Category Archives: Birds

Hummers

I’ve put up a second feeder, away from Little Bastard’s domain, and it’s getting a different crowd.

Cleared for landing!

Gotta adjust for it being in the shade, overexpose the background next time.

Yet another automatic camera setting to learn how to override.

If I walk by to get to the trash cans on the side of the garage, they’ll buzz me, sometimes getting way to close.

That’s because they have nests in these ivy plants along the fence and in the flowering plants next to the laundry room.

But if I just go out and sit about ten feet away, and be quiet, and patient, sometimes they’ll ignore me.

Sitting in the sun, the sunlight off of their iridescent feathers is just spectacular.

Then, “No More Paparazzi! I’m outta here!”

 

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April Juncos

It’s Friday. We’ve made it to another weekend. You need some cute little black-eyed juncos hopping around to relax. Enjoy!

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Not Little Bastard

You’ll remember that yesterday a hummingbird, presumably Little Bastard, was found semi-dead on the porch. After making him comfortable, he later revived.

Later, while I was refilling the hummingbird feeders, a hummingbird was perched right outside the kitchen window, near where the now-missing feeder was.

This is not Little Bastard. He’s an Allen’s Hummingbird. This one is (probably) a Rufous Hummingbird.

The whole time I was cleaning and refilling the feeders it sat there, looking at me.

I was thinking maybe it was thanking me for saving Little Bastard, or glaring at me for saving Little Bastard (he is pretty territorial, this one could have moved in on LB’s territory if I hadn’t revived him), but in the end I figure he had just enough brain cells to realize that I was going to bring food back out any moment and he wanted first dibs.

Still a stunningly gorgeous little critter. The way the colors change as his head moves around and the light hits it at different angles is just amazing.

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Close Call

(We’ll get back to the airshow pictures, I promise.)

I was going out into the back yard early this afternoon and I saw something on the Dodgers doormat outside the door. I got closer and realized it was a hummingbird.

I think that it was Little Bastard, the extremely territorial hummingbird that chases off all of the others that come to “his” feeder.

He body was shaking, vibrating, but that’s it. His wings or head weren’t moving at all.

I poked him very gingerly – nothing. Then he stopped shaking and was still.

He was on the ground right at the base of the sliding glass door, so my best guess is that he flew into the glass. I figured he was dead.

I’ve seen questions by people on Twitter who find birds that are stunned after flying into a window. The advice I’ve seen is to make them comfortable and warm someplace and hope that they’re just stunned. (Insert Monty Python’s parrot sketch here…)

I took a bunch of pictures of him in a bowl full of napkins. The colors are astonishing. I figured it would be the only chance I got to get this close to one of these delicate and beautiful creatures.

No movement at all. But for whatever reason it looked like there was an alertness in the eyes.

I decided to not bring him into the house – what if he recovered and started buzzing around inside the house? The comedy levels would have been awesome, but still…

So I put another napkin over the top, covering him fully, hopefully to keep him warm, but loosely enough so that if he recovered he could get out from under it. I left the bowl out on the patio table.

About 90 minutes later I was fixing lunch and needed bread from the outside freezer. I opened the door and was immediately buzzed by a hummingbird.

The attacker flew right back over to Little Bastard’s normal perch. Then he started clicking and barking at me with some vehemence.

I checked the bowl. Maybe it wasn’t Little Bastard. Maybe it was one of the other hummers. Maybe I was hallucinating.

The bowl was empty.

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Green

Not a surprising theme, given the date.

Yesterday I showed you some odd, bright red plants that are growing in my back yard and I mentioned that they might be some kind of moss. This more conventional (at least to me!) moss has always grown in the damp, shadowed areas of the garden, but right now we’ve had a TON of damp for months, so it’s doing really well.

The best part of these pictures was the way, after I had been kneeling on the sidewalk for a minute or two to get the close-up, the juncos and hummingbirds were totally confused and all flocked into the bushes and fruit trees right over my head to make a racket. I don’t know what they thought I was doing or what threat they thought I presented, but I swear I was innocent and (mostly) harmless!

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A Quarter Gazillion Ravens

Again today, a LOT of ravens.

They were filling the sky when I was getting home with groceries.

In an interesting follow up to yesterday’s post, the red-tailed hawks were out as well. (This may again have something to do with why the ravens were carrying on.) I couldn’t see the hawks, but I could hear them – that cry that you hear in the soundtrack of every movie ever made showing the American West. Then, about 30 seconds after this video was finshed, I heard one again, much closer, and spotted one of them diving out of the sun. The cloud of ravens had shifted off a half-block or so down into the canyon, but there were one or two stragglers off by themselves…

*BOOM* Just a cloud of black feathers where the raven and hawk’s paths had intersected.

