Posted by Cathie Bird on 11 March 2023 at 06:10 PM in Birds, Phenology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
In all the years I've lived in the holler, I have never seen a robin in the yard around my house. At the moment I took this photo, there were four of them foraging together outside my window, eating seeds I scatter for ground feeding birds.
American Robin (Turdus migratorius) on March 1, 2023. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Posted by Cathie Bird on 01 March 2023 at 10:32 AM in Birds, Ecosystems, Phenology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
Last summer, two raccoons -- a mama and her baby -- started showing up around my bird feeders. The young one is now around 9-10 months old and comes by itself. The mama still comes by as well.
Last week she came by earlier than usual and climbed into a hanging platform feeder.
Adult raccoon. February 18, 2023 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Not long after she settled into the basket, a titmouse came along. This little titmouse, not much bigger than mama raccoon's hind foot, hopped and flew all around the raccoon until she finally left and the titmouse could get a seed.
Tufted titmouse eyes an adult raccoon from below. February 18, 2023. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
A couple of days later, the young raccoon came by for some nuts. This one doesn't stress the feeder hanger so much. In the photo you can see some colored wire cable key rings that I had to install after the heavier adult broke it several times. They are holding up really well so far. I'm sure the feeder engineers did not anticipate that larger creatures would be using their invention.
The younger raccoon that visits. February 18, 2023 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
OTHER SIGHTINGS IN THE HOLLER THIS WEEK:
Two carpenter bees, four eastern gray squirrels, and couple of eastern chipmunks. Farther down the holler today, I founded the first cut-leaf toothwort and a whole bunch of trout lilies popping up through the decaying leaf litter.
Posted by Cathie Bird on 26 February 2023 at 05:09 PM in Birds, Fish and Wildlife, Mammals, Phenology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
Last year I decided to include a mealworm and dried fruit mix at my platform feeders, hoping that those items (as well as suet) might attract warblers. Today I saw the first yellow-rumped warbler since November 2022. He has been hanging out near the house much of the day, visiting the suet log and platform feeders several times.
Yellow-rumped warbler at the basket feeder, February 10, 2023. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Posted by Cathie Bird on 10 February 2023 at 04:05 PM in Birds, Cumberland Mountains, Phenology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Tags: Campbell County, Tennessee, Yellow-rumped warbler
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
Yesterday a coyote -- the same one I'm pretty sure I've seen in the yard before -- came back. Though it remains wary, I was able to get some good photos from my bird-watching window:
Coyote (Canis latrans), September 8, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
At one point, it made eye contact, just as it had on May 25th when I got my first photo of it. This time, however, the coyote was out in the open:
Coyote visit, September 8, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
By this time I was moving around quite a bit to get the photos, and the coyote started to move off toward the fence where I'd seen it enter and leave the yard during previous encounters. I scooted my chair closer to the window so that the field of view in the lens wouldn't catch the window frame. When I pointed the camera back out the window, I saw a second coyote resting in the shade along the fence line:
Coyote #2, September 8, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
I think it's likely that birds foraging on seed I put out for ground feeders drew the coyotes closer to the house -- in the absence of birds, I've seen the coyote eating some of the seeds. While these two were here yesterday, a small troop of tufted titmice -- joined occasionally by a blue jay, Carolina wren and northern cardinal -- streamed a constant barrage of alarm calls.
I've been aware of coyotes in the holler since I moved here more than twenty years ago. Once I rescued my first dog in 2003, I stopped seeing them close to the house, though I could hear them occasionally. In early June this year, however, the last of five domestic animals I'd rescued over the years -- a very watchful and vocal border collie -- passed away. Since then I've seen these two coyotes, a couple of raccoons, a black bear, and a return of white-tailed deer tracks (if not the deer themselves, yet) at my end of the holler.
Posted by Cathie Bird on 09 September 2022 at 04:00 PM in Birds, Mammals, Phenology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
On May 11th this year, Merlin identified one of the birds singing near my house as a Tennessee warbler. I tried to locate it but, as often happens by that time of the year in the holler's woods, I couldn't see the bird for the leaves. Even though it's named for the state I live in, these warblers don't spend much time in Tennessee, so I felt fortunate to at least have caught one's song, my first ever.
