Pelicans, a great blue heron, and an egret were fishing but there was too much wet vegetation in my way. Mallards seemed to be pairing off.
Since 1/1/11 I have been describing what I see in the back yard. I occasionally digress.
Thursday, December 31, 2020
All day rain
Pelicans, a great blue heron, and an egret were fishing but there was too much wet vegetation in my way. Mallards seemed to be pairing off.
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
Sunshine
Tuesday, December 29, 2020
Fishers
At lunch, the mockingbird flitted from tree to tree. Bluebirds and warblers came to the feeders, stressing the downy woodpeckers.
Monday, December 28, 2020
Warmer
Five crows gathered on the dock bench and called in unison.
Sunday, December 27, 2020
Ice
Saturday, December 26, 2020
Freeze
The goldfinch flock drank from the pool puddle since the birdbath was frozen. Juncos and white throats poked through the mulch looking for whole sunflowers amid all the hulls.
At lunchtime, white breasted nuthatches came for sunflower seeds. I'm sure I saw at least two of them. Later a brown headed nuthatch popped up.
I also saw a goldfinch on the suet cage with the oriole, but I think it was confused. The male red bellied woodpecker wanted suet but spooked and fled back to the dogwood.
The flirting squirrels were back. They got distracted by fallen seeds. A female bufflehead fished around the barnacle-encrusted pilings across the creek. I saw some other ducks headed upstream that may have been hoodies. Mallards were paddling around with their heads under water.
Friday, December 25, 2020
Yellow birds
In the mulch, a goldfinch joined a house finch to hunt for fallen sunflower seeds. The goldfinch still had a bit of summer color, revealing that it was a male. It kind of looked like a black eye. Several more goldfinches plucked seeds from sweet gum pods. Late in the afternoon, a male oriole showed up. A Carolina wren and the mockingbird came back. The mockingbird guarded the barkbutter balls but accidentally, or on purpose, knocked a clump to the ground where the oriole pounced on it. Meanwhile, the mockingbird moved on to the suet. The oriole flew off with his prize. Then the female oriole came back for more suet. Clouds turned rose at sunset and the temperature continued to drop.
Thursday, December 24, 2020
Gale
I startled a kingfisher and it got away without a portrait. I did catch a hooded merganser pair. A female bufflehead was diving around the pilings of the dock across the creek. Later I saw a drake.
The white throated sparrow dashed around the patio. The mockingbird switched to bark butter balls. The pine warblers argued over the suet.
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
So many birds!
I saw a pelican and some migrant ducks fly upstream so I went to the window in back to get a better look. They were gone but mallards were courting. He bobbed his head then she bobbed hers, back and forth, and then she disappeared under him. They were discretely screened by vegetation.
Back at the feeders, the mockingbird took over the suet, now conveniently within reach. When the mockingbird left, warblers moved in. Two butterbutts (aka yellow rumped warblers) flew at each other over the suet. But the pine warblers got their share. They've been more aggressive this year - they used to defer to the butterbutts. Titmice wisely chose sunflower seeds.After dinner was in the oven, I went outside. The temperature had risen into the 50s but the sky was hazy. None of the birds would join me. When I went back in they came out. The pair of Carolina wrens switched off, one on the suet the other below scarfing up crumbs. Red breasted nuthatches finally reappeared.
I had put out jelly after seeing the oriole but a squirrel got into it. The squirrel tried to climb the pole and slid down like a movie fireman. So then it got up on the back of a chair and leaped for the crook of the hanger. It hung like a bat from the top and ate upside down. Then it came over to the window and hopped up on the birdhouse I keep meaning to clean out, the better to glare at me for laughing. The mockingbird and a pine warbler argued over the suet. Then a female red bellied woodpecker showed up. The mockingbird moved to the bark butter. But the feisty pine warblers stayed with the suet.A brown headed nuthatch visited tie seed feeder. The white throat had a brief bath. A brown thrasher snatched a bark butter ball. The juncos arrived in the late afternoon.
I glimpsed buffleheads paddling upstream so I went down to the dock to see if there were more waterbirds. Just cormorants commuting home. I was hoping I might have a better angle on the planetary conjunction, but the camera battery gave out and I was cold. This was the last chance since it's supposed to be raining tomorrow evening. Back inside with a fresh battery, I noticed egrets were congregating on the lake. There were also cormorants and a great blue heron in the fading light.Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Sunshine
When I got outside, the temperature had risen into the 50s, but the wind was cold and the shadows were long. I spotted a junco up in the wild cherry. You know where the downy woodpecker was. Warblers were delighted with the fresh block of suet K installed. A different white throated sparrow explored the mulch. Four juncos joined it. Carolina wrens went everywhere. I hoped to catch sight of the Jupiter-Saturn conjunction, but I couldn't find a clear sight line. I did enjoy the sunset and the first quarter moon.
Monday, December 21, 2020
Solstice
Overnight rain and a gray sky gave no indication that there was such a thing as sun. But directionless illumination can be good for photography, as long as there is enough light. Mostly the light was poor today - birds moved faster than the shutter.
The white throated sparrow showed up first. Warblers and Carolina wrens attacked the suet. Then the mockingbird came back for another try. Blue jays tried foraging in the mulch. The feeder counterweight is set too low for them. The male red bellied woodpecker was soon followed by a downy woodpecker. And then the cat. At lunch, a brown thrasher discovered the fresh bark butter balls. The mockingbird was not impressed. Pine warblers were getting really bold and challenging larger birds on the suet. I think a couple of birds were pine siskins. I wonder if I've been seeing them all along and thinking they were female house finches?The song sparrow scouted the seed feeder. I discovered goldfinches up in the sweet gum plucking seeds from the gumballs. (Gumballs look eerily like diagrams of coronavirus.) There were flickers of sunlight in the afternoon, but too much cloud cover to think of seeing the conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn. Maybe tomorrow night.
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Cold rain
Bluebirds did want bark butter balls. So did blue jays, brown thrasher(s?), and the red bellied woodpecker. Once again a goldfinch came and watched and didn't eat.
The white throated sparrow was joined on the ground by the song sparrow and, I think, a pine siskin. The rain continued all day but the birds did not.
Saturday, December 19, 2020
Cold
Friday, December 18, 2020
Cold and gray
Three female buffleheads paddled around the placid creek and there may also have been a few hoodies. I was in the midst of cooking so I can't be sure. Afternoon was grayer and windier.
Thursday, December 17, 2020
Bright and cold
Several blue jays flocked to the fresh bark butter balls. They chased away a brown thrasher. A mockingbird landed on the post but I didn't see it eat anything. The white throated sparrow stayed on the ground. So did the juncos.
When I finally got lunch, there were no birds, just a cat. Geese glided on reflected trees. At least twenty cormorants gathered on dead trees, fallen into the lake. Mallards left wakes across the creek's reflections. I didn't see any migrants.