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Sunday, May 24, 2020

Crepuscular


Creatures of the not quite night and not quite day. Yesterday dawn this possum was traversing the lawn at a high trot. If Facebook has told you to love them and leave them....well, feel free. On farms where there are horses and chickens they are much less revered.




So I warned Liz about keeping the barn door closed when she is not outside and all.

Then last night heading home from a bit of evening birding we spotted something sitting neatly by the side of the road right next to some friends' barn.




I couldn't believe it was a fox and not a cat....the lady who runs the farm wasn't twenty yards away, but I guess they couldn't see each other. 

Must have been a pup. 

It was playing with a turkey leg and began to push it around with its nose as we watched.




Eventually we had to pull away and it jumped into the culvert and peered up to watch us go. I prefer dawn to dusk, being every inch a morning person, but I love both times of changeover....from dark to light and bright to night.....

There is excitement out there in the twilight hours for those who are abroad to see. 


Saturday, May 23, 2020

Blackbirds

Male Red-winged Blackbird
Female RWBL

Common Grackle

Eastern Meadowlark


Really, they are.

Female Bobolink


Male Bobolink
Male Baltimore Oriole
Male Birdfeeder
Female Baltimore Oriole, beating up the car
Rusty Blackbird

Thursday, May 21, 2020

Pig Bears and other mythical Creatures


Adventuring has taken place around home the past few days....but there were adventures nonetheless.



The dreaded pig bear was spotted sauntering through the gap in the fence around the long lawn and partaking of its favorite spring prey. Later, as the season progresses, it will change its diet from the native grasses and herbs to the green beans in the garden, thus the dreaded part of the equation.

The vest was soon shed...it was quite warm

And grandma was taken on a nature walk by the home school girl, who has also been involved in the construction of an elaborate blanket fort in the dining room...wish I had taken a photo....

Note pink purse for outward bound water bottle and pop tarts
and homeward bound rocks of good color, size, and style


Bright green beetles were seen on the walk, powder blue butterflies abounded, a Red-tailed Hawk was enjoyed, and a number of good rocks were acquired. 

A good time was had by all. I am kinda missing our peripatetic birding style though.

Female Baltimore Oriole
I wonder if she is building a blanket fort with
that milkweed fluff...



Sunday, May 17, 2020

It's Here


Spring...so long awaited, so very welcome. Trees are blooming. The lilacs are almost open, as are the flowering crab apples that line Main Street down in town.

The first hummingbird arrived at the feeder a couple of days ago. Other birders, less blind than I, are racking up warblers like mad. The boss and I are doing okay though. Picked up a couple of flycatchers today, a Scarlet Tanager, Indigo Bunting (right on the feeder) and some other delightful fliers.


Semipalmated Plover

Least Sandpiper

Best birds of the week though, were a pair of lifers, Semipalmated Plovers and Least Sandpipers, plus not one but three Upland Sandpipers.


Upland Sandpiper

Finding the latter was kind of funny....there is a horse farm up in Ames, where they breed each year. It's a good place to find them even from the road. We were pulled off on the verge and I was scanning the distant fence posts as they like to sit on top of them. Nada, although one had flown off when we drove by earlier.

As I perused the far distance the boss asked, "What color are they anyhow?"

I replied that they are kind of tan, sort of.

Wilson's Snipe


He said, "What's that right next to the car there?"

Yeah, there were three of them cavorting among the lovely Thoroughbred mares and foals sharing the paddock we were parked next to.

What would I be without his sharp eyes and lack of preconceptions about where to look?

An adult Nottabird, nomming sliced apple I put out for catbirds and robins.

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

This is War


It started with oranges. We put a few out for the Baltimore Orioles. If you build it they will come and they did, several in fact.

Two hung around. A regular adult male and this individual. I hesitate to say he or she, as it is mostly female-colored and it hangs with the male mentioned above. However, it acts like a fella, singing, flaunting itself, and attacking everything in sight.




It started with the passenger window on the car, all day, hour after hour, staring at its reflection and then fluttering up and down the window, all fight and no flight.

I tried spraying foam on the window so the reflection would be hidden.

No dice.

So I cleaned that off and the next time we came home the boss parked the car in a different spot. Simple eh?

Or not. Just a short time ago we heard a noise in the kitchen. We thought it was Peggy, but there was no answer from that quarter when we spoke...still asleep.

Mebbe a giant rat?

Ugh.

The boss went to check.

It was (and is even as we speak) the oriole. Sitting on the windowsill over the kitchen sink, pecking the window, and flaring and flashing.

Mack went so crazy I had to put him up in the kennel run to shut him up.You'd think the Spartans were at the door. All of them.

At least he is a pretty bird. Guess we will have to get used to his territorial defense strategy for now at least.