Yesterday, I watched a couple of American goldfinches hunting for bugs on a giant ragweed plant not too far from my birding window. When they flew off, another bird landed on the plant. At first I thought it was another goldfinch but the size, color and feather patterns didn't quite fit. With field glasses I clearly saw a thin, pointy bill and obvious lack of white on this bird's wings. I quickly traded the binoculars for a camera and managed to get several photos as the bird moved up and down the plant, gleaning the stems and flowers.
Tennessee warbler (Leiothlypis peregrina), September 1, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Since I couldn't immediately identify the species, the photos gave me a chance to gather more field marks and narrow the choices. Before long, I'd settled on Tennessee warbler as the closest match, and then used Birds of the World, Merlin and other online resources to sort through similar species with all of their seasonal variations. I concluded that it was, indeed, my first visual experience of a Tennessee warbler in action.
Tennessee warbler (Leiothlypis peregrina) gleaning giant ragweed (Ambrosia trifida), September 1, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Once I had an identification, and just for the heck of it, I decided to check out the BirdCast site to see who'd been flying over the holler that past evening. The estimate for Campbell County, Tennessee was 1,240,400. Though Tennessee warblers did not show up in the species list, it gave me goosebumps to think about that many winged beings flying by while I was sleeping.
Posted by Cathie Bird on 02 September 2022 at 04:28 PM in Birds, Cumberland Mountains, Phenology, Seasonal Shifts, Tennessee | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
Earlier this year a pair of cardinals courted here in the holler. On April 18th, I managed to get a photo of them in a courtship feeding display:
A male Northern cardinal feeds his mate a seed, April 18, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Around the 15th of July, I saw my first juvenile cardinal, one that I thought was possibly a female. On July 18th, I saw another juvenile that had more red feathers in its plumage. They showed up together on one of their visits so I was able to verify there were at least two different young ones stopping by.
The dad often came with them, either foraging with them or singing from a tree branch nearby. The first week of August, I started seeing the mom more often when she came to forage. The photos below are the best of many I got of all the family members that week:
Northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) adult female, August 3, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) adult male, August 4, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) juvenile, possibly a female, August 3, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) juvenile, possibly a male, August 2, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
All of them still come around, but more commonly I'm seeing each of them by themselves. I try to get photos when I can to track any changes in the juvenile plumages. The dark bills characteristic of the young cardinals, for example, are showing a little more orange now.
Posted by Cathie Bird on 14 August 2022 at 05:29 PM in Birds, Phenology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
The first indigo bunting that I saw in the holler this year was a female that landed on some old milkweed stems in my planter garden.
Indigo bunting (Passerina cyanea) female, April 26, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
A few days later, I started seeing a male. He came back almost everyday in late afternoon, but I never caught sight of another female.
Indigo bunting (Passerina cyanea) male, April 30, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Adult indigo bunting (male) with a seed he found. June 26, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
On June 29th, I thought I spotted another adult female. A short time later, a male indigo bunting joined this bird and they foraged in the grass together. After a few minutes observing them, I noticed that the first bird was just kind of following the male around, occasionally opening its bill wide. When I got a good look through binoculars, it was clear that the bill I was seeing was that of a fledgling.
Adult indigo bunting dad introduces a fledgling to the planter garden and feeding areas of the yard, June 29, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
On that visit, the dad and his fledgling stayed in the taller grass at the edge of the yard. It was difficult to get a good photo.
Dad and fledgling return to forage on June 30, 2022. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
The following day, however, the dad and fledgling returned and foraged in more open areas of the yard. I was able to get a photo of the fledgling getting a seed or two on its own as well as taking food offered by the parent.
Indigo fledgling finds some seeds on its own, June 30, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
The parent and fledgling continued to forage together every day for awhile. The young bird would often get here first, and some days -- for example, on July 4th -- it came several times without the parent.
