Saturday, March 29, 2008
Birdsong
Driving the Long Island Expressway today, we saw hundreds of robins along the roadside -- migrating groups, no doubt, having ridden in on the southerkly winds that ended last night with the arrival of a new cold front. Temperatures have been running well below normal and continue there now with highs in the 40s instead of close to 60 where they should be this time of year.
That hasn't stopped the crocuses and bluebells however. Daffodils are starting in and red buds adorn many trees.
The evening egret roost expanded from four to six for a brief momemt Friday morning. Two additional birds showed up around 0630 and were gone by 0640. That night, we had five staying over.
On Thursday, one of the downies was investigating a pile of wood left over from felling a tree last year. Today I found out why when Ron, the firewood man, came around with his wood splitter. He showed me oak borers under the bark of several logs -- quite tempting-looking white grubs.
Several birds scoured the area after he removed the wood and stacked the pieces elsewhere.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Spring ahead
St Paddy’s Day opens at 30 degrees with a bright blue sky and the first crocuses showing themselves -- just ahead of daffodils that look ready to pop. Buds are everywhere and the lawn is barely beginning to green, just in time for the day’s celebration.
A male white-breasted nuthatch graced the
I caught just a flash (the white tail patch) of a flicker on the east side of the pond. Robins abound – nearly three dozen were in the trees when Eileen and I returned from a walk on Sunday and a dozen or more are scattered around today. I’ll skip the list of regulars but note that a blue jay seems to be frequenting the area now and the first red-wing blackbirds arrived this weekend. At mid-afternoon, a black-backed gull dragged the corpse of an eight-inch bass onto the dock and proceeded to make lunch of it.
At
At sunset last night, an egret appeared in the tree midway down the east bank of our pond, the surest sign of the return of warmer weather. Apparently the scout for our usual summer visitors, he was decked out in breeding feathers, although bedraggled by a pouring rain. There this morning before dawn and joined by a black-crowned night heron sitting on an opposite snag, he was gone by sunrise. His arrival is three days ahead of last year (four really, since we got an extra day in February this year). And last year, the first egret was in 10 days ahead of the 2006 calendar date. Global warming?
Fairly cool weather and high winds blew in as the front moved through this morning and it was nippy by
Last night the egret contingent jumped to four, a good sign that we are likely to get to our usual complement of a dozen or more overnight guests. Grackles are up to half a dozen hanging around the pond now, along with at least four red-winged blackbirds.
