Additonal Birds without Regard to Donations

Photos taken in my yard the same day (10/2/2014) as the previous blog, but without regard to the donated staging sticks…

The stars of the day’s show, Red crossbills.  I had at least four visits… a single male, a male and female together and at least two separate visits by juveniles.  I believe this is a juvenile female since the juvenile male I saw was beginning to show some color and this bird does not.

Crossbill, Red  20141002 - 28

This is a pair of Red crossbills drinking together.  (Unfortunately, at the 400mm focal length of my lens, my depth of field is extremely shallow, so only the female is in sharp focus.)

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And finally, a mature male crossbill.  When I process Red crossbill photos and zoom in on the bird (as I believe you can do by clicking or double clicking on this image), I am amazed at the color palate that is on the bird’s plumage.  It is a wonderful, subtle blend of many, many colors.

Crossbill, Red  20141002 - 03

Next are some photos of what has been a regular fall visitor, with several visits a day and occasionally multiple birds in the yard at the same time… the Yellow-rumped warbler.

Warbler, Yellow-rumped  20141002 - 01 Warbler, Yellow-rumped  20141002 - 11

My next star was a male Anna’s hummingbird.  For the first time since the new watercourse was constructed in early July, a hummingbird finally landed in the watercourse and took a bath.  The water in the new watercourse has an increased flow and that might have discouraged the hummingbirds, but this male Anna’s finally took the plunge!

Hummingbird, Anna's  20141002 - 06

The next photographs are of a Golden-crowned kinglet… the species I saw on this day  that motivated me to take to the yard with my camera.

Kinglet, Golden-crowned  20141002 - 07

This species, like the Ruby-crowned kinglet, is capable of raising a bright, crown… in this case orange-colored.  Here you can see the ruby crown, but it’s almost never this visible unless the bird is upset.

Kinglet, Golden-crowned  20141002 - 10

 

Site Donations Gratefully Accepted!

An excellent example of a double entendre if there ever was one!  Let me explain…

When you read the heading of this new post I’m sure that you thought I was soliciting funds for my blog site.  But what I’m actually soliciting are pieces of wood that I can rotate into and out of the site where I perform much of my photography!

On 10/2/2014 I ran into a friend during my morning walk in Washington Park.  He persuaded me to accompany him to his property to search for “staging sticks” that I might be able to use around my watercourse.  We spent the better part of an hour touring his property scouting for pieces of wood.  We came up with about three pieces that I could use and as soon as I got back home I changed out the staging sticks around my watercourse.  I resolved to obtain some photos of birds on the sticks he had furnished to show my appreciation for his time and effort with regard to his donation.

My intention was to take a late morning nap (I had risen at 4am) but I looked out the window and the yard was full of birds, including one or more Golden-crowned kinglets.  Priorities being what they were, I grabbed my camera, my monopod and my chair and set up near our watercourse.  It wasn’t long before the birds returned from my brief interruption.  For the next couple of hours I took photos, then a nap, and then returned to the yard for more photos.  Two hundred and forty-five (245) photos later (!) I called it quits and left to meet friends for dinner.  After returning from dinner I managed to perform preliminary processing on all the photos, paring them down to 104 “keepers”.

So all of the photos you see below are birds photographed on 10/2/2014 located either on the donated sticks or with the donated sticks in the background.  I am very grateful for the donations and if you have any pieces of wood you would like to donate to the cause I would be glad to consider them.  I must warn you, however, that I am very particular as to the wood I use.  There are many factors that must go into my selection and they are too complicated to go into here.  However, if you are interested from a photography or intellectual standpoint let me know… I’m always ready to share experience and knowledge.

For the non-birders out there, identifications are as follow:

Juvenile male House sparrow

Male Yellow-rumped warbler of the Audubon race

Yellow-rumped warbler of the Audubon race

Golden-crowned sparrow (one of our first returnees from the breeding season)

Male Red crossbill (!)

Yellow-rumped warbler of the Audubon race

Chestnut-backed chickadee

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An Interesting Observation with No Photo

On October 1, my wife and I drove to the Alderwood Mall in Lynnwood to visit the Apple Store.  Upon leaving the store my wife wanted to do some shopping and I decided to wait near one of the main intersections of the mall walkways located outdoors but very surrounded by buildings.  This particular area featured a fountain that, at irregular intervals, briefly ejected streams of water out of three tubes that rose into the air and then fell back on river rocks below.  The fountain feature was round and approximately 10-12 feet in diameter.  There were about four surrounding beds with the usual landscaping-fare plantings… hardly an environment that would attract any interesting birds!

I passed some of my time breaking off small pieces of a dog treat and feeding them to a male Brewer’s blackbird (with only one functional leg) and its mate.  When my wife returned from shopping I pointed out the blackbird and as we stood to leave she spied a small sparrow in one of the flower beds directly behind us.  It was standing rather quietly among some of the plantings no further than 3-4 feet away… in other words, I was virtually towering over it.  She noted it wasn’t the expected House sparrow and I took a closer look.  It was a Lincoln’s sparrow!

I can’t imagine what a Lincoln’s sparrow was doing in that environment.  In fact, until just a few years ago, I wouldn’t have been sure that I could have mounted a successful expedition to find one!  Sibley notes that it is found in “grassy, weedy, and brushy areas, often near water”… which is exactly where I now know to look for the species.  But the only part of that habitat description that applied in this instance was the water of the fountain… which didn’t even include a standing pool of water.  And since the fountain and associated planting beds were at a main intersection within the mall, people, including small active children, were walking all around the sparrow’s little island of refuge.

