Bird Watching Club

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  • SoCalLisa
    SoCalLisa Member Posts: 13,961
    edited February 2013
  • SoCalLisa
    SoCalLisa Member Posts: 13,961
    edited February 2013

    I think the brown bird is a california towhee..anyone know??

  • SoCalLisa
    SoCalLisa Member Posts: 13,961
    edited February 2013

    I am guessing, but I think the hummer is a female black chinned hummingbird

    she came to visit as well..today

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited February 2013

    The scientific name around here for these unidentified avians is "lbb" (little brown bird) ;-D but it does look like a California towhee.

  • coraleliz
    coraleliz Member Posts: 1,523
    edited February 2013

    a towhee it is. Not sure of the hummingbird.

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited February 2013

    Very excited to,see the Cedar Waxwings back in the upper reaches of my trees tonight. The whole flock. They don't feed on seed but once they did descend on the birdbath.



    Also saw a little goldfinch, they've been scarce this year.

  • pj12
    pj12 Member Posts: 25,402
    edited February 2013

    There was a hairy woodpecker at our bird bath today and the robins were afraid of him. Wish he would stick around! Fortunately they have just about stripped the palm trees of the purple berries so they are leaving fewer purple stains behind.



    I think the Carolina Wrens have a nest in a ceramic bird house near our back door. They have nested there on and off over the past few years. Last year I was up on tip toe with my nose about five inches from the opening peeking in to see if there were eggs or babies and the mother bird came bursting out to both of our surprise. I'd love to look in again but don't want to have another close encounter like that...it scared both of us! But I love the little Carolina wren...so cute.

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited February 2013

    Because its been warmer lately I'm going to get some sugar water ready and put my hummer feeder out this week. Usually I see the first hummer around mid March so its worth a try.

  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited February 2013

    Chickadee..do the cedar waxwings stay long in your area?  If I am watchful I will see some for a few days here in the late winter/early spring.They will finish off the berries on our hawthorn trees and then they are gone.  Was so excited the first time that I saw them!   I saw a kingfisher last Sat. when I went out for a walk on a bike trail---it follows a creek for a little while and I had seen him several times last year when I was walking more often. 

    Do any of the more experienced birders on here have any recommendations for good birding binoculars?   I am determined to see a pileated woodpecker.  A lot of people in our county see them. We don't live near a wooded area so the chance of seeing one in the backyard isn't too good, but there is a beautiful arboretum nearby and much of the bike trail goes through woods. It would make my day to see one up close.

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited February 2013

    Once the trees starting getting leaves again I don't see them. So I want to say they stay about a month or so. Funny thing they always arrive right around 5pm and disappear in about an hour. Like they have a schedule.

  • nesw
    nesw Member Posts: 81
    edited February 2013

    Jaytee - I have Nikon Monarch 8x42 and I see they are approx $250 on Amazon.  They're water proof and durable - I've had mine for about 6-7 years now and they are in excellent condition.  I was on a boat birding tour once and they had some Swarovskis ($2500 range) that the birders could try out and I swear mine were just as good except for right around the very edges of the field of view.  Swarovski is clear right out to the edges and mine are slightly distorted at the edges.  I've never even noticed because I don't look out through very edges anyway.  Excellent binoculars for the price.

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017

    The pileated woodpeckers love to eat the ripe wild grapes from the vines that cover our old fences in the Fall.

  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited February 2013

    Thank you nesw...will check them out.   Where did you go on the birding tour? 

    Chickadee...that is funny about the waxwings...maybe they are the businessmen of the bird world..they've got places to go!  Such a sleek and beautiful bird!  I have an aunt who lives on a farm in Pa....I remember seeing a couple there who were right at home around their pond.  Only see them in groups around here as they migrate to somewhere else.

    Teka..do the pileated woodpeckers ever land on suet feeders in your yard? Do you see many? 

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited February 2013

    I just checked, its raining but they are out there right on schedule. Daily staff meeting I guess.

