4/19/2018

filling the larder with suet


Red-bellied Woodpecker gathering suet from the hanging feeder cage.
Red-bellied Woodpecker caching suet in a hiding place for later.

4/16/2018

winter birds . . . as winter continues

Snow again.  I've been away since January. This is mid-April.  Almost 80 inches of snow this winter. I've resorted to putting out a plate of seeds for the birds rather than wade through deep drifts between the house and the hanging feeders.  It warmed up a bit last week; many migrating birds are now stuck here.



1/11/2018

winter birds

Snow today, and the birds are more visible than over the last few weeks with no snow.  The Bluejays and Northern Cardinals are willing to sit together for a meal as the temperature drops and the wind increases.
photo credit gwp

12/29/2017

peanuts and suet




Below zero F air temperature.  Wind makes it feel even colder.  Clouds and snow flurries prevent any warmth from sunshine.

The suet is popular with several species.  They do not mind close association when it comes to getting nourishment on a cold day.  Here, a Downy Woodpecker and Black-capped Chickadee partake as a Dark-eyed Junco (with claws more suited for finding seeds on the ground) tries to figure out the best way to hang and feed as the others.

Meanwhile, the new peanut ring attracts the Bluejays.  The Chickadees and Nuthatches explored it immediately.  The Bluejays were more cautious but their curiosity led them to solving the puzzle of this feeder.

12/28/2017

Redpolls in winter


 Common Redpolls Acanthis flammea spend most of the year in the arctic tundra and boreal forests. Although they breed in the far north, flocks of Redpolls wander south in winter months to find food in woodlands, open fields, and backyard feeders.  Their striped breast and bright red forehead patch differentiate them from House Finches with a thicker bill and more rosey red around the face.  Left: a flock of Redpolls on the seed tray.  Below: a Redpoll looking down on a House Finch on a branch in winter.

feeder garden bandits

 Although the feeder garden is intended to feed birds, the squirrels find it enticing too.  The Red Squirrel Tamiasciurus hudsonicus usually gathers food on the ground below the tray of seeds.  The Grey Squirrel Sciurus carolinensis prefers to find ways to leap on the tray, dropping from a branch above or leaping from a stump nearby.  The tray is on a pole with a "slinky" metal coil suspended -- which the squirrels do not climb.

winter feeder garden


The feeder garden at the edge of the woods offers nuts, seeds, and suet to birds in a tray, baskets, tubes, and NEW a peanut ring.  They were pecking nuts out of the peanut ring within an hour.  Snow on the ground, temperatures around zero.  The Northern Cardinals are a bright spot in the scene.

10/31/2017

fallen leaves







Maple, elm, mulberry, swamp oak, birch, and willow leaves create a palette of October color.  It helps the finches and doves appear less visible as they feed. The hawks circle overhead.


10/24/2017

Bluejay bully

A Northern Cardinal was enjoying safflower seeds at the tray feeder this morning.  The Bluejays wanted the peanuts from the same tray.  The Cardinal held his ground, barking at the jays to go away.  They barked back, and grabbed peanuts as they could, then flew away to bury each one.
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10/02/2017

migrating painted ladies


The garden was aflutter last week with Painted Lady butterflies Vanessa cardui.  They were obsessed with the blossoms of Brazilian Vervain Verbena bonariensis.  Fortunately, the lavender blooms are abundant this year, probably self-seeded from last year's single pot of the plant.  I was beginning to think I had too many of the tall strong stems topped with airy umbrellas of tiny flowers.  Now, glad they invited the ladies to stop for refueling on their way south!



7/17/2017

creatures in the rain barrel


 



Deep in the nearly-empty rain barrel, a Gray Treefrog Hyla versicolor clings with its suction-cup feet.  Tree frogs can climb most surfaces with ease -- even this slick dark wall -- because each pad on each foot allows strong close mucous-enhanced contact. 


Outside the rain barrel, a Northern Walkingstick Diapheromera femorata clings to the outer edge on a surface of the same material.
Walkingsticks are leaf skeletonisers, eating the tissues between the leaf veins, pausing for a while and then walking on to new leaves.


Posing on a green leaf, the Walkingstick shows off its twig disguise and demonstrates how its front legs are attached just behind its eyes.  Usually, these two front appendages are held straight out along the antennae.

7/16/2017

Yellow Goats Beard

The seed head of the Yellow Goats Beard Tragopogon dubius is a fluffy ball 3-1/2 inches across. The elongated seeds stand stiffly forming a ball.  Each seed has brown hairs at the top forming a tiny 'umbrella' plume; when ripe, the seeds release at the bottom and breezes help the plume carry them to next season's growing site.  This is one of Mother Nature's methods for seed dispersal.

