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Early Birds

Saturday, January 4, 2025

In the current issue of Living Bird, author Ed Yong describes his love of birds and compares birding and social media consumption as two different ways to spend your time. In the past, he says, “I spent a lot of my time and my life on social media, caring about what people who I don’t actually care about are saying and thinking…” Now he spends that energy on studying birds, such as trying to discern between a western or a semipalmated sandpiper probing the sand. He says, “And one of those things is a total waste of my time, and it’s desperately uncool. And it is not the sandpiper thing.”

The only social media that I consumed was Twitter, until that went south, then I switched to Blue Sky. There are a few people that I like to follow there, but the rest seem to have devolved into the usual shouting and quick takes. I’m reading more books and essays by writers that I follow, and of course, studying our yard birds daily.

Even before first light, the early birds have arrived at the feeders: cardinals and juncos. The rest move in as the morning progresses. Today, the regulars were joined by a single tree sparrow. A female yellow-bellied sapsucker stopped at the crabapple (which is ringed with sapsucker holes). Her head feathers looked a bit ragged, perhaps molting, but her features were clear: red cap, white throat, faint yellow belly. Sapsuckers do indeed consume more than sap, as she was pecking and eating pieces of a shriveled crabapple.

21. Tree sparrow
22. Yellow-bellied sapsucker

Living Bird

My quarterly issue (Winter 2025) of Cornell Lab’s Living Bird arrived today. My husband and I each view every page to see if we can identify the birds shown in photograph or drawing. The Cornell Lab offers many amazing resources to members and the public. The magazine for members is just splendid.

I am not able to take Living Bird worthy photographs of birds in our yard (the iPhone is not up to the task), but we can watch them from our windows with the naked eye or assisted by binoculars. These are our birds. They are not always eye-catching, but they have behaviors, and feather patterns, and features that engage and entertain.

Today, two white-throated sparrows returned to feed among our perennials and shrubs outside our front windows. We hadn’t seen them for a few days.  Twenty species for the year.

After dark, around 5:30, as we were preparing dinner, we glanced at the night sky. There, to the southwest, the crescent moon and Venus shown brightly. We appreciate these natural gifts offered day and night.

20. White-throated sparrow

Strong Westerlies

Thursday, January 2, 2025

Today we’ve had sun and wind, a strong westerly wind. After a morning walk with Henna, I filled the bird feeders and looked up to admire the mostly blue sky. Just then an adult bald eagle with white head and tail flew overhead soaring from southeast to northwest, occasionally buffeted by the strong westerlies. Sometimes you just have to look up.

High winds continued all day. Around 1:30 PM a 25-mph gust snapped an 8-10″ mature bigtooth aspen across the road from our house. It fell across the road, bounced off the utility lines, then fell down across the road. Our power went out. Aspen is fairly light wood so we were able to quickly move all the small branches to the roadside. Srini fired up the chain saw and we now have 25 16″ aspen logs drying in our driveway. Eversource stopped within the hour and reconnected a line to a utility pole and poof we were back in power.

The bald eagle as well as a white-breasted nuthatch visiting the suet today, brings the yard total for the year to 19 species.

18. Bald eagle
19. White-breasted nuthatch