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- Newsgroups: rec.birds
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ncar!netnews.whoi.edu!dremsen@mbl.edu
- From: dremsen@mbl.edu (David Remsen)
- Subject: Backyard Bird Blitz
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.141240.7861@netnews.whoi.edu>
- Sender: news@netnews.whoi.edu
- Organization: Marine Biological Laboratory
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 92 14:12:40 GMT
- Lines: 38
-
- I live in a quiet wooded area on Cape Cod, MA about a mile from the ocean.
- I have numerous feeding stations around the yard and this time of year
- typically get only sporadic visits by one or two species of birds. This past
- Saturday was very strange though. I awoke because I could see an unusual
- amount of activity on the feeder outside my window. There were a number of
- chickadees and titmice and house finches. These are the usual fare at the feeder
- this and any other time of the year. But then I noticed many other birds flitting
- through the trees and bushes of the yard. In the trees were dozens of Robins.
- There were many on the ground as well. Below the feeder were several
- white-throated sparrow. To the left in some low brush were at least six
- Carolina Wrens. More movement nearby revealed a wood thrush. I got up and went
- to check on another feeder near the porch. It was being visited by house finches and
- Northern Junco. While I watched this feeder I saw a mixed flock of birds flying
- toward the house. More robins and with them, dozens of Cedar Waxwings!
- They landed right outside the window. I looked back toward where they came
- from and saw that the woods were alive with Robins and Waxwings! I went
- back to my room to get my scope. This time there were two Downy Woodpeckers
- on the feeder and another on an old summer sausage hanging from a tree. Plus
- two more in the tree itself! On the ground at the base of the hill in the backyard
- were a pair of Flickers! The woods, the lawn, the brush was filled with birds.
- Waxwings flew by in flocks of dozens mixed with Robins. I could hear the wrens
- calling mixed with the waxwings trill. To top it off, there were crows and blue jays
- calling from the tops of trees and a great blue heron landed in the cedar swamp in
- the rear of the yard.
-
- I have never seen so many birds at a time especially this time of year. It seemed
- to me that the waxwings and Robins were on a wide-ranging berry hunt (that's
- what they were feeding on). By the afternoon they were all but gone although
- yesterday (Sunday) there were ten or so in the top of an oak. I wonder if
- all their activity is what brought out the rest of the birds I saw. Most remain in
- the area but are not seen in the numbers I saw Saturday. It was one of those
- scenes that I'd like to see repeated once or twice a week.
-
- P.S. As an aside, there's a family of Great Horned Owls in these woods. Can
- anyone give me a few details on when they start courting and nest building.
- Im interested in following these events.
-
- - Dave Remsen
-