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Feathers and Fuzz

one woman's cure for the empty-nester blues

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Northern Cardinal

October Birdwatching: Post Black Bear

October 29, 2018 by MoJo

I certainly did not intend to be THIS silent!  There has been abundant October birdwatching and great joy Mr. Black Bear has not chosen to return.

Drake and I have our bear-defense routine well-established now.  Only in my world does the human go out BEFORE the Pit Bull to check for a bear.  My logic is:  If the bear is present, I am absolutely certain I will not try to bite him and tackle him to the ground.  Putting the bird food out each morning, and bringing it in at dusk, has worked well.  Not feeding the 4-legged creatures has reduced the squirrel population and, to date, no possums or raccoons have knocked at the door.  I'm okay with that, but Drake is decidedly disappointed that his lust for chasing goes unsatisfied.  I tell him it's better for his skull.

As for the birds:  I haven't seen anything new or unusual, but my joy is no less.  Finding a way to continue to witness God's creation, and keep Drake safe, is the harmony I sought.  The Ruby-throated Hummingbirds stayed almost a week longer than ever-before (10/12).  I loved seeing the Grosbeaks during their fall migration -- just the juveniles and females, as was true last fall.  The return of the Eastern Bluebirds and Eastern Phoebes always makes me smile; a return from wherever it is they go for a month or so after nesting ends.

The other day, I was working on a project in the garage with my daughter.  She told me there was a bird in the window.  I told her it was probably Daddy Blue letting me know his mealworm feeder was empty.  Quite honestly, I'm not sure if she amazed at my knowledge, or frightened by it.  I'm guessing the latter.

Okay, enough words.  The message is:  feed them and they will come!

  • We Start at Dawn

  • They Come in Black and White - Downey

  • Red-Bellied Woodpecker

  • Tufted Titmouse

  • Sweet Napoleon (White-breasted Nuthatch) vs the male Eastern Towhee

  • They Come in Color - Cardinal and Pine Warbler

  • The Boys (Northern Cardinal) - Hair on Fire

  • The Girls (Northern Cardinal) - Don't Care About Them Struttin' Boys

  • The Migrants -- Ruby-throated Hummingbird On Their Way Out

  • The Migrants -- Rose-breasted Grosbeaks Passing Through

  • Big and Wanna-be-Big -- Mourning Dove, Cardinal & Napoleon

  • Littles to the Left (Bluebirds, Napoleon) -- Bigs to the Right

  • The Bullies (Northern Mockingbird) and The Please-Don't-Eat-ALL-The-Worms Hopefuls (Pine Warbler)

  • I Like My Worms Well-Done (Eastern Phoebe)

  • And Finally:  Made at The Retreat (Eastern Bluebird Juveniles)

  • With Dad and Mom (Eastern Bluebird)

  • "Bear Food" Removed at Dusk

Coming Up

When the camera inside your owl house goes out, knock before entering!

Filed Under: All the Others, Bluebird, Eastern Phoebe, Feathers, Hummingbird, Northern Cardinal, Woodpeckers Tagged With: October Birdwatching

Male Northern Cardinal Feeding Junior

September 12, 2018 by MoJo

As I write this post in early August, juvenile Northern Cardinals are everywhere. They’re eating black oil, safflower, suet and mealworms — just about everything. One of the cameras caught Dad feeding Junior. As you will see in the video, Junior was deeply into being stuffed with live mealworms!

As the video goes on, you’ll see Dad leaving Junior to fend for himself. Poor Junior. He seems to notice at first that his worms taste less delicious than the ones Dad was feeding him. But — he never does realize that he is eating the dried mealworms tossed along side a cup of live ones.

One last comment. Since I just did a post on distinguishing between juvenile male and female Cardinals, one has to at least guess which this is. I’ll put my guess (and it is a guess) at the bottom of this post*.

https://www.feathersandfuzz.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Junior-Video.mp4

 

* Based on the red splotching on the face … my guess is:  Juvenile Male … but it’s just a guess.

Filed Under: Feathers, Northern Cardinal Tagged With: Adult Bird Feeding Juvenile, Feeding Junior, Juvenile Bird Wing Flapping at Feeding, Northern Cardinal Adult Feeding Juvenile, Northern Cardinal Male Feeding Juvenile

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This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it. Psalm 118:24

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