I don’t know if it was the hawk that had been injured yesterday by the mobbing of the raven pack, and it almost certainly wasn’t the raven who did it (I’m assuming), but the Wheel of Life took another turn right there!

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Ravens & Hawks

I spent much of the day outside, cleaning up the porch, washing down patio furniture, getting the telescope out and making sure it was working and properly aligned. While out there, there was a war going on overhead.

When I first went out I could hear what I thought was a “mass murder” or crows. There were a LOT of birds circling out there.

I was an idiot when I first went out. I could hear all of the activity, but I didn’t pick up my camera as I went out. Sitting out in the open in one of the pine trees just off the back of our hill, plain as day, were two red-tailed hawks. They were stunning, gorgeous, and it was the shot of a lifetime occuring while I didn’t have my camera. *sigh*

So, that explains why all of the birds are upset. I don’t know how many there were. There was one time when I counted 35 in the air above me in one spot, but there were also other groups in the air out over the canyon, as well as many roosting in the trees. I’m guessing 50 minimum, maybe as many as 75.

And to my surprise, they were ravens, not crows. I’ve definitely NEVER seen that many ravens in one group! I thought they were much more solitary. But the Cornell Merlin app positively ID’s their calls as ravens. And you can see that they have the distinctive wedge-shaped tail, where crows are flat across the back of the tail, like a fan. These birds were all soaring far more than flapping, another distinction between ravens and crows. These birds all have four long “finger” feathers (ravens) and not five shorter “finger” feathers (crows).

I have no clue what brought them all together, but there were something on the order of five dozen ravens circling over the neighborhood all day and making quite a racket.

Out of the sun cam this guy, the arch enemy of the ravens. One of the two red-tailed hawks.

And this one is obviously missing some feathers on his left wing. That’s a very large chunk of his wing that’s missing! He seemed to be no worse for wear, maneuvering normally, but obviously the ravens had won that battle.

There’s the two of them. And as you can see in both pictures, it’s obvious why they’re called “red-tailed” hawks.

Meanwhile, back in the canyon, after the hawks were scared off, all of the circling ravens came to rooste in two or three tall pine trees.

Standing room only! In addition to this tree there were two others with smaller groups of ravens roosting.

Cue Tippi Hedron and Rod Taylor!

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Fine Feathered Friends – January 26th

Comets and other celestial objects aside, we had another visitor this week.

It was breakfast time, the birds had been fed, and the entire yard was covered with mourning doves, black-eyed juncos, and house wrens. The hummingbirds were at their feeder. And over by the tree was…something new.

It was bigger by about 50% than the mourning doves, a bit smaller than the ravens and crows that are constantly up in the trees.

It started out pecking at the roots of the tree, and when it picked up its head and I saw that short, sharp beak, my first thought was that it was some sort of woodpecker.

The markings on the body were quite distinctive, the black crescent on its chest with the black & white spots across its body.

Not caught in any of the pictures, but when it fluttered its wings there were red markings on the underside of its wings.

It took the Cornell Merlin bird app about half a second to ID this one. It’s a Northern Flicker, the “red-shafted” variety which is found in the western United States. And yes, it is a member of the woodpecker family.

I’ve never seen one before, most certainly not here, but I hope that it liked the bugs it was finding in the tree roots and will hand around! A gorgeous bird!

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Perched Junco

I’ve seen a Junco sitting out on the Christmas decorations once or twice, but it’s skittish. I finally got a picture from the living room through a break in the drapes.

It was cold and wet, but I’m sure that sitting on the fake, illuminated candy cane filled it’s little heart with joy.

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Junco Jubilee

I had mentioned a month ago that the Juncos had returned, a flock of a dozen at least, maybe 16 to 18. It’s hard to tell, when seed gets thrown out they’re flitting and jumping and fluttering all over the place. And they’re tough to get a photo of, since at first sight of me, even from inside the dining room, they’re bugging out.

But today I saw a bunch of them out there, maybe 10 or 12, and I got up to the sliding glass door very slowly and quietly so as not to spook them.

They’re well camoflouged in the dead grass but I can spot at least seven of them here.

Welcome to December. May the cute, hoppy, jumping, flitting, fluttering birds be a source of happiness and joy to you today!

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