Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts

Monday, September 4, 2023

BALD BLUEJAY & more

Seen in the birdbath this week/ bald Bluejay

Sept. 2, 2023

Here's why I never seem to get much done as my office window looks over the front garden.

Sighted 5 minutes ago. BALD BLUE JAY!!!😲

Stopped what I was doing. Looked it up on line.  (What I call my “but I digress moments) Never even considered this was a thing.

Check out Laura Erickson’s “For the Birds”  https://www.lauraerickson.com website.

BLUE JAY information from Erickson:

"Every year in July and August, people here and there throughout the country notice bald Blue Jays and ask me about them. And every year I explain it pretty much the same way. Adult Blue Jays molt every summer. The feathers are replaced a few at a time over most of their bodies, so they retain enough feathers to keep flying and to protect their bodies from the elements.

"But some Blue Jays tend to drop all their head feathers simultaneously. This has one big advantage, reducing the number of days that the head is missing any feathers at all, but a big disadvantage, too, exposing the bird’s head to the elements with no protection whatsoever for as long as a week or two. I was licensed to keep an education Blue Jay named Sneakers for many years, and she molted this way. I was absolutely responsible for Sneakers, and very protective of her dignity, and this was also before I was taking many photos of birds, so I never took photos of her in her bald state. 

"That is, until this summer. Being home during the pandemic, one of my joys has been whistling to my neighborhood crows and Blue Jays when I set out peanuts. The nearest crow family brought off four chicks, and the family of six has been showing up regularly at my big tray feeder. One of the parents noticed this spring that if I went into the yard and whistled when it was nearby, I always put some peanuts in the feeder, and now the whole bunch is likely to show up if they’re within earshot when I whistle. So far, neither parent has lost all its head feathers.”

What about other birds?

GOLDFINCHES, notes Cornell’s e-Bird (https://ebird.org/home), molt twice a year. Here’s what they say:

“Every summer, goldfinches replace their bright body feathers with duller ones for the winter. The new feathers come in one by one, giving the birds that strange patchwork appearance.

Unlike most songbirds, goldfinches molt twice a year. At winter’s end, they’ll grow in a complete set of new golden yellow feathers. Again, each one will have a strange, patchy appearance for a few days, but soon they’ll be vividly beautiful again.”

CARDINALS, both male and female, molt every year. Here’s what AnyCardinals.com have to say:

Cardinals, both male and female, molt like many other birds. They molt once a year to shed their old, damaged plumage and grow stunning, new feathers to conduct flight efficiently, stay healthy, and allure their mates.Cardinals molt their feathers once a year, usually in the late summer and early fall.

Male cardinal will molt feathers from their whole body while female cardinals do not molt their body plumage, only their wings and tail feathers.

And on to another discovered bird topic

ANTING from birdwatchingdaily.com (Again, I digress…) 

And not only cardinals but other birds. 

“Have you seen a cardinal bird covered with ants? If yes, then you should know that there is no reason to panic. Cardinal birds covered themselves with ants. This behavior is called anting, where they voluntarily cover their whole body with ants. Although it is a bit unusual and alarming, cardinals are not the only bird species that do that. Ants release formic acid that helps birds ward off lice, so they do anting once in a while. 

One theory is that the acid secreted by the ants kills mites and other parasites that might try taking root in a bird’s feathers. Another possibility is that formic acid acts as a sort of natural balm, soothing the irritation caused by molting.”

And that was a bit of my morning. Now writing it up to share.


 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

 Now is the time to start planning to harvest and preserve your herbs. There’s lots of good information in the

HERB SAMPLER Second Edition

Buy one for yourself and consider getting a few more as the winter holidays approach – hostess gifts, housewarming and holiday presents.

The Second Edition Herb Sampler (2019) is exclusively sold retail at Snavely's Garden Center, Chambersburg or available through Amazon. 

Just click this link to find it.

Thursday, February 18, 2021

RECORD YOUR BIRDWATCHING ANYTIME

Rose-breasted Grosbeak

Did you know you can do bird counts not only for the Great Backyard Bird Count but at any time? 

You can create your own YARD list or LIFE list. These are a great way to record what you see, even that hawk, heron or eagle that flies overhead or hear such as a Great Horned Owl HOO HOO hoo hoo - ing at night, likely unseen.

There may be times that you see many birds in your backyard because of the weather. We have a heated birdbath and an easily refilled feeding station on our deck. When it gets really cold and/or snows we have many more birds than usual. In spring, especially after a rain, we don't see many at all. 

Check the links for more information on creating your own lists. The eBird entries do requires a time and place as they need that to have consistent data to use.


Sunday, January 24, 2021

Identifying Backyard Birds

Are you getting ready for the Great Backyard Bird Count? Start identifying the birds you are seeing in your yard. Don't forget you can also participate while on a hike or visiting beyond your backyard. Be sure to take a notepad to record your sightings.