Yellow Goats Beard blossom

6/26/2017

juvenile Bluebird


This little Eastern Bluebird comes from the first clutch of eggs laid and hatched in the nestbox.  The adults have started clutch number two with eggs in the nest.

6/12/2017

mushrooms


The woods is full of mushrooms.  These are growing on a downed buckthorn branch.


6/07/2017

bright blooms in the shade


False Solomon's Seal Maianthemum racemosum or Smilacina racemosa blooms brightly in the shady woods.  The blossom is a stalk bearing clusters of tiny star-shaped flowers.  With its bloom, each plant stretches the appearance of its long curving stem. Later this summer the plant will  have a cluster of waxy berries.

mealworms for nestlings


A beautiful morning.  I put a fresh supply of mealworms in the plate.  Eastern Bluebirds, nesting in the distant box, are the first to gather breakfast for their babies.  What more can I say?

5/29/2017

bee on cranesbill


While admiring the Cranesbill 'Karmina' in the gardens today, I noticed a fuzzy bee hurrying from one to another of the blooms that are just beginning to open.  I believe it is a Carpenter Bee Xylocopa virginica, commonly a nester in various types of wood; they eat pollen and nectar.

sweet woodruff blooms among the creeping charlie


At the edge of the wild wild woods . . .  this year, the ground ivy has crept into the Sweet Woodruff Galium odoratum.  Their blooms complement one another nicely in the shade.  Ground Ivy, Glechoma hederacea is also known as the invasive "creeping charlie" but I begged some to fill an area where nothing else pretty would grow; thanks Linde!

5/23/2017

nestwatch update



Peek inside some of the nestboxes in the wild wild woods . . .





















This box (above) holds a Tree Swallow nest -- a cozy cup formed of grasses with feathers for additional warmth. As she laid the eggs, one each day, she hid them under the feathers until she was ready to incubate them. 
Now they are clustered together; she sits with her body pressed close to them until they hatch.
The nylon lines suspended on this nestbox deter other species from claiming all the boxes; Tree Swallows and Bluebirds are aerial feeders and can maneuver between the lines to access this box.





Five Eastern Bluebird eggs are cozy in their nest cup of woven grasses.  This nestbox was lined with a deep soft cushion of moss by Chickadees before the Bluebirds took possession.









That pair of Black-capped Chickadees moved to another nestbox where they laid a clutch of 7 eggs.  Six babies hatched and five survived a wet cold week of weather.  They all gape hungrily when a parent brings food. The little one on the left is closing his beak after gulping an insect.  The others are still calling for a meal as the adult departs to hunt another.


In another nestbox, House Wrens have woven a grass shelter within a twig structure (below).  Two eggs so far; they usually lay 5 or 6, sometimes as many as 10.


5/21/2017

sweet flag




A small cluster of Sweet Flag Acorus americanus grows in a wet spot at the edge of the wild wild woods.  A cylindrical form protrudes from amidst the leaves, showing pale bumps today that will become the plant's flowers.  Mother Nature arranges them in a diamond pattern.  So subtle, you have to look closely to spot the few flower structures among the green and white sword-like leaves.

5/18/2017

Tree Swallow nest



One nest box in the wild wild woods is being used by Tree Swallows Tachycineta bicolor this year.  Yesterday there were two eggs clearly visible, today maybe three.  Tree Swallows poke feathers into the grass structure of their nest to hide the eggs, so it is hard to tell for sure.  Usually they lay 4 to 7 eggs per clutch.  Today while I was monitoring the cam, the adult perched at the opening and kept poking her head in to check on her nest.

5/08/2017

tulips



Tulipa 'Marilyn'.  A long slender lily-flowered tulip variety.  Blooms later than other tulips in my gardens.  Bulbs were a gift from my sister when she visited the the Amsterdam Tulip Museum.

5/05/2017

maple samara


One of the prettiest maple samaras I've seen this year!  
Even though only half of this pair developed, it is lovely in the sunlight.

5/03/2017

pollinator magnets



Agastache seed heads stood through winter at the edge of the wild wild woods (see post 2/3/17).  Now, with warming soil, the new sprouts are coming up to bloom another season.

These fragrant showy blossoms are vital to my pollinator garden. 

Also called Hyssop or Hummingbird Mint . . .  these are "Honey Bee Blue".

first egg Eastern Bluebirds 2017