Gusty wind from the North spotted and streaked the windows, making photography difficult. The rain filled the ant moat to overflowing and gave a surprise shower to the red bellied woodpecker that landed hard on the suet. A brown thrasher came for barkbutter or mealworms only to find the dish still covered against the rain. Pelicans and gulls passed over the creek.
Club Mallard
Since 1/1/11 I have been describing what I see in the back yard. I occasionally digress.
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Real rain
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Bird buffet
Morning began with a pileated woodpecker and blue jays. Three starlings visited but were unsatisfied and didn't stay. A white throat pecked at the residue in the barkbutter dish. A Carolina wren got inside the dish. Meanwhile a goldfinch landed on the suet with a pine warbler. The goldfinch must have realized its mistake and joined the house finches for seeds. House finches are bigger.
The overcast sky developed blue rents. A pair of buffleheads drifted on the creek. Lots of little birds use the azalea by the side window as a launchpad for the feeders, but it is very hard to get photos of them. White breasted and brown headed nuthatches picked out seeds. I refilled the glass dish with a mix of mealworms and barkbutter balls. The pine warbler was pleased. A downy sampled the suet. The song sparrow found what I dropped (deliberately). Bluebirds noticed that the dish was refilled. The female oriole had jelly and a drink.
Pelicans and gulls were very busy on the creek but the only ducks I saw were the bufflehead pair and another female. A great blue heron stalked along our shoreline. By then the sky had cleared but the light was going.
Friday, February 20, 2026
Waterfowl
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Very gray
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Very warm
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Fog
Happy Lunar New Year and Mardi Gras. At breakfast a light fog grayed the distant pines. It didn't seem to trouble the pelicans flying low over the creek. Gulls, too, were fishing. The committee of vultures took to the trees. The two mourning doves returned. Downy and red bellied woodpeckers came for the feeders. So did a wren, a pine and a myrtle warbler, a brown headed nuthatch and starlings. Blue jays flew past but returned for breakfast.
The sun finally got through at 10am. Then a junco appeared on the seed feeder. Where was it during the bird count? Bluebirds enjoyed the sunshine. A goldfinch also wanted seeds. The pelicans kept on fishing, apparently with success judging by the splashdowns. Cormorants had the same idea.
Monday, February 16, 2026
Gray
We held off on the open dish feeders in case the rain was not finished. That was just as well since starlings investigated the menu. The towhee returned for breakfast. I saw what I think were bufflehead drakes. Pelicans flew by all day and the dredge apparently observed the holiday. The red belly ate both seeds and suet but the downy only wanted suet. Nuthatches came earlier than usual, both kinds. I also counted a blue jay, a mockingbird, a pair of bluebirds, two kinds of warbler, and a wren before 8:30am. Later in the morning there were titmice and the song sparrow. Except for a crow, the lunchtime birds were repeats even though they now had jelly and barkbutter balls. The temperature only rose a couple of degrees from just under 40 to just over. Plus, the wind was gusty. I was glad to be inside to finish the GBBC. I did twelve checklists and counted 37 species, one of which was new. This year I posted more photos too.




