The volunteer sunflowers are blooming -- right under the seed station, ready for the birds, with a little extra protein.
7/08/2011
mealworms for young Bluebirds
The bluebirds bring their young fledglings to the mealworm plate. This is only a small part of the parents' efforts to teach their young how to hunt; another lesson is patience to sit on the hummingbird feeder poles scanning the grass below for insects. It usually pays off. We hope they're learning the territory, so they come back next year and nest again.
7/07/2011
fledglings
6/12/2011
I noticed an unfamiliar growth on my rhubarb. Turns out, the rhubarb is BLOOMING. New to me, but evidently common on plants that have been in the ground a while, as mine have. They came from my Dad's back yard, and have been producing delicious stalks for five years. Obviously, something I will use as a subject to create some art. And the kids devised new ways to use the giant rhubarb leaves.
5/31/2011
feeding young Bluebirds
The video below shows the adult female Eastern Bluebird that flew into the nestbox with a worm dangling from her beak. She fed the worm to one of her four young birds, then turned up to the opening and accepted another worm from the adult male.
In this way they can feed all four of the hatchlings enough so they'll grow to nearly full size in two weeks.
5/30/2011
Eastern Bluebird hatchlings
5/23/2011
nesting House Wrens
nesting Eastern Bluebirds
feathered nest Tree Swallows
5/18/2011
Tree Swallows
Tree Swallows Tachycineta bicolor are building a nest in one of the nestboxes. They have been constructing the cup with grass and pine needles for a few days. Today, the female is adding feathers for the cup lining.
5/17/2011
Goldfinches
5/13/2011
young fledgling
5/12/2011
5/10/2011
Jack blooms in the woods
5/08/2011
5/07/2011
pussywillows
5/04/2011
maple trees in bloom
5/01/2011
4/28/2011
Robin in Springtime song
4/27/2011
treetop nests
4/24/2011
4/10/2011
bright epaulettes on blackbirds
4/07/2011
nest site selection
4/02/2011
Springtime
The birds are leaving the winter guild and finding mates again; this pair of House Finches Haemorhous mexicanus lunched together and sunned themselves on the tray feeder.
The sounds of Spring are louder each day -- woodpeckers drumming and excavating nest cavities, cardinals singing to one another, robins warning us away from their desired nesting spots, nuthatches barking for more peanuts, and chickadees chatting.
The sounds of Spring are louder each day -- woodpeckers drumming and excavating nest cavities, cardinals singing to one another, robins warning us away from their desired nesting spots, nuthatches barking for more peanuts, and chickadees chatting.
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