The bird feeder station at the edge of the woods is a busy place on a wintery morning.
11/14/2014
winter water
At the edge of the wild wild woods, I keep a bowl with open water for the birds. Many species use it to drink and to preen their feathers even in cold weather. Feathers do their job of insulating for warmth better when they are clean. The Northern Flicker Colaptes auratus often drums on the ground to find ant larvae to eat. That may make him thirsty. The Blue Jay Cyanocitta cristata occasionally dives in for a full bath.
10/02/2014
windblown
Bluejays love peanuts! This bird was trying hard to get one even though the wind almost flipped him head over tail.
9/01/2014
young birds
Several bird species were successful at hatching and fledging babies this summer in the wild wild woods.
This young Black-capped Chickadee found a peanut too big for him, but he can peck at it to manage a treat.
This Downy Woodpecker male (with the red cap) is feeding a young at the suet block, hoping he will learn to help himself before winter sets in.
The two big guys below may look like a battling pair. The brown one is a juvenile Common Grackle begging from his parent at the seed tray. This is how young birds learn to fend for themselves.
7/28/2014
juvenile or adult?
These two Northern Cardinals Cardinalis cardinalis look alike. Both are females, so have some red feathers like the all-red males, but are mostly tan rusty brownish so they can hide better from predators in nesting season.
But notice the difference between the adult and juvenile?
The young first-year female Cardinal above still has her juvenile dark grey bill. Her new adult feathers are just coming in to form her winter coat.
The adult female Cardinal at right is identified by her bright orange or red bill. Her feathers look disorganized like her youngster because she is molting. She loses her old worn feathers in late summer, so her new warm winter feathers are just growing in.
7/14/2014
wild berries
7/06/2014
wild berries
At the edge of the woods, where sun shines on them part of the day, wild raspberries grow each spring. The birds love the juicy berries so much that they usually don't get a chance to ripen fully to their darkest black-red.
This year, I covered these with a net for a while in order to see them ripen. And, I got to taste them too!
This year, I covered these with a net for a while in order to see them ripen. And, I got to taste them too!
7/02/2014
germander
Germander Teucrium canadense self-seeded a few years ago where the slopes drain rainwater down to the swale and into the woods. Tiny 3/8" flowers cluster on spikes that stand six inches above green leaves. Bees collect pollen and suck nectar from Germander. The leaves are bitter, so the rabbits and deer do not browse these plants.
7/01/2014
Eastern Bluebird babies
Eastern Bluebirds hatched five babies in a nestbox near the wild wild woods. Both parents feed them worms, flies, damselflies, and other insects of all sizes. Here, one little bird tries to swallow the big bug he got for breakfast.
6/26/2014
wrens nesting
The House Wrens Troglodytes aedon built a nest in one of the boxes near the woods. The male carried twigs to fill the box, and the female found fluff to line her nest cup.
6/24/2014
stream bed through the woods
Record rainfall in June so far! During one downpour, the swale and the dry stream bed down through the wild wild woods was running full. Good moisture for the wildflowers growing in the woods.
The neighborhood uphill from the woods feeds runoff water into a swale where cattails, blue vervain, bulrush, blue lobelia, and winged loosestrife grow.
The neighborhood uphill from the woods feeds runoff water into a swale where cattails, blue vervain, bulrush, blue lobelia, and winged loosestrife grow.
Winged Loosestrife (Lythrum alatum) |
Blue Lobelia (Lobelia siphilitica) |
last winter's snack
These galls are the "packages" left after winter birds pecked through to get at the treats inside.
Last summer, an insect laid eggs at the tip of the plant stem. Each hatched egg became a larva that burrowed into the stem. The larva chewing and its saliva caused the plant to build a gall. This became shelter for the larva as it expected to survive winter and emerge in Spring. However, winter birds often peck the gall to extract the larva. This is one way birds find food in winter.
5/25/2014
wildflowers
In the woods today, Solomon's Seal, Rue, Violets, and Trout Lily. After the very cold wet months of April and May, native wildflowers seem happy to be emerging from the leaf litter.
5/16/2014
more migrants
5/07/2014
first hatched
The post on 4/23/2014 was about a nest containing two eggs. If you guessed it was a Northern Cardinal nest, you were correct. Today the first egg hatched, after at least 14 days of incubation. (Usually the eggs hatch after being kept warm and turned frequently by the female for 12 or 13 days, but we've had cool wet weather this Spring.)
In the photo at left, we see the hatchling's back side with sparse tufts of grayish down where more feathers will grow. Other than these tufts, the baby bird is naked.
In the photo below, we see the front belly-side of this same baby bird. It already has the distinctive thick bill typical of Northern Cardinals. Note the amazing detail of its feet and claws! Belly is transparent enough to show internal organs. Eyes are not yet open, and it will be very clumsy for a few days but will flail around trying to reach food as a parent approaches.