See if you can ID the birds on this page.  Answers at the bottom.

Middle 1

The Merlin Bird ID and Audubon Bird Guide app can easily be downloaded on phones on tablets.  Not so easy on a desktop computer. 

Here's a free online resource with easy to find ID. BIRD WATCHER'S DIGEST:   [https://www.birdwatchersdigest.com/bwdsite/]

There are plenty of books for identifying birds available through the Franklin County Library System. They are offering curbside pickup. Go to their webpage for CURRENT GUIDELINES for checking out books at this time. (http://www.fclspa.org/reopening/). Use the topic Bird identification in the Search box.

Middle 2


My favorites books are:

* Sibley Field Guide to Birds - This has drawings of male & female plus juvenile & breeding plumage on some.
* Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Birds
* Peterson Field Guide to Birds East of the Rockies 



 If you want a great bird song ID book get BACKYARD BIRDSONG GUIDE EASTERN AND CENTRAL (Cornell Lab of Ornithology). [  https://www.amazon.com/Backyard-Birdsong-Guide-Eastern-Listening/dp/0811863425  ]  It has the sounds of seventy-five unique birds from Eastern and Central North America at the touch of a button plus short descriptions of each.


🐦 🐦🐦🐦🐦🐦





Wednesday, January 20, 2021

GREAT BACKYARD BIRD COUNT -2021

It seems being stuck at home there is much more birdwatching going on, at least on the Facebook pages of my Friends and others that I visit.


With that in mind, I'm thinking this year's GBBC will be highly successful utilizing many more citizen scientists to gather and report bird data. You just need to spend at least 15 minutes at a location. If you can spend more than 15 minutes, you’ll get a better sense of which birds are in your area. If you’d like to do more than one count at the same location, or counts at several locations, just  submit separate checklists each time you do so.

Here's some links to help you understand how this works.

Counting Instructions 

Bird Counting 101   This article gives you clear information about counting and is helpful if you are new at this.  Ex, "If you see a male Northern Cardinal in the first five minutes of your walk, and then see a male Northern Cardinal in roughly the same place on your way back you would count one." 

Bird Counting 102- At the Feeders This is the article that I review each year. 

Help Id'ling Birds  This link provides online reference sites, several with FREE apps to download.

The Merlin Bird ID and Audubon Bird Guide app can easily be downloaded on phones on tablets.  Not so easy on a desktop computer. 

Here's a free online resource with easy to find ID. BIRD WATCHER'S DIGEST:   [https://www.birdwatchersdigest.com/bwdsite/]

There are plenty of books for identifying birds available through the Franklin County Library System. They are offering curbside pickup. Go to their webpage for CURRENT GUIDELINES for checking out books at this time. (http://www.fclspa.org/reopening/). Use the topic Bird identification in the Search box.

e-Bird Data Entry

Yes, you will need to set up an e-Bird account to enter your information; however, it is only once and they don’t ask a bunch of personal information (name, email, user name and password). Having an account ensures that your data will be associated with your efforts, allowing scientists to quantify participation to aid in analyses. It also enables you to keep track of your personal bird records and lists. 

You can also enter observations at other times of the year and because a location is not associated with your account, at different locations. Go to this link to set up the eBird Account. Once set-up, you can use the sign in information (User name and password) to participate in NestWatch . 


NestWatch is a nationwide nest-monitoring program designed to track status and trends in the reproductive biology of birds. Participating is easy and anyone can do it.

The Cornell Bird Lab has an abundance of online educational resources that may be of interest to homeschoolers and teachers with online education responsibilities. There are FREE downloadable lessons, clubs and citizen science programs for K-12 and information for Undergrad and Grad students, too.


Tuesday, December 15, 2020

The Importance of Home Gardens

Heated deck bird bath provides water in winter

Driving by the large, wooded area at the far edge of our neighborhood, my son and I often saw rabbits feeding and on fair nights, with the windows down, we heard the song of spring peepers. In the mid-1980’s posted zoning signs were replaced with store names and construction began. My son asked, as bulldozers toppled trees and turned the woods into a large swath of dirt, “Where will the bunnies go?”


Statistics bear out the significant increase in human population and the millions of acres each year that are taken from native habitat for housing, commercial and industrial uses. Along with these numbers research shows that song birds, meadow birds and their food sources are in great decline.

 

Beyond the benefits of home food production and increased property values, today suburban landscapes are becoming the lifelines for plants and animals that have lost their native habitat to development. As development continues wildlife is forced to depend upon our human-dominated landscapes for their continued survival.

 

What is planted in home landscapes plays an important role in determining the future of wildlife. “[G]ardeners have the power to make a significant contribution” toward variety in both plants and animals wrote Dr. Douglas Tallamy in his book, “Bringing Nature Home.” Establishing areas of biodiversity is important to saving our wildlife.

