Monday, March 21, 2016

Saw the wave again this morning before the sun was up.   This time it was a twisting mass spread out along the line of flight -- to the east.   Birds were low, housetop to treetop level.   Only a block away to the south but I couldn't see what they were.

I suppose they are nesting in trees in town and then going east either to the canyon lakes where there is plenty of water, or heading out to feed on grain in a field somewhere.    Grackles seem to do that, fly west in the evening and east in the morning, but do so in smaller numbers and often as single birds.

And this morning on a limb outside the kitchen door window, two curvebill thrashers by a feeder.    I took them more food.   One bird let me come to within two feet to put in seed.    Haven't seen them together like that before.

The male and female pyrrhuloxia have been coming to eat at about the same time, which may indicate that they too are pairing off.

The doves are always paired off and horny.

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

There was a red bird atop the utility pole in the alley early Tuesday morning.   It was singing.   Did not see it at a feeder, but then I don't watch all the time.

Sunday, March 13, 2016

I am so excited!   In dusk at 7:30 pm a male cardinal came to the feeder, joined for a minute by a female cardinal.   My 1st ever sight of a female.   Went for camera but when I got back the female had flown and the male was munching away.  

The female looks bigger than the pyrrhuloxia and with a glowing red-pink beak that is plainly conical, unlike the curved scoop beak of the pyrrhuloxia.

Friday, March 11, 2016

My Great Backyard Bird Count, Feb 12-14, 2016

The Great Backyard Bird Count was forgotten about at my digs until the final day.   

Too much trouble to come up with hard and fast numbers.    So I didn't post guesses on eBird.

The most common bird here are house sparrows, and they form a seething mass of boiling feathers around the feeders. Very hard to count. Plus birds come back to gorge; they don't just eat and run, which means if you have a count over a period of time, say 30 minutes or an hour, you'll count the same bird several times. I think what happens is that the birds fill their crops and lay off eating for a spell and come back for more if there is any more. 

But, objections voiced, here's my guestimate count.

House sparrows. A lot. 25-40.
House finches. 10-15.
Eurasian collared doves. 10 plus. There were more back in the fall than now.
White winged doves. 4-6. More than back in the fall.
Pyrrhuloxia. 3, 1 male & 2 female.   1M & 1F regulars.
Curve-billed thrashers. Saw only one at a time. Mighta been 2.
Cardinal. One, came by Saturday. Not a consistent visitor unless the weather is cold.
Dark-eyed, slate-colored junco. 1. On ground, not at feeder.
Sparrow as yet unidentified, 1-2. Gonna have to ask for help from the bird forum on ID. Heard one "churr" first time yesterday. Not chirp like house sparrows.  And they scratch like chickens.  
Ruby-crowned kinglets, 2 seen yesterday. In evergreen trees, not at feeders. Tiny boids, just over hummingbird size.
Starlings. Rarely come to my yard. See them perched on utility wires in alley. 2-3 this weekend.
Great-tailed grackles. Many pass overhead or perch in the hood, whistling or scraping. Saw one for the first time perched in the backyard close to a feeder. No feeding behavior observed. Don't much go for seeds.
Blue jay. One has been coming by the front yard, Heard but not seen.
Canada geese. Saw two groups fly overhead in v-formation, total 22 birds.
Mockingbird. One. Started singing this weekend from LP&L pole.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Two Short African Bird Videos

National Geographic Story

A little bit scary.

Don't miss the video at the end of the article, featuring one ostrich egg, one mammal, and three other birds.