We keep bird feeders going year-round; seed feeders, suet feeders (peanut butter cakes instead of fat drippy suet in warm weather), hummingbird feeders and others. I make a custom seed mix, adding nuts and bits of dried fruit, which the buntings and finches appreciate, and try not to think about our yearly seed and suet costs. Eh, it’s worth it, less than a cable bill and beats watching television, especially when seeing the less common transients.
The custom adds to the mix, sometimes including additional sunflower seeds, makes for a messy buffet; the less desirable seeds fly everywhere with birds peck ISO the good stuff, but we have enough ground feeding birds to clean up the fallen seed.
The husk and shell debris is great for the soil, and for worms; the shepherds hook pole is anchored via spike holes drilled in a large log resting on a 2’ x 2’ paving stone, a paving stone surrounded on all sides by raised mole burrows. Feed the birds, feed the worms, feed the moles. Mole watching is like spectating submarine races.
The oddities, weirdos and transients are always enjoyable. We occasionally get migrating orioles passing through, worth briefly putting out an oriole feeder with grape jelly and orange slices. No orioles this year, but an uber-common yet new to me at eating orange slices citrus gobbler, a gray catbird.
He wasn’t around for long, which was a good thing; he could make short work of an orange slice, yanking out a pinkie sized chunks, throwing his head back like a shorebird with a fish, swallowing and going back for more. Happy to have fed him along his way, glad we’re done with orange slices.
Like orioles, scarlet tanagers are occasional migrants; we had a first year male Scarlet Tanager on the feeder a week ago. The first year males are, even to my color-blind eyes, far more orange, and the black wing bars are different. I needed a bird book to confirm.
Another very common bird, never seen on the feeders before this year, red-winged blackbirds. Not transients but suddenly everyday visitors. My farmer neighbor’s un-mown and un-cowed for several years pasture has gone to weeds and wildflowers (awesome for butterflies, some rascal may have thrown milkweed seeds over the fence) and the stream at the base of his pasture has gone to cattails, hence the red-winged.
An aside, if this whole post isn’t enough of an aside, those kind of neglected, gone to seed pastures have become increasingly rare where we live; land is worth too much to let it lie fallow and fall into a natural recovery state. Those neglected fields, once common, are a critical but unappreciated flora and fauna resource. Since his field went to seed it has become a butterfly bonanza and the riparian bottom has recovered.
On another plus side the number of manure flies has decreased by 90%. Previously I would walk out to my (white) truck and see 50 on each side of the cap and cab. We enjoyed the cows, frisky calves especially. The flies not so much.
Back to birdlife. Living in a mature woodland with snags, dead trees and cavities we have every mid-Atlantic woodpecker at the seed and suet feeders, often 3 -4 different species vying at once. A few days ago I looked at the feeder and saw another woodpecker common enough hereabout. Hard to miss the thunderous hammer pecks, size, and vibrant color. Their call was used in early Tarzan movies as background jungle noise.
https://www.google.com/search?q=pileate ... NVGPmo1xuAI had never seen a Pileated on a feeder. He was taller than the tube feeder, and perched all of eight feet from where I was sitting; Best, longest close up view of a Pileated ever, wish he’d come back.
My amusing favorites were the three crows that figured out a way to get to the suet. Always three, there are dozens around, often ganged up scolding the nesting red shouldered hawks.
Too big to land on the hanging suet container, two would land beneath and one would attempt to grip the suet basket, flapping furiously and pecking to dislodge chunks of fatty goodness. His buddies on the ground gobbled the fallen pieces of suet, and they would spell each other at the flapping and pecking labor. It was comically cooperative to watch, if pricey in suet cakes.
OK, my always favorites are hummingbirds. We run multiple hummingbird feeders in season, on the front porch and back deck, and even with distant feeding stations the males are fighty little buggers, engaging in the most acrobatic of aerial combat. Immelman had nothing on two aggressive Ruby Throated going at it.
They are also demanding customers; when we bring the hummingbird feeders in to clean and re-fill they buzz around the naked feeder pole expectantly, knowingly, sometimes impatiently strafing me while I’m putting a feeder back up. I mutter at them “Yeah, yeah, I’m going as fast as I can dammit”.
Anyone else enjoying the bird show in their yard? Whatca got?