must have been 200-250 or more in this group, plus stragglers all over the grounds. They were calm, lots of signs warning folks against feeding them, so no expectations on their part. But watch where you step… IYKYK!!

Way up high, apparently 25’ tall, covered in a small fortune in gold, and anatomically correct, is Golden Boy. I have no idea who is represented by the four sets of figures on the corners beneath him. Perhaps I’ll check out the power of my Google-foo when I get home.

Which, with luck, will be tomorrow evening. Wish us luck!

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Day 530

Went on some sightseeing quests around the city today.

Found flocks and flocks of the dreaded Cobra Chickens!

Came outside after a wonderful anniversary dinner and found thunderheads punching their way toward the stratosphere. Five hours later (i.e., now) there are lightning bolts all over!

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Mockingbird Nest

Remember the day that a HUGE red-tailed hawk swooped right past me in the front lawn and grabbed onto something in this bush that’s grown up around a support pillar in front of my front door? (Here are the pictures.) I may have figured out what it was going after.

A couple of weeks ago, after noticing some mockingbirds flying into and out of that bush more and more often, I took a closer look and found a nest in there.

Yesterday I heard a very soft peeping sound coming from there, and found at least three mockingbird chicks in there.

They’re ALL MOUTH. They must only be a day or so old because they’re blind and just running on instinct. Something comes near (i.e., me) and they pop up for a few seconds, mouths open, peeping, then hunker down and hide if no food is incoming.

When I’m getting close enough to get these pictures, rest assured that Mama Mockingbird isn’t far away and is giving me the stink eye every second. The nest is at about head height, with the gutter about four feet above. She’ll perch up there sometimes, the better to be that much closer to me so she can save time in attacking and gouging my eyes out if I make a false move. Or she’ll be out on the power line, thirty feet away, with a mouthful of food to bring back as soon as I get out of sight.

Directly above them on the inside of the roof line is the mourning dove nest, still with two fledgelings, although they’re big enough now to take off more and more often.

Welcome to the “Willett Aviary – Front Yard Edition!” Here’s a quick video of the little squeakers! And you can actually see all three!

 

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July 4th Hummingbirds

The Fourth of July here was most pleasant, not too warm, with a number of events worth grabbing the big camera for.

First off, sitting out on the back porch I was amazed at how many hummingbirds we currently have. I have two feeders up, plus all of the flowers that are in bloom, so there’s plenty of food for them. They’re tough to count since they’re zipping about like F-35s in a dogfight, but there are at least six or seven and it may be as many as nine or ten. Maybe more?

As always, Little Bastard was guarding “his” feeder. He’ll zip between a perch in the orange tree on the south side of the yard and one here in the big tree in the middle of the yard.

Whenever any other hummer gets near, he zips over drive them off. I do notice that the others seem to be working together, coming in pairs or trios with one serving as a decoy to be “driven off” while the others hit the feeder for a quick sip before Little Bastard can come back.

When Little Bastard’s neck feathers catch the sun, the bright red iridescence is gorgeous.

It’s quite the game they’ve got going, but it makes little sense to me. I keep both feeders supplied so there’s plenty for everyone, but I guess hummingbird senseless greed and territoriality doesn’t have to make any more sense than human senseless greed and territoriality.

It’s also always surprising just how stinking LOUD they can be when they’re buzzing by at full speed within arm’s length. It’s very cool.

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Fine Feathered Friends – June 29th

There was a knock at the door! I opened it… And was confrounted with a confused, chaotic cloud of frantic, fierce flapping!

When I recovered my wits, and the real estate agent at the door had taken several startled steps back, this little dude was sitting on the floor inside the door.

The agent was pushing an open house on the “white bunker” house at the bottom of the hill. That’s my term for it, of course, their Zillow listing has a ton of much flowery language. But the short version is 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, only 1,940 square feet (!!!), and a look that I find tragically unappealing, and they’re asking for

$1.7MM??!!

Even by our local standards, that’s freaking ridiculous by a factor of two or more!!

