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dA
ROBINS
EAT all of my worms.... i want to make robin kabobs. :grins: ~ wild bird's unlimited has a pretty good bird magazine in their stores and the last months issue is there usually free....glossy photos great place for seed that's better quality than walmart crap... but agway usually has the best prices.... |
Good info guys - Thanks all for the responses. Here is a discussion forum that I signed up for. Looks promising.
BirdForum - The Net's Largest Birding Community, Dedicated To Wild Birds Looks like the same engine as this site. About 90K members and the categories look well organized. There is even a state by state category. |
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Amazon.com: Peterson Field Guide(R) to Eastern Birds: Fourth Edition (Peterson Field Guides) (9780395266199): Roger Tory Peterson: Books -spence |
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Does anyone do life lists? When I last updated, I was at about 220 species. Use to watch birds much more when young (HS/college) than now but I do have feeders active and just checked: 8 different species at feeders in preparation for the storm.
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use your imagination
you can have all the feeders you want but
you need to do some broadcast seeding also where you can..... the birds respond to their environment too so increase their FUN any way possible... they like "sheltered spots" especially in this snowy weather that's why i mentioned the Quonset huts made from pine bark. for example: just now after going out food shopping we noticed a sign for FREE Christmas trees ....that did not sell b4 Christmas and i grabbed two and tossed them into the back of my car they are now out on the deck in my little Bird play ground and instantly the birds Love hopping around under them.:buds: |
Funny you say that Raven. Just took my xmas tree down and propped it up in the woods near the feeders. It's like a mini playground before they hit the feeders.
The guide I'm using now is Kaufman's Field Guide to Birds of North America - pretty decent. I'm always looking - I'm a sucker for guide books. |
Audubon Field guides
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Cold is really bringing the birds to the feeders today. Saw my 1st Red-Bellied WP (female) since putting out the suet about a week ago. Funny name for a bird that has no red at all on the belly! More appropriate would be a Redneck WP?
Bad news: starlings are zeroing in! |
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or a little starling/blackbird chase. :D Man can they eat suet. :( |
Feeder's are already jamming today.
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Made a log suet feeder for the woodpeckers and added it to the station. Now it is the wait game. Made it like this (Duncraft), but with poplar.
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saw a bunch of bluebirds this morning around the boxes again. i have heard they will bundle together in boxes in the winter cold nites. That may have been the case. They should be south as I would if I had wings
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Bluejays =Wolf Pack
if we buy a roasted chicken somewhere like say Bj's for five bucks
the black plastic tray goes out there with the left overs and they devour it like Piranha :uhuh: |
My parents have a small army of woodpeckers coming to their suet feeder. Dog keeps the squirrels away. :hihi:
We just got a birdfeeder down here where I am now (Southampton LI) about 2 weeks ago and the birds have found it. Had a Cardinal pair out there yesterday and the usual hundred thousand chikadees that have found it. |
tufted titmouse is my most abundant, and a lot of cardinals too. Really missing the few Carolina Wrens we usually always have but have been absent this year, although they were around a lot this summer as they woke me up often. Squirrels have been scarce the last few years must be the coyotes.
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Got the wrens over here! Titties = chicks but all outnumbered by common house sparrows. Got 3 regular Cardinals, boy are they territorial.
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Did anyone watch the Nature special on hummingbirds? Just finished on WGBH2, should show again. Great footage and several new learnings.
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We've had lots of Wrens and Titmice here.The Downies have been absent around the suet feeders.
Haven't seen my Sharpie(hawk) yet this year. The stupid Blue Heron is STILL hanging around! |
suet
maybe the presentation isnt right..........
for the smaller downies as i have both kinds the bigger Harries cuz they have a brownish tuft of hair between the beak and their head it acts as a shock absorber when they rat ta tat tat on a tree drilling it for bugs i find they want a long profile to land ,survey, and approach as they are very cautious with much bobbing and weaving to make sure nothing has changed since their last visit. the wife's been buying suet at Job lot about 7 cakes per week so that their is several options available. they seem to have a pretty good selection there and the Nutties (i callem) nuthatches and the smaller downies like the peanut suet... nuthatches are quite fond of the smaller spanish peanuts and like Cardinals favor safflower seed which looks like a hulled sunflower seed except they are white. |
Today the birds were (almost) the food: visit by a sharp-shined hawk!
Right now at dusk about 20 mourning doves doing their best at cleaning up the ground. |
Playing with my VadoHD camera spying on the birds. First attempt nice shot of some mourning doves. Weird, the birds seem to know they are being filmed!
Doves.flv video by PRBuzz - Photobucket |
Cool Cam. Shame you couldn't get some cards in the shot. I'd tak a Junco. Friggin Doves - Always in the way :D
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http://s772.photobucket.com/albums/y...gSparrow-1.flv |
Nice. You mostly ground feeding?
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