 

New Yard Bird

Last things first…

The birding has been very good lately… in fact, it only slacked off for a week or so in early September.  But things have been so good lately that on September 30 (2014) I logged a new yard bird… a Hutton’s vireo!  At the time I was photographing the bird I was under the impression that I was photographing our first fall Ruby-crowned kinglet.  But in processing the photos I realized that the bird wasn’t a kinglet and in all probability was a Hutton’s vireo… the two birds closely resemble each other.  One of my “better birder” friends confirmed my identification.

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In vireo fashion, which I’ve only come to realize this year, this vireo flew to the water and bathed “on the fly”.  I’ve observed this with the White-eyed vireo in Texas in May and the Warbling vireo in our yard earlier this summer.

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I was fortunate in being able to get a couple of decent photos before the bird began hitting the water… once it was wet, it became much more difficult to identify.

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We continue to have many Yellow-rumped warblers visiting the yard every day… more than I’ve ever seen in the yard previously.  Most appear to be of the Audubon’s race, but many are so pale as to defy my species identification.  (Last spring I was fortunate to be able to get both races in the same photograph!)  I believe that the bird pictured below is a male of the Audubon’s race.

Warbler, Yellow-rumped - Audubon's  20140930 - 09

We’re up to about 3-4 Dark-eyed juncos of the Oregon race in the yard.  In most past years the birds have left for higher elevations for their breeding season, but this year we had a pair that remained around the property.  Unfortunately the product of their breeding season was a Brown-headed cowbird, which I think I documented in a previous blog post.  By winter this will be our most numerous yard bird unless the Pine siskins, which I haven’t seen in well over a year, return in previous numbers.  In this photo you can clearly see the outer white tail feathers, a real clue for identifying a junco in flight.

Junco, Dark-eyed - Oregon  20140930 - 06

And the final photos are of House finches, usually regular visitors although they did disappear from the yard for several weeks during the breeding season.

Finch, House  20140930 - 01 Finch, House  20140930 - 02

Hyper Birding Activity in the Yard!

I was at the Post Office yesterday and noticed that they have a ‘forever’ stamp series based on songbirds. So those of you who consider yourself birders and enjoy advocating for them can now use forever stamps with pictures of songbirds. And since the stamps are good for first-class postage forever, you should avail yourself of several sheets (20/sheet).

About 3pm on September 26, 2014 I had an amazing experience… maybe my best of what has been a very nice, extended summer of birding in the yard. Since my morning walk in Washington Park had been rained out, I was considering taking a makeup walk in the middle of the afternoon. As I was tidying up the kitchen in preparation for leaving, I glanced out the window towards the watercourse and was surprised to see American robins all over the yard and the water features. I estimate that there were at least a dozen in the yard, but the actual number could easily have been twice that. I realized that there might be a Varied thrush among them and so started watching a little more intently. It was difficult observation… the robins and many other species of birds were moving all around the yard, trees and water features. There was no Varied thrush among them but I saw something even better… a Swainson’s thrush. How can it be ‘better’? If the past is any indication, the Varied thrushes will eventually be coming down from the mountains and will visit our yard daily for several months this winter. The Swainson’s thrush is a much rarer visitor to our yard and will migrate south for the winter so we won’t have even a possibility of another sighting until spring.

The activity in the yard was like a scene in Alfred Hitchcock’s, The Birds. In the space of about 15 minutes I saw:
• 2 Brown creepers
• 2 Yellow-rumped warblers (Make that three Yellow-rumped warblers. In addition to the two pale (probably first-year females I observed in the yard, while I was writing this I just spotted a male Audubon’s Yellow-rumped warbler still in breeding plumage!)
• A pale female Western tanager (which I thought was long-gone!)
• At least one Spotted towhee
• Our first Golden-crowned sparrow returning for the winter season
• A Song sparrow, an as of late very rare visitor since our previous winter resident(s) left in the spring
• And the usual cast of Chestnut-backed and Black-capped chickadees, House sparrows, and House finches.

After about fifteen minutes there was some abatement of the activity, but unfortunately one of the Yellow-rumped warblers flew into the window right in front of me and spiraled to the ground below. I knew my presence in the yard would result in the birds leaving, but I wanted to do what I could for the warbler. It was conscious and I reached down and lifted it off the ground, at which time it made a rapid recovery and flew 30-40’ across the yard. It wasn’t a great flight but at that point I felt that it would survive.

So for the past couple of weeks I had thought that my photographic activities in the yard were winding down, but if it doesn’t rain tomorrow I think I’m going to have to be back out in the yard for a while!

Sorry… no photos. And this is my first posting in a couple of weeks. I’ve apparently successfully copied my photos from the 1T internal hard drive on my laptop to a new external 2T drive. I have a few photos from the yard, from an excursion out into the county and I also took a four-day trip to Winthrop which generated a considerable number of photos. Due to the overhead associated with the image transfer I didn’t process images for a few days, and by the time I got up the courage to download to the external hard drive I had accumulated over 470 images that I’m still trying to process! So I do have some new photos and I’ll try to post some photos before too long.

DON’T FORGET THE SONGBIRD STAMPS available at the US Postal Service!