thedeadlyhook (
thedeadlyhook) wrote2007-03-27 12:27 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Stupid Bird Tricks, Mating Season version!
Sightem of the morning: in the park, a small, brown, finchlike bird (I'm getting better at telling the different breeds of water birds apart, but it'll be awhile before I can ID all of the various hoppers and tweeters and peepers clogging the bushes around here), flew up to a car, perched on the edge of a door by a rearview mirror, and started bonking its little beak against the glass, repeatedly. Considering that I also saw geese going cuckoo at each other around the lake in a very not-normal way, I'm guessing this is mating-related - aggressive, get the hell out of here, you, you, other male, you!, or possibly an attempt to pitch woo, let me kees you - ow! - let me kees you - ow! - let me --.... you get the idea.
Birds are FUN.
Also, the cormorant I keep seeing around the lake seems to have a favorite perching log, and the wigeon population favors one specific bush to hide under. I'm getting better at this watching thing.
Birds are FUN.
Also, the cormorant I keep seeing around the lake seems to have a favorite perching log, and the wigeon population favors one specific bush to hide under. I'm getting better at this watching thing.
no subject
Let's see if I can figure out how to post a picture:
Not our specific woodpecker, but he looks very much the same. Pretty, but noisy. *g*
no subject
no subject
These are technically known as Small Brown Jobs.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
My local peregrine pair produced their first egg early yesterday morning or late the night before. I posted a few pics from the falconcam on my LJ. Just wanted to let you know in case you'd like to take a look.
Egg number two should come tonight or tomorrow. This is the third year this female will have bred and the earliest she's laid so far; her first year it was 4/18, last year 4/11, and this year 4/3. Maybe she's getting it done progressively earlier because she's gained confidence and efficiency with experience - I dunno. She did choose the same nest-site though, which is convienient for the watching - only 3.5 stories from street level and there's a window across the street that's convenient for spying on the nest with bino's.
Oops- am missing Lost.
no subject
Falconcam! Damn, that is awesome. It just blows my mind how they lay their eggs right out in the open like that, but I guess their nests are usually so high that not too many other predators can access them anyway.
no subject
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v480/scubiedeb/EPL%20Falconcam%202007/eplphoto2.jpg