Saturday, December 1, 2018

My Find

Yard sale today:
3.5 lb. bag of Bark Butter Bites
5 lb. container of black oil seed/safflower seed
10 suet cakes
Suet tower
2 woodpecker towers
3.5 lb. bag nyger/shelled black oil sunflower seed

We calculated the cost - would have been $110 at the Wild Birds Unlimited store.  I got it all for $20.  And they threw in the generic birdseed (at lower left) just so they could get rid of it.  Very happy about this bargain!

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Birds At Feeding Station and Yard, Fall/Winter/Spring 2018-19

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, front yard, 12/23/18
Purple Finch Female 10/27/18
  1. Blue Jay
  2. Bluebird
  3. Brown Thrasher
  4. Northern Mockingbird
  5. Carolina Chickadee
  6. Tufted Titmouse
  7. White-breasted Nuthatch
  8. Brown-headed Nuthatch
  9. Red-breasted Nuthatch
  10. House Finch
  11. Purple Finch
  12. American Goldfinch
  13. Northern Cardinal
  14. Mourning Dove
  15. Northern Junco
  16. Pine Warbler
  17. Orange-Crowned Warbler
  18. Yellow-Rumped Warbler
  19. Downy Woodpecker
  20. Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker
  21. Song Sparrow
  22. Chipping Sparrow
  23. White-Throated Sparrow
  24. Carolina Wren
  25. Ruby-Crowned Kinglet
  26. Sharp-Shinned Hawk
  27. Cooper's Hawk
  28. Eastern Phoebe
  29. Rufous-sided towhee
  30. Rose-breasted grosbeak

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

And So It Begins - Fall 2018

October 9, 2018.

Mike puts up the feeders at about 5:40 pm.

By 6:00 the chickadees had found them.

And so it begins!!

Friday, July 20, 2018

Friday's Fave Five, 7-20-18

 Beach Version 2018
LINK to Friday's Fave Five Host Blog

1. We spent July 7-14 in a house at Pawley's Island, SC.  The opportunity came up rather quickly.  We just wanted to go somewhere, anywhere, to breathe different air for a few days.  I was scanning the internet when a sale popped up for this property.  A cancellation had occurred and the owner was offering a 20% discount to re-rent it.  We snapped it up and had a great week in a creek/marsh-front house, only a few houses from the north point of the island - easy to either boat or walk to the point, from which we could see marsh on the left and ocean to the right.  
View from the walkway down to the boat dock.




2. Both our children and their spouses, as well as Mike's sister and husband, spent the first couple of days with us.  Brother-in-law then left his boat with us for the week - a great treat that led to some good fishing opportunities.  Our daughter-in-law proved to be the best fisherman in the group - she caught enough for us to have flounder for supper one evening.  We really enjoyed using the boat.
Daughter-in-law and daughter - both love to fish.
Mike the fisherman.  He enjoyed catching this flounder even if it had to be thrown back.
One of the many views from the boat.

3. Wonderful opportunities to observe birds - the best in years.  We constantly saw shorebirds from our house - several kinds of herons and egrets, other shorebirds, songbirds, and more.  We also took several trips to Huntington Beach State Park, about six miles from our rental, which is known for premier birding on the U.S. east coast.  
Laughing Gull on a sandbar

Immature little blue heron looking for lunch in the waters at Huntington Beach State  Park.

I call this one "Praise Jesus!!" :-)  It's an anhinga - they spread their wings out to dry.
Roseate spoonbills,  They are young birds, not as pink as adults.
But they were a lifer for me - first sighting ever!
Black-Crowned night heron.  Another lifer.
Painted bunting singing its heart out from the top of the tree.  I believe this is an immature
because of the yellow wash on its breast.
I call this picture "Church Potluck."  :-)
This little "marsh hen" (clapper rail) was seen often from our back deck.  That's unusual --these birds are normally very secretive and hard to observe.  But it would sneak out from the marsh, looking for food, or running to the marsh on the other side.  I got several pictures of this quiet little bird. . .
. . . as well as a couple of pictures of the little chicks that were with it.  They were hard to catch with a camera because they quickly ran from one marsh to another.
Purple Martins lined up on their house.  Most of the time they were flying, catching mosquitoes.

 4. After family left, we had a few days to ourselves, and then dear friends came for a couple of nights.  So it was a great vacation, save for one thing. . .

