Club Mallard
Since 1/1/11 I have been describing what I see in the back yard. I occasionally digress.
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Very pleasant
A crow came looking for a handout but nothing was ready. It had a feather sticking up. Then the female pileated arrived and tore up the suet. A blue jay was only interested in barkbutter balls. A brown thrasher felt the same. A Carolina wren was less choosy. In the afternoon, I spilled the bag of barkbutter balls and a white throat took advantage. It was late in the day when I finally saw bluebirds.A yellow jacket queen prospected around the birdbath. A skink tiptoed across the lower patio but I didn't get a picture. I also missed a tiger swallowtail, a silver spotted skipper, a red bellied woodpecker, and a mockingbird.
Friday, April 24, 2026
Nuthatches
The birds slept in but after breakfast they came in a wave. Two brown headed nuthatches appeared to be courting. A mockingbird, a bluebird, and a Carolina wren were more interested in eating. So were the seed feeder trio - chickadee, cardinal, and house finch. A brown thrasher got away without a photo. Bluebirds and blue jays were more cooperative. The male red bellied woodpecker returned. I went outside after lunch and saw lots of butterflies. The black and tiger swallowtails were recognizable but not the brownish orange ones. I think there were dragonflies as well but I didn't get any pictures of them either. Wasps worked hard. Rain started after 2pm but wasn't heavy and didn't last very long. The pink evening primrose started blooming. Bud clusters formed on the milkweed. The beautyberry leafed out. White throated sparrows were still here but rushing around and hard to capture. A vulture and an osprey flew over.
Labels:
beautyberry,
blue jays,
bluebird,
brown thrasher,
butterfly,
milkweed,
mockingbird,
nuthatch,
osprey,
primrose,
red-bellied woodpecker,
wasp,
white-throated sparrow,
wrens
Thursday, April 23, 2026
3 caterpillars
A Carolina wren attacked the suet from underneath. Then a downy woodpecker male did the same thing. White throats scuttled around. The wren queued up with blue jays for barkbutter balls. Three first instar black swallowtail caterpillars occupied the bolting parsley in K's pot on the front patio. The caterpillars weren't moving. I harvested a pepper and admired some green ones. The pinxter flower, a native deciduous azalea, was blooming as was the false indigo. The moon was at first quarter.
Labels:
blue jays,
caterpillar,
downy woodpeckers,
indigo,
pepper,
pinxter flower,
white-throated sparrow,
wrens
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Birdhouse
I didn't see anything at breakfast. At lunch, the male red belly took an interest in barkbuter balls but I missed it, twice. A mockingbird and a blue jay followed. White throats ran around the patio. The house finches got very passionate. A Carolina wren sampled this and that. A titmouse had seeds. A female bluebird had a bath. And I finally got the red belly. The first night heron of the year landed on the dock and promenaded up to the grass where it stepped off to stalk along the spartina. And I was without the camera because we were hanging the birdhouse. Later, I saw a heron behind the bushes later but I think it was a great blue heron. A cabbage white flitted past. The blue eyed grass bloomed.
.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Brown thrasher
The air was still cool and the wind gusty but the sun was bright. Carolina wrens returned. White throats lingered. A mockingbird considered the menu. A brown thrasher went directly to the barkbutter balls. Then a blue jay took over. Chickadees, house finches, and cardinals ate seeds, just as they do every day.
Labels:
blue jays,
brown thrasher,
mockingbird,
white-throated sparrow,
wrens
Monday, April 20, 2026
Chilly
Wind gusts felt colder than the actual temperature. Carolina wrens and blue jays came for suet and barkbutter balls. They were all I noticed. Clouds fought with the sun throughout the day.
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Pileated woodpecker
The sky was gray all day and quite dark at one point, but there were only a couple of brief showers. However, the temperature, which was comfortable at breakfast, dropped steadily down into the 50s. Wind gusts made it even colder. A bluebird showed up at breakfast and returned throughout the day. Yellow flag iris opened. White throats dallied but arrived for lunch. Carolina wrens also visited then. I saw the pair flirting under a chair. The cardinals were courting too. After lunch, the female pileated woodpecker came for suet. She dropped lots of crumbs to the delight of little birds.
Labels:
bluebird,
cardinals,
iris,
pileated woodpecker,
white-throated sparrow,
wrens
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