A Good Day in the Yard!

I spent an hour or two run the yard again today (3/28/2020), hoping for new spring migrants. None showed but I obtained some good photos of regular visitors. Here are some of the photos…

I’ve now seen almost as many hummingbird visits to the watercourse in the past week as I saw the entire last season (as I mentioned in my last post)! This is probably the same male Rufous hummingbird… he seems to be addicted to tasking baths. In this case I managed a quick shot at 1/400th of a second, far too slow to stop the wing motion but good enough to provide very good detail on the rest of the hummingbird.

Male Rufous Hummingbird

The crows are pairing up and building nests. I think I’ve located the general areas for two of the nests. The crows were agitated this afternoon due to two Bald eagles overflying the area.

Crow
Female Northern Flicker
Male Spotted Towhee
Black-capped Chickadee
Male House Sparrow

The Large and Small of It

From an excursion outside the yard yesterday (3/26/2020)…

A Bald eagle photographed on West March Point Road…

A male Downy woodpecker intent on accessing the suet feeder in the yard…

After several years of enjoying and photographing hummingbirds accessing the watercourse, at the end of last summer I could only remember about four hummingbird visits to our watercourse during the 2019 season. Why so few I can’t imagine. However this year I’ve already observed two male Rufous hummingbird visits to the watercourse… one, as I think I may have mentioned, occurred when I was filling the watercourse and the other this afternoon. This afternoon I was in the yard with my camera and managed to record the event. The watercourse is flowing more robustly due to the larger pump I’m now using, but the hummingbird seems to have no qualms about landing in the increased flow. This hummingbird, as well as most of the other smaller birds, seem to prefer perching the edge of one of the drops for bathing purposes.

Late March

For the past several weeks my watercourse has been dry, with only a small pool at the base. My old pump quit and I installed a backup that was slightly more powerful. It apparently pushed water over the side at some point and I was losing significant water in a short period of time. I attempted some half-hearted investigation of where the problem was occurring but cold, wet weather discouraged my desultory efforts.

Knowing that the spring migrant season was approaching, I reluctantly tackled the problem last week. I never discovered where the problem(s) were occurring, but my efforts fixed the problem and the watercourse has been up and running for about a week. My first customer, fittingly enough, was a male Rufous hummingbird. The birds are showing little interest in the watercourse, which somewhat surprises me. It’s not the cold… cold water/weather has never dissuaded birds from bathing.

I’m still waiting for more spring migrants… American goldfinches, Black-headed grosbeaks, Brown-headed cowbirds and of course, WARBLERS!

For the past two days I’ve been involved in a project to photograph a rare bird to which I was alerted by a birding friend. I’ve obtained a couple of photos but nothing I care to post. In the mean time, I’ve been on a few excursions which netted me the following photos.

Male Spotted towhee
Female House finch
Male Red-winged blackbird vocalizing
Female Red-winged blackbird with nesting material
Female Red-winged blackbird with nesting material
Female and male Mallard
Female Mallard

Spring… It’s About Thyme!

Sorry… I couldn’t resist!

I have friends who I have been helping with attracting and identifying birds. On March 11, 2010, I spent a little over an hour in their yard photographing some of their visitors. The best photograph I obtained was one of this male House sparrow which has apparently purloined this sprig of what appears to be thyme for nesting material.

A Few Birds in the Yard

I spent an hour or so in the yard on March 8, 2020, the first day in almost a week that weather seemed to beckon. Even so, it was quite cool.

This is a Song sparrow, one of two we have had in the yard recently.

This is a Fox sparrow, which I consider fairly similar to the Song sparrow. It took me a good while after moving to the PacNW to be able to differentiate between these two sparrows.

Another member of the sparrow family, a male Spotted towhee.

This is a Bewick’s wren which has been accessing our suet feeder for the past couple of months.

This is one of the early female Rufous hummingbirds visiting our yard…

And finally, a Pine siskin getting a drink of water in the yard on March 7. (Don’t try this at home!) We’ve had very few siskins for the past several months, but about two weeks ago we had one show up, then two and most recently about four. This is a species that in some past years has been our most numerous winter bird, but on occasion the species has been absent from our yard for over a year.