No, thanks, go away. Now, back to the bird.

I didn’t try to touch it, but I leaned over to get a better picture and the little beastie went into panicked fluttering and flailing mode again, right up into my face and out the door. It tried to land on the flagpole, which was way to slippery to hold onto, but it managed to keep its balance as it slid down to the bottom.

Now clearly seen as a mourning dove fledgeling. The coloration is all wrong for a mourning dove, but normal for a fledgeling who is likely to get out of the nest and get stuck on the ground where it would be an easy meal. Our subject wasn’t too thrilled with the photos, so once again it remembered that it was capable (sort of) of flight, and made it all the way across the street, where it discovered that it didn’t yet know how to land in a tree and perch. After something of a crashy sort of coming to a halt (any landing’s a good one if you can walk away from it!) I left it alone.

Until later, when I heard it in the nest up under the roof by the front door.

Remember how the finches always build their nests on our back porch? The mourning doves have done something similar in the front. But way back behind some tall bushes, and up about two feet higher than I can reach without going to get a stepladder. Which I didn’t want to take the time to do.

Once again, the neighbors are watching as I’m on tip-toes, stretching up as high as I can, trying desperately to not fall face first into the garden, holding onto my phone with one hand, blindly pointing it off in the direction of the nest, shooting pictures at random and hoping for the best..

This was the best I got, at first.

Later when I went out again I could see that the fledgeling was still there, so I tried a different tact and did something equally ill-advised in terms of my personal safety (ER docs & paramedics: “You broke all of those bones doing exactly WHAT??!“) but which let me actually look (just a little) at what I was taking pictures of. Success!

Meanwhile, the bird’s had a rough first day of flying. It’s probably coming down off of one hell of an adrenaline rush (do birds have adrenaline or is that a mammal thing?) and it would have really preferred being left alone.

So I did!

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In The Shadows

The birds were flitting about as I was stretching my legs, but instead of flying away, a bunch of them stuck around in the tree right above me.

Out in the sun is one of the male house wrens, resplendent in the bright morning rays. Can you spot the hummingbird in the shadows?

Yeah, he’s shiny and bright and bold and he knows it.

Little Bastard can be absolutely iridescent in the sun, but he knows that the hawks are out, so he’ll stay well hidden in the shadows and let the wren sit out in the sun at the top of the tree in the open.

Iridescence has its limits!

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Hawks, More Hawks, And Ravens – OH MY!

It started with the distinctive cry of a Cooper’s Hawk in the back yard, along with the squawking of several ravens. The hawk was close, somewhere in those big pine trees on the hill behind the house. I quickly pulled up the Cornell Labs Merlin app (you need this app too!) and started an audio recording with the app identifying the birds as it hears them.

You can hear the Cooper’s Hawk at the very beginning, over the sound of the screen door closing, and again (much more clearly) at the 01:06 mark.

I had set the phone down and grabbed my camera, looking for the Cooper’s Hawk, when from behind me (at the 00:57 mark) I heard a Red-tailed Hawk, then a second one. This pair is familiar! They were close and getting closer, flying right over my head into the trees where the ongoing fight was happening.

As a helicopter goes over you can hear chirping and calls from all three hawks, as well as the ravens still harassing them. The ravens finally forced them out of the trees, the Cooper’s Hawk going down into the canyon behind us where its nest is and the Red-tailed Hawks climbing back into the thermals over Valley Circle Boulevard.

Notice the missing feathers on this hawk’s right wing. I would have thought they would have grown back by now, but it’s become an identifying mark on this particular magnificent bird, one that’s easily seen even when it’s several hundred feet in the air and a half mile or more away.

Spectacular!

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Hummers At The Watering Hole

I do wish that the sound quality on YouTube videos was better. On my phone you can hear all kinds of bird songs, the drone of other hummers buzzing me, dogs barking, planes goin overhead…

On this video, it’s all dulled down and dampened, like listening through it with soggy sponges stuck into your ears.

Maybe it’s something I’m doing wrong…

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