 

“Biodiversity refers to the richness or variety of animal, plant, and other life in a given area, from the tiniest snail or plant to the largest predator,” wrote Dr. James Finley, Professor of Forest Resources at Penn State. 


Biodiversity embraces all living things, including humans, and how their existence and survival are interconnected. What each plant and animal provides and needs creates a web of interdependence. As an example, plants need insects for pollination and insects need plants for food. Birds need insects and the berries and seeds from plants as food.


 


Tallamy, Professor of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware, notes that historically home gardens focused on creating beautiful surroundings, expressing artistic talents with design, and making areas for fun and relaxation. Recent trends show a new focus on design to provide refuge for wildlife and support animals including birds, pollinators and other insects as well as native plants.

 

The Herb Society of America's Green Bridges Program promotes the idea that individuals can contribute to building a national chain of yards, gardens and communities that support biodiversity, especially for native plants and pollinators. There are four key things that home gardeners can do to support biodiversity: add native plants, support pollinators, reduce lawn area and create an environment that supports the needs of wildlife.

 

One of the most important things to do is to add native plants, those that grow naturally in our area. Native plants are the most hardy and likely to thrive with less disease or insect problems. Some native plants also filter air and water as well as help maintain soil health. Many ornamental plants, though beautiful, are from Asia and Europe and are avoided by native insects.

 

Tallamy describes the importance of native plants by explaining that “[a]ll animals get their energy directly from plants, or by eating something that has already eaten a plant. The group of animals most responsible for passing energy from plants to the animals that can’t eat plants is insects. This is what makes insects such vital components of healthy ecosystems. ” 


Insects, as reported by the Natural Resources Conservation Service, make up 99.5% of pollinators. “Pollinators are the very foundation of biodiversity. Almost 90% of flowering plants require animal assisted pollination,” said Laurie Collins, Master Gardener. “In addition to one third of our food, they pollinate other species of plants that provide food and shelter to wildlife.”


Collins also noted that pollinators – bees, other insects, butterflies, birds, bats, and mice – need the plants for shelter and food. Adding host and nectar plants that support pollinators is only half the solution. Correct use of herbicides and insecticides is just as important.

 

A typical suburban lawn does not support biodiversity. Cornell University reports that compared to native vegetation, non-native heavily treated turfgrass is a biodiversity wasteland. While some sources suggest replacing lawns with native grass, Dr. Peter Landschoot, Director of Graduate Studies in Agronomy at Penn State, notes in our area native grasses are warm-season species. “They stay dormant for most of the year and become overrun by weeds.” He says that property owners need to be comfortable with having grass at heights of 6-18 inches, not always welcome in residential neighborhoods.

 

Instead convert lawn areas by adding native trees and understory plants to the landscape. This can be along the perimeter or in small areas throughout the property. Tallamy notes that studies show that modest increases in the native plant cover in suburban yards significantly increases the number and species of breeding birds. Additionally, by using lawn space for native plants home owners can reduce the costs of lawn maintenance such as heavy watering, mowing, pesticide and fertilizer applications.


Native trees such as white oaks (Quercus alba), black willows (Salix nigra), red maples (Acer rubrum), green ashes (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), and river birches (Betula nigra), under-planted with woody perennials like serviceberry (Amelanchier canadensis), arrowwood (Viburnum dentatum), and blueberries (Vaccinium spp.) are excellent choices for Pennsylvania properties.



Landscape design can help reverse the human-caused habitat loss by providing some or all of the four needs of wildlife: food, water, shelter and nesting areas. The National Wildlife Federation (NWF) website has practical suggestions for meeting those needs. Once gardeners have met these needs they can apply to the NWF for a Garden for Wildlife certification.


Providing food can be as simple as seed and suet feeders but including native plants with seeds and berries is important as well. Bird baths are typical for home gardens but rain gardens or ponds can provide water sources that serve frogs and other wildlife. Providing water year-round is important and for bird baths can be accomplished with a heat source or by swapping out containers during the day.

 

A rock wall, evergreen tree, wooded area or water garden offers cover from predators. From plain to decorative, birdhouses are some of the best nesting areas when placed correctly. Other nesting sites include mature and evergreen trees, dead trees and even caterpillar host plants such as milkweed. It is also important to make the garden safe for wildlife by protecting the air, water and soil by eliminating or reducing herbicide and pesticide use and adding compost to the soil.

 

The shifting relationship between humans and the environment has changed the balance of nature. Home gardens are an important building block, along with community gardens, parks and other natural spaces, to replacing lost habitat. Gardeners can help restore some of nature’s balance by designing their landscape with the needs of wildlife in mind.

 

~ Carol Kagan, Penn State Master Gardener

I Write: The Seam Ripper's Lesson

 At our monthly Writing is Fun meetings we decide a prompt for writing for the next meeting. Length is set at 2 pages so we can read them at...