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Oct 30, 2019

Last BarrytheBirder blog for a while...

This is the last BarrytheBirder blog for a couple of months due to a health issue in the family that will keep me concentrating my attention elsewhere for a few months.   This entry is a slight departure in that it is not a photograph, but is rather a drawing of a Sawhet Owl I sketched 24 years ago in my early birding years.   I quickly learned back then that photographing birds was faster than drawing them.
See you later...
BarrytheBirder

Oct 29, 2019

Early snow means serious 'carb'-loading at the feeders...

Photo by BarrytheBirder

Dark-eyed Junco, American Tree Sparrow
and Mourning Dove share the bounty

Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 28, 2019

Fox Sparrows on southern migration...

 Photos by BarrytheBirder

Three of my favourite Fox Sparrow photos



Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 27, 2019

Irruptive and irregular ... but always welcome in winter

   Photos by BarrytheBirder
Below: female (top)
male (at bottom)

Pine Siskin
Carduelis pinus
In yesterday's blog I stated that Pine Siskins were one of the birds that always outnumbered House Finches at our winter feeders, but  because the siskins are known as an irruptive and irregular species, in migration they do not show up every year.   Nevertheless, when they do show up, it's usually in goodly numbers.   This suits me just fine, because they are such pretty little creatures.   They are about the same size as  the goldfinches and act in similar ways.

Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder 



Oct 26, 2019

The House Finch ... at our house

Photos by BarrytheBirder
HOUSE FINCH
Carpodacus mexicanus


Male


Male and female

My Peterson Field Guide says that the House Finch was transplanted from the historic western U.S. and Canada to the northeast U.S. about 1940.   Since then it has apparently become the dominant species at many eastern feeders; but not in my neck of the woods in Southern Ontario, at least in winter.   In my backyard and those of my nearby neighbours, Goldfinches, Juncos, Common Redpolls and Siskins always outnumber the House Finches when the snow flies.
Please comment if you wish.  
BarrytheBirder

Oct 25, 2019

Early snowfall challenges Canada Geese...

Photo by BarrytheBirder
Please comment if you wish.

Oct 24, 2019

Small, solitary and secretive...


                                                                                                  Photo by BarrytheBirder
GREEN HERON
Butorides virescens
The Green Heron is a bird that I do not see very often and now, in mid-December, they're heading south for the winter to Mexico, the Caribbean and northern South America.   While the Green Heron avoids detection by spending so much time standing very still, when disturbed it will let out a squawking 'KEOW', which is when I typically, but not that frequently, see them.
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 23, 2019

First Juncos of the fall seem to be a little late this year...

    Photo by BarrytheBirder

Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 22, 2019

Orioles one of many breeds in peril...


According to scientists, the number of birds in North America, since the 1970s, has declined by 3 billion, almost 30% of the continent's entire population.

Male Cardinal photo by BarrytheBirder

The Cornell Lab of Ornithology says that in the case of  Baltimore Orioles, as an example, populations have been declining throughout their range with Canada experiencing over a 3% loss per year (resulting in a cumulative loss of 24 percent) between 1966 and 2010; this according to the North American Breeding Bird Survey.
   
Partners in Flight estimates the global breeding population at 12 million, with 82 percent spending part of the year in the U.S., 18 percent breeding in Canada, and 24 percent wintering in or migrating through Mexico.

Because they breed in North America and winter in Central and South America, Baltimore Orioles are vulnerable to deforestation and habitat loss in many countries; their conservation requires international cooperation.   

Spraying insecticides onto trees not only kills off orioles's insect food, but may poison the birds directly.  Orioles and many other songbirds migrate at night, when they can become disoriented by lights or rainstorms and crash into tall structures such as skyscrapers and communications towers.
          
Female Cardinal photo by BarrytheBirder
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 21, 2019

October birdbath...

Photo by BarrytheBirder
...barely room for birds
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 20, 2019

A bevy of bird bums at nearby Lake Wilcox...

Photos by BarrytheBirder


Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder


Oct 19, 2019

According to The Cornell Lab of Ornithology...

Photo by BarrytheBirder

If I was a Mourning Dove...

I would eat roughly 12 to 20 % of my body weight per day, or 71 calories on average.  As a human being weighing approximately 170 lbs., and using the same food/weight ratio as a Mourning Dove, I would consume between 20 to 34 lbs. of food per day.   99% of the Mourning Dove diet is seeds.   Even If I was eating chocolate fudge ice cream, I doubt I could probably swallow more than 5 lbs.

Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder 

Oct 18, 2019

Mid-October duck pond at Temperanceville...


                                                                                                  Photo by BarrytheBirder
Golden Thanksgiving weekend
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 17, 2019

Fall at Eaton Hall ~ Seneca College

 Photos by BarrytheBirder

Canada Goose and Mallard Ducks
on Lake Jonda


Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 16, 2019

At Bond Lake in Oak Ridges...


                                                                                             Photo by BarrytheBirder
Mallard pair purposefully pose for me
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 15, 2019

Thanksgiving Day at the Pine Farms Orchard...


                                                                                                     Photo by BarrytheBirder

The one day of the year when it's better 
to be a duck than a turkey.

Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 14, 2019

Red-winged (first summer) Blackbirds ~ Agelaius phoeniceus

Photos by BarrytheBirder
These are the first photos I have ever taken of a young male Red-winged Blackbird.   In fact, it's the first one I've ever seen.   There were three of them at the backyard feeders for the first time ever, that I know of.   I've had both male and female adult 'Red-wingeds' many times before, but this sighting was a bit of a thrill.   Most noticeable, of course, is the feathers of the head, back, and secondary coverts edged with brown to buff.



The photo below shows one of the young blackbirds standing next to a European Starling, beneath the feeders.   The starlings tried to chase-off the blackbirds, but they stood their ground and continued to get their share of seeds.


Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 13, 2019

Juncos should arrive in our backyard this week...

Photo by BarrytheBirder
I took the photo above in our King City backyard five years ago, on Monday, October 13, 2014.   The Dark-eyed Juncos usually show up each fall around the same time each year.   To me, their arrival is what I like to call the ''unofficial first day" of fall.   So, any day now...
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder   

Oct 12, 2019

Manteling by Sharp-shinned hawk

 Photos by BarrytheBirder
Pictured here is a Sharp-shinned Hawk, in my backyard, after it caught a Mourning Dove which was on the ground beneath one of the bird feeders.  In the top photo, the hawk is seen holding its prey down and mantling, or spreading its tail and wing feathers to hide the prey from any other bird of prey that might try to steal the dove from the 'Sharpie'.   None did, so the 'Sharpie' had a complete meal (below).


Please comment if you if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 11, 2019

Bald Eagle photos by Dave Kemp in British Columbia...



A neighbour of mine, here in King City, Ontario, was lamenting to me recently that he had missed getting close-up photos of two Bald Eagles, while driving along the north shore of Lake Ontario.   I was able to sympathize because I have seen Bald Eagles, but have never got a photo of one.   It reminded me of four photos in my bird files that were taken by a birding acquaintance and e-mail friend of mine from British Columbia.   His name is Dave Kemp and he is a very accomplished photographer.   The eagle photos shown here are his and I never get tired of scanning them.   I hope you, dear reader, are similarly impressed.





Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 10, 2019

Peregrine Falcon almost became the Duck Hawk...

John James Audubon
A longtime acquaintance of mine made a gift to me, several years ago, of a bird book he acquired at an auction sale.   It was entitled 'Bird Homes' by A.R. Dugmore and was published 119 years ago in 1900.   Dugmore was a renowned birder, known world-wide, and his books were widely published.   In Bird Homes, He lists the Duck Hawk, and sub-titles it the Peregrine Falcon.   He goes on to say: "Few people associate the name Duck Hawk with the Peregrine Falcon of history, yet this is the bird that was used when falconry was the fashionable pastime; at the time almost any price was paid for a well-trained tercel, as the male bird was called; now that falconry has almost died out, the name of peregrine will probably go, and the more common name of duck hawk will be the only name by which this bird will be known".
Well, 119 years later, the name Peregrine Falcon name has not disappeared and the name Duck Hawk is merely a historical footnote.   Three of my newer field guides, Sibley, Stokes and National Geographic, make no mention of the name Duck Hawk.   Moreover, Dugmore lists a raptor known as the Pigeon Hawk, and does not use the name Merlin at all.

Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder   

Oct 9, 2019

Big birds passing through...

Photos by Barry Wallace
Trumpeter Swans
(Cygnus buccinator)

I spotted two adult Trumpeter Swans (pictured above) in a small pond on Dufferin Street, opposite Seneca College, a few days ago.  Trumpeters have become noticed more and more in York Region as the species continues to respond to their re-introduction to eastern Canada in recent years through captive breeding efforts.   Magnificent is the word to describe this bird, which at 60" in length is one of the largest birds in Canada.   If one is lucky enough to be quite near these huge creatures when they take off and call at the same time, the moment is never to be forgotten.

Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder 

Oct 8, 2019

We must share this planet because we are so alike...


                                                                                                     Photo by BarrytheBirder
A great little bird book
There are folks who think the only living creatures who must survive world calamities are humans.   Then there are those who believe all creatures on earth will survive together as we are vitally connected.   This little book is already being enjoyed by animal lovers, tree huggers, and planet protectors.  Hopefully people of all persuasions will come across it and embrace it.  It moved me forward in my thinking about our one world being saved for all living species.   It is a quick but moving read; with all the more impact because of its lucidity.
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder   

Oct 7, 2019

Young woodpecker learning the ropes...

                                                                                         Photos by BarrytheBirder


A young male Downy Woodpecker has to be forgiven for thinking perhaps this oriole nectar feeder can provide him with some nourishment.   Sadly, he was mistaken, but he moved on to find rewards elsewhere in the backyard.
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 6, 2019

The upside-down world of nuthatches...


Photos
by 
Barry
the
Birder












 Red-breasted Nuthatch      ~      White-breasted Nuthatch


I dare say when it comes to nuthatches at our backyard feeders, they spend more time looking and facin g downward than they do looking upwards.   It has to do, of course, with footholds and the feeding port openings.  Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers sometimes try to imitate the nuthatches, but look like awkward amateurs by comparison.   We also see the nuthatches occasionally foraging for insects in or under tree bark, along branches or trunks.   The behaviour has earned them the nickname "Upside-down Bird", in many places by many birdwatchers.

Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 5, 2019

Cardinals mate for life and may have three or four broods per mating season

 Photos by BarrytheBirder
NORTHERN CARDINAL
(Cardinalis cardinalis)

The Northern Cardinal is a bird we have in our backyard 12 months of the year ... usually one pair.   The one pair is always very territorial when it come to other cardinal interlopers.  But this year we have two pairs of adults cardinals and they have been prolific.   Both pairs appear to have raised two broods this year and one of the pairs seems to be feeding a third brood (photo below).   I have only just learned that male cardinals will take over the feeding of young fledglings while a female cardinal sits on a nest where she may have as many as four broods in a mating season.  Cardinals mate for life and I'm thinking that our backyard, in the village of King City, Ontario, may now have a lot more of these beautiful red birds around than ever before.   What a delightful possibility.   Cardinals are found in south-eastern Canada, the eastern USA and down into Mexico, Guatemala and Belize.   They are not native to Hawaii but were introduced there many decades ago, as were many other especially attractive birds.


Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 4, 2019

Grackles think they own our garden and its birdbaths...

Photo by BarrytheBirder
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 3, 2019

Last hummingbird left my backyard on September 20

Photo by BarrytheBirder
Expert birder and author, Ken Kaufman, in his 1996 Lives of North American Birds, addresses Ruby-throated Hummingbirds and states that 'Almost all leave north America in the fall, wintering from Mexico to Costa Rica or Panama.   Some may cross Gulf of Mexico but apparently most go around Gulf, concentrating along Texas coast.
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 2, 2019

The Kingbird

Photo by BarrytheBirder

KINGBIRD
(Tyrannus tyrannus)

The Kingbird, whose scientific name is the latin 'Tyrannus tyrannus', meaning tyrant, is listed on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species as being of 'Least Concern' but adds its population trend is 'Decreasing' (insecticides, perhaps?)   It eats large insects during migration and on the breeding grounds, but in winter in South America it eats mainly fruit.   I have a certain affinity for Kingbirds, I suppose, because I live in the village of King City, in the municipality of King Township, in Ontario, Canada, and Kingbirds are nearby and common here in the summer.   I am particularly fond of them because they are so nattily-attired and are fearless at defending their territory against much bigger birds such as hawks or crows.
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder

Oct 1, 2019

Young Hairy Woodpecker gets the hang of it...


                                                                                                     Photo by BarrytheBirder

It's taken this young Hairy Woodpecker a couple of weeks to get the hang of this feeder (pictured above).  Actually, the feeder is meant for birds smaller than this 9 1/2" woodpecker, but big birds can get the seeds if they hang low enough on the screen, bend sideways and push their beaks into the reduced opening.   As they say, where there's a will, there's a way.
Please comment if you wish.
BarrytheBirder