It's still going on!!!!
Starting in early spring, we began sharing some of the birds we were seeing right here in our own backyard - and our thoughts about nature's healing powers at such an anxious and frightening time in the world and in our own nation's history. We called our first posts Birding at Six Feet, and many other birders contributed poems, musings and photos about their at-home birding adventures. We even saw a rarity: a hybrid between a Dark-eyed Junco and a White-throated Sparrow!
And then the orioles arrived! When these brilliantly-colored beauties finish their long flights from Florida or Central America or even farther south, they need insects and juicy sugar-filled fruits to replenish their reserves of strength - but we had a late, cold spring here in Vermont. Flowers weren't blooming and the usual big hatches of flying bugs just weren't around. All over the state, people reported usually-shy orioles coming to eat suet at backyard feeding stations, or hanging onto the perches on hummingbird feeders to sip some nectar.
We put out nectar, suet, chopped up fruits, and lots and lots of jelly. And we had Baltimore Orioles in the backyard, a few feet from the kitchen window, every day for a month!
We wondered if birding at home would continue to be wonderful, or whether we'd begin to feel increasingly "antsy" and want to venture farther afield.
But our one-acre lot has continued to attract birds that, in turn, attracted our eye and our attention. Here are some of the birds we've seen over the last two weeks.
A big surprise and a first ever for this yard: At least three Scarlet Tanagers, an adult male all splotchy from molting, an adult female and a first-year male. Here are other views of the molting male, the female and the young male:
A pair of Gray Catbirds nested in the swampy part of our yard, fledging at least two youngsters. The family stuck around until 10/7, chowing down on wild grapes.
White-throated Sparrow |
I also noticed the orioles living on suet in my yard last spring in my area toward Brattleboro.
ReplyDeleteHummingbirds were late in arriving and didn't stay long. Did this happen in your area too?