5. A diagnosis.  On Sunday of the vacation, I "face-planted" onto the dock while getting out of the boat.  It was a really hard fall, and rather awkward with the whole family looking on in horror thinking Mom has killed herself.  I had pain in the chest area for the rest of the week, but for the most part it was mild and only affected me with certain movements and bending over.  It seemed to be healing over the course of four or five days, and by the time we got home I didn't even feel it, and forgot about it, until about three days ago.  This Tuesday the pain came back with a vengeance, incapacitating and much worse than during the vacation.  Went to the dr. yesterday - I have a broken fifth rib, not displaced, which means it's not nearly as serious as it could be.  Dr. said I probably bruised it last week, and then some normal movement caused it to crack this week.  So I am learning how to deal with the pain of a broken rib.  BUT - it still goes on FFF because I am relieved to know what is wrong and that it can be managed with rest, ice, and some pain medication.

Thank you for putting up with all my bird pictures!!

Tuesday, July 10, 2018

Huntington State Park & Other Beach Locations 2018

Fabulous opportunities.  This is just a fraction of what I've seen.

Great Blue Heron, sandbar between North Pawleys and Litchfield

Laughing Gull with dinner

Painted Bunting singing from the top of a tree - must be an immature because of the changing color.

Painted Bunting at feeder

Immature Little Blue Heron - mottled due to changing colors

Anhinga saying "Praise Jesus!"  (actually drying his wings as they do sometimes)

Clapper Rail - the standard "marsh hen" of the coast - very secretive.  We've watched her several times run across the yard from one marsh to the other, sometimes with babies in tow.

Immature Summer Tanager

Two Prothonotary Warblers.  I tried so hard to get a good close-up picture of one, but it was not to be.

The picture of the day.  Seven Roseate Spoonbills with a snowy egret in the middle.  Lifers for us.

Saturday, June 30, 2018

Dickcissel

Photos I got tonight of a dickcissel at Dobbins Farm Ponds.


Local Osprey Nest

This osprey nest is right on the main highway along the way to school!


Thursday, June 14, 2018

Recent Birding

I've finally been able to get back on here after a break of several months.  Still doing it in a round about way, but it works.

This is the brown booby that was seen for about a month at Furman University.  According to the range maps, it should not be anywhere north of Miami, Florida.  Viewed early May, 2018

Dickcissel, Dobbins Farm Ponds, 6/12/18

Indigo Bunting, Dobbins Farm Ponds, 6/7/18

Prairie Warbler, Dobbins Farm Ponds, 6/12/18

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

New Bird at Feeder / New Lifer

Orange-crowned warbler.  Very non-distinct, no wing bars, orange crown very rarely seen.  It matches online pics and pics in Peterson field guide.

Feeders Going Crazy this Morning 1/17/18

We got a somewhat unexpected snow last night - Woke up to a dusting this morning, which continued until about 9:30.  I'd say we have about an inch out there.  No school, as the roads are not expected to warm up.  

The feeders have been like an airport.  We sat and enjoyed the traffic for about half an hour, and I got a few pictures.  I've enjoyed seeing the feeders finally get some decent action.  For some reason it's been slow this year.

Goldfinch - thistle feeder

Love this shot of a downy at the suet (which is snow-covered)

Downy is blurry in this one, and I think that's a pine warbler underneath, but this shot is included because of the red showing on the head of the ruby-crowned kinglet!

Another goldfinch, this time on the sunflower seeds.

I've never seen a robin in the trees near the feeders.  I'm not too crazy about robins to begin with, but seeing this one perched in the trees above the feeders, I had to get a pic of it.

I'm also not too crazy about red-winged blackbirds at the feeders, but I guess they've got to eat also.

Yellow-Rumped Warbler.  Also fondly known in the bird world as a "butter butt."
The obligatory snow photo of a cardinal

White-throated sparrow.  I didn't catch the head but wanted to document.  They are not common.  Two types exist - this one has brown and beige head stripes.  Another has black and white stripes.  I actually saw one of the other type very briefly this morning.

Pine warbler at the suet.

The behavior of the birds is fascinating to watch.  Some are alpha birds and the others know not to come around.  I watched the kinglet trying to get suet from the bottom without bothering the downy woodpecker which was gorging.

Most fascinating - All the birds left in one fell swoop.  Two or three seconds later, a Cooper's Hawk came swooping down.  Three cardinals in one tree were stock still for about ten minutes after the hawk left.  Amazing to watch.