A Little Yard Interest

I find after logging into my site this morning that things appear rather radically different. My site (BlueHost) uses WordPress software for development purposes. The framework with which I was familiar has been replaced with updated software which is not familiar to me. If you’re reading this it means that I have successfully made the transition!

After grousing about the lack of species diversity in our yard in my post of 7/22/2019, that afternoon I had a very brief visit from a warbler. Unfortunately it made only the briefest of appearances. I’m fairly sure that it was a male Wilson’s warbler, but I wasn’t able to detect a black cap on the bird’s head. Yellow warblers, the only other realistic possibility, are too rare to seriously consider. (There is no photo!)

On 7/23/2019 I had just finished removing string algae from the watercourse, refreshing bird baths and filling feeders when a pair of Cedar waxwings, our first in about a year, flew into the madrone trees on the outskirts of the yard. I quickly went inside for my camera but when I returned they had left, so sadly, again no photos!

Digressing a bit from the yard, on 7/22/2019, in my walk in Washington Park, I found a Barred owl and obtained photos with my iPhone. The owl was less than 15′ away and was being harassed by a Douglas squirrel which ventured to within about two feet of the owl. (Sorry about the quality of the image but it was taken with my iPhone!)

When I returned home that morning I had an email from a neighbor who had seen and photographed what she identified as a Saw-Whet owl on our property! I immediately went out to try to find it but was unsuccessful in doing so.

So that’s the yard news, but the reason I’m creating this post is that I had a good photography day in the yard yesterday despite the lack of interesting visitors. So here are some of the better photos I took…

Sub-adult male? Rufous Hummingbird
Chestnut-backed Chickadee
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Juvenile American Robin
Adult American Robin feeding on Oregon grape berries
Juvenile female House Sparrow
Male House Finch
Male House Finch
Male House Finch
Male House Finch feeding a juvenile

I might mention that we had at least four male House finches in the yard at one time.

And now for a special friend who sometimes visits while I am monitoring the yard for bird activity…

Townsend’s Chipmunk
Townsend’s Chipmunk

It appears that I have successfully navigated the updated software. There are some improvements…. I just have to get used to them. It appears there is an improved way of selecting photos to post. This is my first attempt, and apparent success, at posting an image from my iPhone to my web site.

Just to Keep Things Moving…

It’s been slow photographing any really interesting birds in the yard this summer.  We’ve had some really dry weather and our water features, especially the watercourse with flowing water, should be attractants.  I’ve spent a great deal of time in the yard but I haven’t seen a warbler in the yard in about three weeks, only brief sightings of a couple of tanagers when they first arrived and no crossbills!  I’m worried about what might be happening to our rarer, and more interesting birds this year.  On the other hand, we have perhaps had a record number of common birds bringing young to the yard.

On Sunday, July 21, I made a very brief and short (across the alley) foray out of the yard for a little photography.  While I was setting up a Pine siskin came slowly hopping along the ground with long pauses between movements…. very atypical siskin behavior.   I watched the bird for the better part of an hour as it slowly worked its way up into some bushes where it should have been safe for the night.  It didn’t appear injured and it was eating a few seeds as it went but I was puzzled by its behavior.

While I was waiting for the possibility of a robin or flicker visiting an Oregon grape bush I was observing, a covey of California quail happened by.  The rest of the photos here are members of the covey.  This is the adult male and chief lookout for the group.

The adult female…

And one of about six chicks in this covey…

While I was photographing members of this covey I saw yet another covey enter our yard. It’s been a good year for quail reproduction!

Back to the Yard

In my recent three posts, I have tried to present some of the birds, and a very few of the photos, I took while in Central Texas in early May, 2019.  During the time i was processing those photos, and organizing posts, I continued taking photos in my own yard.  It was not unusual for me to take over 200 photos in a single day.  I should be more selective!

I’ve been VERY disappointed in the number of some of the usual spring visitors (warblers, tanagers, waxwings, crossbills) we’ve had this year.   But I’ve had two unusual visitors to the yard recently.

The first was a small flycatcher of the genus empidonax.  It appeared in a Japanese maple located almost immediately next to me (on 6/23/2019), where I recognized it as a flycatcher.  It flew around the yard for about ten minutes, its chief activity seeming to be chasing American goldfinches and chickadees, not around the yard, but OUT of the yard!  I managed to get several photos but unfortunately, the flycatchers of this genus can be reliably identified only by their vocalizations.  It wouldn’t heve mattered if it had vocalized… I wouldn’t have been unable to have identified it anyway.

My second unusual visitor (on 7/6/2019) was a Hutton’s vireo, a bird that is known for closely resembling a Ruby-crowned kinglet.  The kinglets are mainly winter visitors so I was aware of the possibility of the bird being a vireo, but it wasn’t until I processed the photos that I could confirm the vireo identification.  I managed to take quite a few photos, but I only got one fairly good one that I could use for identification.

On July 9, 2019, I looked out of the house to see two juvenile Brown-headed cowbirds around the watercourse.  They seemed to bee wanting to identify with a male American robin in the watercourse, but the robin seemed unwilling to be associated with the cowbirds.

Back on a another more positive note, we have at least one family of Black-headed grosbeaks visiting the yard.  This first photo is of a male.  The lack of color on the second bird probably indicates that it is a juvenile.

This final photo is of a fawn, one of several in the neighborhood that, if not already so engaged, will grow to menace the plants in our yard.  

 

Central Texas – 2

Continuing with photos of birds I photographed in Texas, here are two photos of one or more Black and White warblers.  These warblers are fairly common spring visitors and this year I believe all I saw were males.

This is a male Yellow warbler

A beautiful male Chestnut-sided warbler

A bird we always look forward to seeing is the Indigo bunting, a ‘cousin’ to the Painted bunting I featured in my first Texas post. (In my original post I mistakenly identified this as a Lazuli bunting.)  

An Ash-throated flycatcher has occupied a nest box on the property for all of the springs I have visited…except for this year!

This is probably a female Back-chinned hummingbird, but since there was also a male Ruby-throated hummingbird in the area I can’t be sure because the females of the two species are so similar.  The Black-chinned hummingbird is by far the most numerous visitor to the Central Texas area.

I counted as many as four male Brown-headed cowbirds around the property at one time.  The cowbirds are partially responsible for endangering two Central Texas  threatened species of birds, the Golden-cheeked warbler and the Black-capped vireo.  Cowbirds don’t build their own nests but lay eggs in the nests of other species.  The young cowbirds grow quickly and are aggressive, pushing the other nesting birds out of nests so that they don’t survive.

My final photo is of a male adult Ladder-backed woodpecker feeding a juvenile male.

Happy Fourth of July!

As I log onto my website I see that I have posted 365 prior posts… the equivalent of posting every day for a year!

And now for a little celebration of the Fourth of July…

(RED)  Another view of my old friend, profiled in my previous post, a Summer tanager

(WHITE):  A White-winged dove

(and BLUE)  A Blue-headed vireo

This Blue-headed vireo deserves a little comment.  I believe this is the first of this species that I have photographed and possibly even seen.

Happy Fourth!