BTW the birds seem to have been rendered a little desperate by this prolonged cold weather. The feeders are thronged. I put some dried fruit out for the orioles and catbirds, and to my surprise robins started coming to partake. Within a couple of days they are literally waiting for me on the doorstep in the morning! Hard times for insect and worm eaters. 


****Has anyone else noticed that Baltimore Orioles seem to be singing, "Swing me the cradle, swing it"? Seems kinda fitting.

Bonus bird, Tree Swallow, lookit them shoulders! Must work out. Or else
bugs'll really bulk you up.

Sunday, May 10, 2020

To My Mom


I'm thankful to the Lord every single day that I can call my mother late in the afternoon or early in the evening and just talk.

Some days she plays Dragon Mahjong while I bash things on Klondike and we murmur about our Covid-crippled days, exchange I love yous, and say good night.

Sometimes we reminisce and I hear stories from before I was born or when I was a baby that I never heard before. Such treasures. Such laughter and joy.

My mother is a person of indomitable spirit, courage, and great joy. She always has soldiered through everything life has thrown at her bravely and brightly...and trust me, she may not ever let you know, but it has thrown a lot.

Although I have been most stubborn about learning...a Montgomery thing, don't cha know....she has taught me much about living a life of grace and thankfulness. I have a lot more to learn and all...and a very great deal to be thankful for...but I am surely working on it.

All of us are daughters and sons; some of us are blessed enough to be old fogies ourselves and yet still have our wonderful mothers. 

I want to wish all you mothers a Happy Mother's Day today, but most especially my own because she is so special.

Love you mama, you're the best!

Thursday, May 07, 2020

Holy Beaver


I hope some of you skilled outdoor folks can tell me a bit about beavers....like what they do when they want you to go away sooner rather than later....

Another birder, more skilled than I, recently started walking a really nice state trail along the former Erie Canal towpath. It's the most incredibly awesome place you could imagine, lined out along the remains of the old canal, featuring an antique lock of impressive proportions.

In pursuit of the good birds she sees there, and maybe a few of our own, we walked it the other day. It was fun but the boss didn't have a warm enough jacket so we stopped and went home. 

Doesn't this leucistic Canada Goose look like a granny wearing a mob cap?


Then last night he sat in the car while I wandered down it at the end of a long day of quarantine related confinement to quarters.....thanks, I needed that!

It was amazing. Full of peace and calm and wild gloryI didn't see a single human soul for the better part of an hour. I won't bore you with the wonderful birds that literally accompanied me (geese and a Wood Duck, carefully preceding me up and down the canalway, keeping just the right distance from my danger). Trust me that they were many and varied.

However I had an encounter that was somewhat uncanny. I was standing at the very end of one bit of walkway right next to the big lock, glassing over a large swampy area lined with water-killed trees and festooned with swampy vegetation.





A rustle in the tall grass RIGHT NEXT TO ME caused me to notice a beaver a few feet to my right. I turned to look and grab a photo as it walked up the bank next to a bit of limestone foundation there. 

It stood up on its hind feet, threw its head back and began to hiss like a tea kettle. It was most alarming. 




I grabbed a couple of quick shots and backed away precipitously as it waddled slowly down the bank, hissing the while, and slipped slowly into the water. Then it swam around in a little circle sounding more like a rattlesnake than a big rodent.

As I hustled away without getting even half a look at the swamp it blasted its tail down upon the mirrored surface as it to say, "Take that!"

And again, "Take that. And that! And that!"

Wood Duck giving me the stink eye as he slowly glides just so far, but no farther
away from me down the Erie


I can't lie. I wasn't exactly terrified, but I sure was concerned that it was going to come after me and bite me. Not sure if I accidentally walked too close to it...having not seen it...or if it came out of the water to threaten me.....However, I was quite happy that it went east while I went west.

Canada Gosling


And that is all. I think the next time...and I surely hope there will soon be one....I will cross the little wooden bridge and admire the swamp from the other side of the lock.

Here is my checklist for that excellent walk through the waning hours.


Taken at a different swamp, but this is what those teeth can do.



Wednesday, May 06, 2020

Just add Black Flies

The size of this guy





And you can be outdoors in the Adirondack foothills.....




Sunday, May 03, 2020

When Boredom Strikes


The Kentucky Derby may be postponed for months
and there may be no racing at the speedway, much to the boss's disappointment. However, there is still the fun of watching  buggies crammed with Amish kids drag racing home from church, over the blind hills on Pavlus Road. There were three in one batch and a few high-steppers soon to follow. The lead horse was going at a dead gallop, head stretched out and legs gathering the ground like a Pony Express horse. The other two were on a high pounding trot that would have shamed their former classmates at Saratoga harness track. Try as they might they could not catch up with that fat old galloper though.

It was a little scary....did I mention blind hills....but it sure was exciting.

And those kids were sure having fun. I never saw such grins.