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I was explaining to a coworker today why I stop feeding the birds in our yard during the late spring into the fall.
You keep feeding the birds and they will focus on your offerings more than what they should normally be eating. Our birds do a nice job with weeds and bugs, and it helps when you don't want to use conventional bug sprays. With the variety of birds that visit our yard/neighborhood, most insects take their life into their hands if they cross our "no-fly" zones. Now if I could only keep the squirrels out of our yard, I'd be content.... |
no Blue Jays at all since B-4 winter in my back yard Wareham ,ma
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yeah,
i have a huge bush of catnip growing thats gone to seed little tiny black ones the size of poppy seeds and they seem to love that stuff.... i'm trying to harvest it tho, so since i bought expensive finch mix at the feed store...i shoo them away often |
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I never realized our territorial humming birds are.
they fight each other off for the feeder and hog it. I don't know what kind these are but the males are cool looking. |
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Eastern Goldfinch in my yard eating the flower seeds.
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Turkey Vulture that was by my car at work.
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he must be waiting for the meat raffle info from you .:uhuh:
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i sometimes sit in the back yard and this ruby throated humming bird is doing LAPS around the house at mach1 to keep any intruders from pilfering his stash. when i sit in the front, the hummbird comes down to me and hovers right in front of my face doing facial recognition i suppose and stays there for a full 30 seconds before jetting back to his spot almost as if to say.... thanks. |
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I came into work the other day and this hawk was sitting on our smokestack screeching.
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Lots of hawks near me now. Route 295 has become their buffet now. Some days there are half a dozen patroling a 3 mile stretch from Lincoln to Attleboro.
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Close up of the young hawk at my office.
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Must have 1000's of starlings in the trees surrounding the house! Send over the hawks.
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and just imagine
they're not native to this country
that there were only two....yep just 2 here in 1954 until some dumb as dirt biologists let them escape in Texas: flocks are so big they block out the stars |
Rather than deadhead my coneflowers, I let them go to seed, because goldfinches definitely enjoy the seeds.
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I was trimming shrubs early yesterday morning. Birds were singing, then the
Blue Jays started sqwaking and it became dead quiet. I looked up and there were between 35-40 Hawks migrating south, high up on the thermals, just circiling in 100yd circles without moving their wings just riding the NW wind. Too far up to identify them, but one of the coolest things I've seen. Nature is unbelievable.It was quiet for a long time afterwards. |
very interesting
i didn't know hawks mass migrated i've seen turkey vultures in large groups but never hawks.... hmmmm |
I had never seen it before either Rav, but there they were just
like I said. Wished I could of identified them, but they were way up there. They looked to be about Redtailed size. No they were not turkey buzzards for sure. :doh: |
A couplke of years back we had a massive crow roosting migration pass by our house. the trees were bare, except for the hundreds and hundreds of crows perched in them.
They would pass in waves, cawing loudly as each wave passsed. There were probably well over a thousand in all. Reminded me of the movie "The Birds". The crows still pass by our house as part of thier seasonal migration, but nothing like that one time. |
Whatever migratory bird that flys in groups has to start the journrey
somewhere. I wonder where they all meet to start the flight or do they just pick up hitchhikers a few at a time? |
I looked up some info on Hawk Migration and it is not uncommon
to see what they call a "Kettle", which is a group of Hawks migrating by circiling tightly on an air thermal. Some types of Hawks migrate as far South as Peru. |
Found out some more info from a guy who counts migrating Hawks.
He told me these Kettles can be as large as 100 to 1000 Hawks. He said there hasn't been enough Nortwest winds yet to push down the broad wing migrators in really large numbers , but they will come,followed by the smaller Kestrel hawks etc. and lastly the Golden and Bald Eagles. I found 4 Hawk Watch areas and hope to take my Grandsons to see them the next time we get a nice clear NW wind day. |
a Kettle of hawks
a murder of crows everything else is just friggan flocks :huh: |
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Great Horned Owl. I saw this at a outdoor expo.
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Great source of info and place to watch, hawk mt PA: Hawk Mountain Raptor Count | Hawk Mountain Sanctuary: Raptor Conservation, Education, Observation & Research |
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now ya notice the color of that great horned owl's eyes _RED
maybe that's why the unknown creatures have those to see better in the NIGHT to eat you |
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