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited September 2017

    Also, the wild grape vines grow up the native pin cherry trees next to the old fences.   The pileated woodpeckers have never come to the suet feeders.   Shy!   Usually, I see them in the early morning.

  • nesw
    nesw Member Posts: 81
    edited February 2013

    Jaytee - the DH family spends a couple weeks in Cape May, NJ, each summer and we go visit (mainly for the spectacular birding...lol...). We take a skimmer boat tour to see the wading birds out along island edges in the huge bay.  I've got some good photos of pelicans, oystercatchers, and osprey.  I'll try to post a couple.  But first - a pileated woodpecker from the trees in the neighborhood. Never comes down to the feeders though.

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited February 2013

    Finally found where I left my Waxwing pics.

    Here is one of their staff meetings!

  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited February 2013

    Great pictures!  Have had an occasional small woodpecker drum on the house...am imagining what it would sound like if that fella took a turn!!   And the waxwings!  I just think they are such handsome birds.  Thanks again for sharing your pics!

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited February 2013

    Just arrived in Galveston this afternoon. Have already spotted some ibises and spoonbills and of course the pelicans both brown and white as well as the usual shorebirds. Hope it stops raining long enough to do some serious birding.

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited February 2013

    Pj12, a Carolina wren nearly put my eye out once. Unbeknownst to me he was roosting in a wreath on my front door. When I went to open the door, out came the wren right into my face! Right after that, he flew out of the wreath and into the house where he roosted behind the refrigerator for about 3 hours before we managed to get him out of the house. Needless to say, I no longer have decorations on my front door.

  • nesw
    nesw Member Posts: 81
    edited February 2013

    A couple of shorebirds from Cape May, NJ. An oystercatcher and an osprey with a fish for breakfast.

  • nesw
    nesw Member Posts: 81
    edited February 2013

    Chickadee - I thought you might like this one.  We've got some friendly ones in the backyard.  Have to stand there for a long time at first, but once one of them comes in, he remembers and will readily come again.

    And still lots around in the snow.  Just gotta keep that food coming.

  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited February 2013

    Awww....love the picture of the chickadee eating from your hand!  There used to be an ad that ran in Birds and Blooms magazine for a kind of mannequin you could purchase to help train the birds to hand feed.  You would put a hat and a flannel shirt on it, some black oiled sunflower in its hand, and keep it outside for a number of days--then you would put the hat and shirt on and they would come right to you.....took out the having to have patience part!  But maybe the process of coaxing them to come to your hand would be more satisfying.  Anyway, chickadees are probably my favorite bird, I have told my children for years that if I was a bird, I'd be a chickadee! 

  • stride
    stride Member Posts: 470
    edited February 2013

    Sometimes I think a flock of Carolina wrens has landed in our yard, and then I realize there are only one or two. They are cute, but so loud! We had a pair repeatedly try to build a nest in a rolled up awning on our back porch. My husband would unroll it, a few sticks would fall out and the wtens would suddenly appear in a nearby tree to scold him most vociferously.

  • SoCalLisa
    SoCalLisa Member Posts: 13,961
    edited February 2013

    Saw these yesterday

  • SoCalLisa
    SoCalLisa Member Posts: 13,961
    edited February 2013
  • SoCalLisa
    SoCalLisa Member Posts: 13,961
    edited February 2013
  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited February 2013

    The ruby throats have arrived in the states. Yay!

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited February 2013

    Nesw, that is so cool! Ours are very unafraid but I've never tried to get one to land on me.

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited February 2013

    Finally got to go birding today. Saw a variety but small numbers of most things. Spotted only one or two groups of sandhill cranes, which was unusual. We saw roseate spoonbills, ibises, yellow crowned night herons (2 large groups), many ruby crowned kinglets, a shrike, a kingfisher and the usual suspects (white and brown pelicans, herons, egrets and other shorebirds). The marsh flats where we've had very good birding in the past have dried up in the past year, I'm guessing due to the drought. Very disappointing and somewhat disconcerting.

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