• Birds

    Killdeer Nest

    killdeer nest mrs killdeer

    Mrs. Killdeer tried hard to lure us away from her nest with her broken wing routine. My husband is the one who spied these eggs, camouflaged though they are among the other stones.

    I’ve seen a red fox twice at the other end of the airport from this nest. I hope he doesn’t find it. It’s always with mixed feelings that I become aware of a bird’s nest. There are so many strikes against them — predators and tromping people especially. I’ll check back in a week or so to see if these eggs are still there.

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  • Plants

    Trout Lily

    Yesterday as we explored alongside the river, we came upon lots of these lovely yellow flowers sprouting up. I came home and looked them up in our wildflower book.

    trout lily1 trout lily2

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  • Birds,  Plants

    Spring flourishes

    Blue-gray gnatcatcher
    Blue-gray gnatcatcher

    My daughter was excited to spot this tiny bird making its buzzing call as it foraged among the leaves. It seemed never to be either still nor silent, but it was a treat to see.

    We also saw a number of yellow-rumped warblers, a palm warbler, and more ruby-crowned kinglets.

    Palm warbler
    Palm warbler
    Ruby-crowned kinglet
    Ruby-crowned kinglet

    A swallow watched us, his mate a few feet away on the fence.

    treeswallow

    On a walk yesterday, we looked hopefully at the pileated woodpecker nest cavity we watched last year. To our surprise, a bird was peering out — but it wasn’t a pileated woodpecker. It was a northern flicker! I’m not sure if it was resting or trying on the nest for size.

    Northern flicker
    Northern flicker

    We saw a few other beauties on our walk as well, from various instances of dead-wood art….

    green shadow…to may apples unfurling their umbrellas.

    mayapple1 mayapple2

    These are just the things I was able to get pictures of, but among the other sights that have pleased us lately are the brown thrasher we saw “gardening” in the dirt under our bird feeder this morning, the fox that ran beside us for awhile on our bird watching jaunt, and the turkey that startled up and flew away in the brush nearby (nesting?). It’s a great time of year because every few days there is something new popping out of the ground or into the treetops.

    forsythia

     

  • Plants

    Glory of the Snow

    chionodoxa chionodoxa2

    Not sure how I’ve missed these lovely little flowers interspersed among the grass in various lawns around and about, but I’ve noticed it this year. It’s called chionodoxa, poetically nicknamed Glory of the Snow.

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  • Birds

    Killdeer

    killdeersm

    Mollie, the first border collie I bought after graduation from college, used to love to chase these swooping, screeching little birds. But in all the walks I took with her, she never caught one, and I never got this close to one.

    This one’s for you, Mollie.

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  • Birds,  Walks

    Happy

    chickadee1 chickadee2

    This makes me happy: two chickadees setting up housekeeping in our chickadee house. We put it up last year and nobody used it. This year it apparently makes the grade for these two!  We’re going to call them Chuck and Dee Dee.

    Saw our first yellow-rumped warblers today:

    Mister
    Mister
    Mrs
    Mrs

    As well as this elusive chipping sparrow.

    chipping

    Also saw some fiddleheads!

    ferns

    We found a second hawk nest to monitor on our way to the marsh. I caught a flutter of wings and a flash of red in some trees beside the road, looked more closely, and saw it was a red-tailed hawk lighting on a branch beside a stick nest. It’s the second twiggy mass we’ll be keeping an eye on!

    Red-tail pair
    Red-tail pair
  • Birds

    Eagle’s Nest

    My father-in-law took the girls and me to see something really neat yesterday: an eagle’s nest!

    It was overcast and VERY windy, and we saw the male come in trying to negotiate the winds. He perched in a nearby tree. The female and one chick were in the nest the whole time. Hopefully we’ll get a chance to see them again, and maybe we’ll see them do an exchange or feeding at the nest.

    momandchick

    dad

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  • Ponds & Streams

    A few more spring sights

    daffodil

    Here are a few more photos taken on our walk yesterday.

    These guys remind me of those two old men in the balcony on "The Muppet Show."
    These guys remind me of those two old men in the balcony on “The Muppet Show.”
    A tadpole soaking up the sun. It never moved in the ten minutes I was there.
    A tadpole soaking up the sun. It never moved in the ten minutes I was there.
    Salamanders mating.
    Salamanders mating.
    Good day, Mr. Frog!
    Good day, Mr. Frog!
    Power-lounging squirrel. The squirrels are going to be bummed when I put the birdbath back on this base!
    Power-lounging squirrel. The squirrels are going to be bummed when I put the birdbath back on this base!

    Not captured on film were the three kingfishers flying and rattling vocally over the pond. I’m not sure if it was courtship behavior or territorial behavior, but they weren’t fishing, and they were pretty indifferent to the various humans around the edges of the pond. Swallows were diving and circling. At one point a Cooper’s hawk flew over, making a speedy path toward a racket of small birds beyond the pond.

    One young man was playing his guitar on the boardwalk — adding his song to the spring peepers, honking geese and rattling kingfishers. That’s not something you can do with a piano, more’s the pity. It was nice — a human sound that blended well with all the natural sounds.

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