The heat wave dissipated and normal Spring temperatures returned. There weren't a lot of birds but a mockingbird managed to get a snack without me getting a photo, twice. White throats didn't care how many pictures I took. A Carolina wren posed nicely.
Club Mallard
Since 1/1/11 I have been describing what I see in the back yard. I occasionally digress.
Monday, April 6, 2026
Back to Spring
Sunday, April 5, 2026
Storm
Just down the street on the way to church we saw a rabbit. Blue jays and white throats visited the glass dish while cardinals and house finches ate seeds. A squirrel foraged underneath. By 3pm a storm was blowing our way from the West. It got dark and windy before the short deluge.
Saturday, April 4, 2026
A hot week
Yesterday was still hot. A pine warbler considered the barkbutter balls. Then blue jays arrived, and white throats. K spilled some on the patio for a crow. The pines and oaks shed pollen. Flower bud spikes appeared on the wild
cherry. Today was supposedly the last of the heatwave. Azaleas opened but jonquils withered. A cabbage white flitted through the vegetation. A white throat checked to see if the dish had been refilled. Two more hopped around in a dogwood. Another perched by the fence. Blue jays noticed when I refilled the dish.
Labels:
blue jays,
butterfly,
crow,
oak,
pines,
warbler,
white-throated sparrow,
wild cherry
Thursday, April 2, 2026
Insect season
The heatwave persisted and again the temperature was well into the 80s. We ate outdoors and afterward I saw bees, wasps, butterflies, and an uncooperative dragonfly. The butterflies were a cabbage white and a tiger swallowtail. I couldn't identify the dragonfly. I heard blue jays bud didn't see them. The long haired yellow cat tried to catch a squirrel. The squirrel was outraged and I hope I embarrassed the cat. Azalea buds began opening.
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Windy
March ended with a blast of wind and heat. At breakfast there was a brown thrasher. I was away tabling at an event most of the day and came home too tired to think. I do remember that I saw an egret and a mockingbird at the event. I think something bit me too because I had a welt next day. The tide was way out thanks to the wind and nearly full moon. While I was recuperating, the red belly came for suet. A dove wandered around. White throats, blue jays, and a mockingbird ate barkbutter balls. The mockingbird had to wait for a cardinal to finish. Then a bluebird got his I must still have been tired today because I don't seem to recall seeing anything except the dredge. The temperature beat the old record by two degrees.
Labels:
blue jays,
bluebird,
brown thrasher,
dove,
mockingbird,
red-bellied woodpecker,
white-throated sparrow
Monday, March 30, 2026
Black swallowtail
At lunchtime the swallowtail was checking flowers for nectar but I think most of them had already been visited. The red belly came for suet and sparrows for barkbutter balls. Fierce-looking clouds passed over but did nothing. The day was hot and windy.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Nuthatches
Lots of birds arrived at breakfast while my fingers were sticky. I think one was a brown thrasher but I didn't see it again. The first one that I caught on camera was a white breasted nuthatch. White throats were everywhere, on the ground, on the feeders, in the pool puddle. A myrtle warbler also looked for a drink there. Bluebirds defaulted to seeds because starlings emptied the suet and barkbutter. A titmouse investigated the empty dish feeder. The male red belly ate seeds. I put some mealworms out hoping the starlings would be less interested. A crow didn't see anything worth its time. Azalea buds began to open as the day warmed up. A pine warbler foraged for fallen food. A chipping sparrow made a brief visit. The mockingbird pair discussed the menu and decided on jelly. Cardinals were courting. A brown headed nuthatch tried to grab a seed. When I put out more barkbutter balls, blue jays showed up immediately. Bluebirds and white throats were right behind.
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