Fledgling on the 4th of July, foraging on its own. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
The fledgling on a white oak branch, July 4, 2022. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
I haven't seen the younger bird now for several days, but an adult male indigo bunting has been here several times, usually early morning and late afternoon. This year was the first time I'd seen and identified an indigo bunting fledgling. I'm still hearing indigo songs out in the woods near the house and down in the flatter parts of the holler and my neighbors' fields.
Posted by Cathie Bird on 11 July 2022 at 04:57 PM in Birds, Citizen Science, Cumberland Mountains, Phenology, Tennessee | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
A little more than a year ago I saw my first Louisiana waterthrush. It was grooming its feathers on a branch, easily identifiable with binoculars and almost beyond reach of the camera lens I was using at the time. I felt lucky to get any kind of usable image.
Louisiana waterthrush (Parkesia motacilla) on June 11, 2021. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
After my first sighting, I looked this species up at Birds of the World -- something I like to do for any bird I find in the holler -- to predict what my chances of seeing more of them might be.
Pretty much centered in the breeding range for Louisiana waterthrushes, the holler's natural features match a majority of those where these birds more frequently breed. It's hilly with closed-canopy mixed deciduous and evergreen forest, and has two high to medium gradient headwater streams running through it. Neither stream could be classified "perennial" but, in most years I've lived here, they'd have had plenty of water flowing during the waterthrush's peak breeding season. Not an exact match, but I thought I had a good chance of seeing them again.
Louisiana waterthrush, June 28, 2022. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Just a few days ago, I caught sight of one searching at the edge of the woods beyond my driveway and hanging around my planter garden, hunting and catching insects.
Louisiana waterthrush with an insect it caught, June 28, 2022. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Prior to this sighting, my Merlin app had suggested one might be around but I was unable to match my recording to any of the typical songs/calls. I've now seen and heard its calls every day since I saw it on June 28th. It's interesting to me that its appearance near the house coincided with a stretch of really dry weather during which the flow of both streams had slowed considerably, so I'm wondering if that's why it came in closer or if it was just branching out a bit.
Louisiana waterthrush near the planter garden yesterday, July 3, 2022. [Photo: Cathie Bird]
Good photos of this individual have been hard to get. It seemed shy at first and would scurry for cover if it saw me at my bird-watch window. Now that it's coming closer, my imaging difficulties relate more to its speedy foraging style -- lots of blurry pictures to weed out.
Such an interesting bird. Makes me happy to hear and see it around the holler.
Posted by Cathie Bird on 04 July 2022 at 01:04 PM in Birds, Citizen Science, Cumberland Mountains, Ecosystems, Phenology, Tennessee | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|
Recently, I started bringing suet feeders into the house at night because they were being emptied, and probably not by birds. Most of the seed feeders had been showing signs of night raiders as well, but a few adjustments seemed to work to protect those feeders from take downs. Adjusting my timing for restocking ended excessive seed disappearance.
This past weekend, however, the holler went somewhat silent when Shadow, my best friend and watchdog, passed away. I wondered how long it would be until critters I knew were out there in the night holler would start to show up during the day.
Last night, one of those that I suspected as the primary suet-gorger (and feeder-wrecker) came while it was still light enough to get a photo:
Raccoon at the suet log, June 9, 2022 [Photo: Cathie Bird]
For now I'll probably bring the suet in earlier, but events like this always spark a reassessment of feeding birds and the wildlife that bird feeders may also attract. I'll also watch to see what other animals come closer to the house now. Before I got pets, white-tail deer and wild turkeys came through the yard -- maybe they will again. I've continued to add native flowers and fruit plantings, and reduce (or eliminate) any mowing and brush cutting in areas near the house unless it's for my own safety as I move around the yard. Sometime soon I want to do a post on what I see -- other than plants -- in my planter garden. I'll continue to share thoughts and photos on how I live as a human being and evolve my relationship with all the amazing creatures whose relatives lived around the holler before people did.
Posted by Cathie Bird on 10 June 2022 at 01:18 PM in Birds, Ecopsychology, Ecosystems, Mammals, Phenology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| | Digg This
| Save to del.icio.us
|
|