Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts
Friday, January 3, 2014
A drink of nectar
Our backyard is musical with hummingbirds - music of their wing songs, their chirps, and cries of alert.
Monday, June 24, 2013
Monday, June 10, 2013
Elegance upon awakening
The elegant act of awakening...
the dance...
the arrangement...
the ballet of awakening
as performed early in the morning
by wild lovebirds in our backyard.
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
The count is eight
The count of wild lovebirds at
our feeders is EIGHT.
Four females, four males; pairs for life.
Nick & Nora, Liz & Dick,
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice
Our mornings are filled with their beauty
and their crazy chatter.
Love (birds) is (are) in the air!
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
The relative cowbird
We have heard a new bird song in the morning. It is a nice song - strong, "a liquid-sounding series of low gurgling notes followed by thin sliding whistles". It is a unique song. I watched the birds, looking for the one singing those gurgling notes.
It comes from a brown-headed cowbird. The house finches, goldfinches, sparrows and lovebirds all tolerate this visitor. He seems innocuous enough... but I am not sure I am pleased.
Cowbirds are brood parasitic birds. They lay their eggs in other birds' nest. Their young are fed and raised by the 'host' parents. If the host 'knocks' the cowbird egg out of the nest, the adult cowbird may/often return to destroy the host's own eggs.
It "seems that Brown-headed Cowbirds periodically check on their eggs and young after they have deposited them. Removal of the parasitic egg may trigger a retaliatory reaction termed "mafia behavior"." (Hoover, Jeffrey P. &. Robinson, Scott K. (2007). "Retaliatory mafia behavior by a parasitic cowbird favors host acceptance of parasitic eggs". PNAS 104 (11): 4479–4483).
So it seems odd that the other birds at our feeders and in our garden sit along side the cowbirds. They eat side by side, they hop around on the grass together. They don't fight one another, nor do they scream or dive-bomb each other.
Cowbirds might be like some relatives... drop the kids and run. And I wonder whose behavior came first - the bird's or the relative's?
You can bet I will be watching bird behaviors more closely now...
It comes from a brown-headed cowbird. The house finches, goldfinches, sparrows and lovebirds all tolerate this visitor. He seems innocuous enough... but I am not sure I am pleased.
Cowbirds are brood parasitic birds. They lay their eggs in other birds' nest. Their young are fed and raised by the 'host' parents. If the host 'knocks' the cowbird egg out of the nest, the adult cowbird may/often return to destroy the host's own eggs.
It "seems that Brown-headed Cowbirds periodically check on their eggs and young after they have deposited them. Removal of the parasitic egg may trigger a retaliatory reaction termed "mafia behavior"." (Hoover, Jeffrey P. &. Robinson, Scott K. (2007). "Retaliatory mafia behavior by a parasitic cowbird favors host acceptance of parasitic eggs". PNAS 104 (11): 4479–4483).
So it seems odd that the other birds at our feeders and in our garden sit along side the cowbirds. They eat side by side, they hop around on the grass together. They don't fight one another, nor do they scream or dive-bomb each other.
(Photo above shows a cowbird and a lovebird sharing a tree)
Cowbirds might be like some relatives... drop the kids and run. And I wonder whose behavior came first - the bird's or the relative's?
You can bet I will be watching bird behaviors more closely now...
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Back yard gymnastics
Every day, our goldfinches display their gymnastic talents.
Toby has taken lessons, although he has a tendency to doze off in the middle of his stretching routine.
Toby has taken lessons, although he has a tendency to doze off in the middle of his stretching routine.
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Friday, February 1, 2013
Monday, January 28, 2013
Winter
Winter does happen in the desert of Arizona.
But rarely are we prepared for this here in the flatlands.
Friday, June 8, 2012
We live here now
The peach-faced lovebirds have moved in.
They seem comfortable hanging out
in our backyard 'bird sanctuary'.
I have spotted two female and
two male lovebirds feeding and watching.
two male lovebirds feeding and watching.
Lovebirds are the noisiest birds we have in our garden.
They certainly have that LOUD 'parrot' trait!
We are pleased to introduce you
to Lovey and Dovey,
Mr. Duchovny
and Mrs. Duchovny.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
A one-way converstaion
This warm morning, I sat in the gazebo reading a novel.
Missy Goldfinch dropped in to visit.
She was very talkative.
"Really, you are reading?"
"Abounding in nature, you choose to read?"
"My beauty and conversation alone should entertain you...."
"Wait a minute...."
"Whoa, what is this intruder on my time with you?"
"You have other 'friends' ?"
"Others who will eat my food?"
"Really, you allow these fakes in your life?"
"Can YOUR little friend do this? Stand on his head and eat?"
"You, my dear, surely must see my beauty"
"My worth is 100 times more than that wooden fake."
"I have grace, I have a voice."
Friday, May 25, 2012
Love the lovebirds
Our backyard is a haven for birds.
The feeders get crowded and the birds get bossy.
But recently we have had some very special guests.
Peach faced lovebirds have made a re-appearance.
They sit in the tree above the feeder and watch the frenzy. Occasionally they feast. But mostly they screech back and forth - their 'song' as an alert that they visiting.
Only three of them have been kind enough to pose for photos. I have named them (top to bottom):
Lovey, Dovey, and Mr. Duchovny.
(can you spot the third one at the bottom of the photo?)
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