In the photo at left, we see the hatchling's back side with sparse tufts of grayish down where more feathers will grow. Other than these tufts, the baby bird is naked.
In the photo below, we see the front belly-side of this same baby bird. It already has the distinctive thick bill typical of Northern Cardinals. Note the amazing detail of its feet and claws! Belly is transparent enough to show internal organs. Eyes are not yet open, and it will be very clumsy for a few days but will flail around trying to reach food as a parent approaches.
5/01/2014
migrants
Migrating birds stopped at the edge of the wild wild woods this week. On Friday, one Yellow-rumped Warbler Setophaga coronata hopped around among the finches below the seed feeder. On Saturday and Sunday, several more appeared. A flock of 30 or so have been sharing the suet with our resident finches and sparrows.
According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/yellow-rumped_warbler/lifehistory these warblers are able to winter farther north than other warblers, sometimes as far north as Newfoundland, because they can digest the waxes found in bayberries. There are some bayberry bushes around here, but this is the first time we've hosted traveling Yellow-rumped Warblers.
4/25/2014
blooming trees and shrubs
4/23/2014
nest watching begins
Nestwatch season has begun in Minnesota and the wild wild woods.
http://nestwatch.org/
Discovered today in an evergreen tree at the edge of the woods, a nest hidden among the needles protects two lovely eggs. We'll watch for a few days to verify what species this is. Can you guess?
4/19/2014
beaks
Baltimore Oriole |
Close up: the beaks of Baltimore Oriole, Red-winged Blackbird, and Common Grackle. All three of these birds are in the blackbird family (ICTERIDAE).
Orioles have a long, thick-based, pointed bill. They love ripe fruit and will stab the closed bill into a soft fruit, then open their mouth to cut in and drink with their brush-covered tongue.
Blackbirds have a very sharp slender bill to glean seeds from weedy plants like cocklebur. Sometimes they probe at the base of aquatic plants, prying them open to get at insects hidden inside.
Grackles devour crops like corn, eat garbage, and can saw open acorns. Their bill is long and pointed, but slightly curved down, with a hard keel on the inside of the upper mandible.
Grackle (juvenile on left) |
Red-winged Blackbird |
4/11/2014
young pileated woodpeckers
We watched two young female Pileated Woodpeckers Dryocopus pileatus this morning. They were hunting for bugs in grass at the edge of the woods when a neighborhood cat came along; the woodpeckers dived and swooped above it to chase the feline away. She crept away through the shrubs while they vocalized their loud, high-pitched ‘kuk-kuk, kuk-kuk' alarm calls. Then they resumed searching for insects in the grass and at the base of a nearby tree. Note the strong claws that allow them to grip tree bark solidly while they probe for insects.
4/09/2014
nest cams ready
Nest cameras are ready in the wild wild woods! This is one camera's view into a wooden nest box from the inside of the roof, looking down.
The birds are singing, defining their territories, and looking for mates. I cleaned out three wooden nest boxes at the woods' edge, and three pvc nesting tubes in the woods.
They all look as barren inside as this one but will soon be stuffed with an assortment of twigs, grasses, fur, fluff, string, and feathers for nesting.
4/01/2014
First Bluebird
April 1, 2014. No, not a joke. I saw my "first" Eastern Bluebird of this spring season at the edge of the wild wild woods this morning. What a welcome sight after the longest winter ever!
2/01/2014
more feathers close up
Aren't they amazing close up?
The feathers on the birds in the wild wild woods are showing some wear since last summer. Flying, preening, and roosting crowded into a hole or huddled together in a box causes feathers to wear out.
These three examples -- Dark-eyed Junco (right), Northern Flicker (below right), and Redbellied Woodpecker (below left) -- all have beautiful feathers!
1/20/2014
eye shields
I've occasionally noticed something about the eyes on some of the birds I observe: milky or filtered texture.
According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology http://www.allaboutbirds.org, birds have what is known as a nictitating membrane or “3rd eyelid”.
This membrane is a translucent or clear eyelid, closest to the eyeball. A bird will close these membranes over their eyes but can still see through them to protect their eyes when needed, such as in flight, while hunting, or to dive under water.
This Northern Flicker may have been trying to shield his eyes from flying bits of bark as he probed for insects.
1/07/2014
critters at the woods' edge
This Eastern Cottontail rabbit (Sylvilagus floridanus) has a thick fur coat in cold weather, but does not turn white like the native hares do. This may be the rabbit that saunters around the fenced veggie garden all spring, looking for new lettuce to enjoy. They live in the brush pile at the edge of the woods, and like to munch on corn and other seeds that blow out of the tray feeders on windy days. There seemed to be some accumulated in the sheltered depths of the toad haven, half buried by snow.
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