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judging by the lighter color of the head and neck skin i'd have to say
what you have there is an Albino Turkey dark pigmentation not seen in the feathers is not seen also in the skin comparing it to the individual in the foreground.... |
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if and when it comes back I'll take a little closer picture,,, I'm suppose to be working instead of looking out the window over my monitor!!! :smash: |
the money shot would have been a male albino
with feathers spread |
had cardinals and rose breasted gross beaks eating side by side til 8:30 pm
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noticed this evening......... :)
a red headed wood pecker (probably a red belly) taking the peanut suet from the woodpecker tree (i built) basket and then feeding it to it's new Baby ,,, mouth to mouth basically teaching it... "this is where you get the GOOD Stuff" http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c6...nob1/woody.jpg |
inundated with female Rose-Breasted Gross Beaks
after two pairs here produced mainly females in the broods. Man can they ever EAT ....they are like Machines..... munch munch munch said in Arnold Schwarzenegger's voice>>> Give US your Sunflower Seeds and we Will Terminate them.... |
Seems like those Grosbeaks travel in packs. Here today, stick around for a short while like a few days eating a bunch of stuff, then you never see them again.
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i had one fly into my greenhouse glass door and break its neck... i keep the feed bag on that i am more of a wild bird breeder than feeder because i have multiple species broods of crying babies flappin their wings helplessly wanting to be fed... and Paul (professor) ....i have a Carolina Wren that made it's nest in our plastic mailbox... they're known for making them in Odd places |
Can't recommend no melt peanut butter suet highly enough
the downies love it so do the catbirds, nuthatches the red belly woodies and the flickers are hooked on it |
well here it is Thanksgiving
i just got finished loading up all the feeders and filling all the suet stations as it is very miserable conditions outside. |
Got a Carolina Wren living in a nest above the light over the back door. It is sheltered over the light with a roof so it is out of the weather. I usually have one or a pair living under that roof somewhere over many years now.
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Nothing unusual about this, I know, but I did see a large flock of lucky wild turkeys today.
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job lot had 18 skids of black oiled sunflower seeds
coming in i had to return a 40 lb bag back to wally world shoulda known better that for 18.95 it was to good to be true it was soooo old the meats had separated out of the shells |
Yeah, they had tons of sunflower seed but no large bags of niger seed. They had small bags, but they are not worth the price when you feed the birds all season long.
Suet has been out a couple of weeks now, and the only birds I haven't seen (as part of my regular contingency) has been the slate colored junco's. |
@ these temperatures (ie below freezing) store bought suet
or REAL beef suet is better ..... not so good in a steady rain (week of rain) as it tends to mold up... Niger seed is good ....but clumps in rainy weather better to buy FINCH FOOD somewhere and do an ocasional broadcast by hand into all the dry or drier spots |
bluebirds "finally"
always nice to brighten even the nastiest day
seeing bluebird's return and eat beef suet the photo's came out SUCKY because of reflection off storm door http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c6.../bbs%20006.jpg |
~~ seeing the birds ~~
I also enjoy feeding the birds , i guess growing up in a farm environment, back in norwalk , and loving the out doors. i keep several suiet feeders filled year round. like you guys said big difference in suiet types. i found the best ,i like is located right in the meet- chicken area . fresh beef suiet . and i enjoy keeping several bird seed feeders up also . and allot of bird houses . it mellows you out when you watch them. Frank
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Just had a huge flock of robins fly through my back yard. Rested for 15 minutes and flew on..
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Just came home to see a big flock of Bluebirds in the tree next to the house.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Big flock of Robins eating berries off the Viburnums now too. My compost pile draws in tons of birds too.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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that the robins arrive 30 days before spring arrives. this process repeated itself the same spring when i relocated just afterwards from atlanta back to boston the robins arrived 30 days before spring arrived even though the snow storms were happening in both locations. |
2/2/15... robins ?
.. wow ? while out snow-blowing my rear driveway near the lightly wooded area today ( southington-CT ) , I seen a small flock of robin's 14 + - , out and about . I sure wish them well ,when heavy snow falls I always spread extra seed out , in no snow areas for my feathered friends. Frank.
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robins will eat finely chopped suet
they are not fond of hoping on snow tho bittersweet berries is what sustains them during the Last month of winter yesterday i heard one here .... but no flocks yet. |
My bird of the week was a bald eagle that was picking up pickerel off the ice after a small ice fishing tourney on the lake. It landed between a gull and a crow and robbed their asses, it was pretty cool. Made a pass about 20 feet away from me.
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heard and then saw my buddy the Caroline Wren this morning
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Carolina wrens are my favorite bird in the yard. I had huge numbers of them for years then a few winters back when we really got smoked with snow they disappeared. I have had a handful this year, will be interesting to see if this snow makes them split.
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god damned Vermin
i just got back from plowing the driveway
and shoveled the walks & clear the door swing area ect. i go to un-burry my rubbermade trash can (birdseed can) thats under a 1 1/2 feet of new snow.... and a rodent has chewed a whole right thru the LID now i'll have to upgrade to a steel barrel :hs: |
Had a good size red tail hawk almost come through the deck window doors try to grab a junco on the deck railing. Banked hard left and missed crashing...missed the junco as well. Keep watching for the replay since the juncos are back on the railing. Rather the hawk take a few squirrels as long as its in the yard.
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i have so many birds that they descend down from the maples
.......it's like falling leaves in a windstorm i have a red tail that will land on the roof peak to grab a chickadee or junco or titmouse on occasion as i find feather piles where it smacked into it |
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