Corvid family members selecting acorns |
Bird comings.
Bird goings.
Bird doings.
BIRDS BEIN' BIRDS.
Canada Goose on display |
Ted Floyd writes in his introduction to the
Smithsonian Field Guide to the Birds of North America:
Lazuli Bunting out on a limb |
No small surprise,
given they've been around for 100,000,000 years or so!
Fine specimen of a Northern Mockingbird |
California Quail preening just for me (Mount Tamalpais) |
Birds, as Floyd points out, are never "quite ordinary to us." They "inhabit a realm of diversity and complexity, of fecundity and commotion." They "sing richly and gloriously, and some birds make astonishing annual migrations."
Northern Flicker in the act of doing not much at all |
Try on for size and perspective
the 40,000 miles logged yearly by the Sooty Shearwater!
Heron wading in golden waters (SF Bay) |
So when you're graced with the infrequent spectacle of, say, a life and death struggle between a Great Egret and a Corn Snake, or the precision blitzkrieg strike of a Blue Jay taking down a dragonfly, or a mob of Magpies picking clean a deer carcass in a few hours, then you know you've been witness to something truly momentous in some small miraculous way.
Magpies devouring deer carcass |
Even so, despite making it look easy,
birds must work hard for their efforts.
P.D. James acknowledged:
but He does not throw it into the nest."
High Voltage Crows |
Ruby-crowned Kinglet |
All of which could just as easily have been missed because your head was turned the other way! Imagine how many instances of bird behavior are simply not catalogued in the human sphere of cognizance.
Bewick's Wren, a lovely little peeper |
Red-winged Blackbird |
Western Bluebird in repose |
So to catch one of the wildest, most elusive creatures that nature ever designed – the BIRD – in the act of swooping down on a vole and bringing it back up or a Seagull swallowing a starfish . . . why, it's a revelation of the magical interconnectedness of the natural world, binding you deeply to its innermost secretive workings.
Seen flying away clutching an 8-inch long fish in talons,
on Coast Trail, Point Reyes National Seashore.
Another time saw her swoop down to grab a fish victoriously,
Alpine Lake, Marin Municipal Water District.
Nesting Osprey pair |
Fun Fact:
Ospreys will completely submerge in the water during dive bomb
for fish and still be able to come away with a prized canape.
Stalking Great Egret hunting for a fish, snake or frog |
GREAT EGRET
Seen flying off with a 3-ft. long snake clamped in her mouth,
at marsh near Pacific coast, Steep Ravine, Marin County.
Great Egrets can live over 20 years.
Great Horned Owl at dusk at Point Reyes |
GREAT HORNED OWL
Spotted on four occasions barreling through overhead:
once in a backwater on Bear Valley Trail, Point Reyes National Seashore.
Once careening away into thick woods at Briones Regional Park.
Another time in a secluded woodland area of Wildcat Creek Canyon.
And another time at Tennessee Valley in the Marin Headlands
roosting in the hollow of a large Eucalyptus tree branch.
Barred Owl Pair, Tracy Aviary, Salt Lake City, Utah (photo by me) |
Fun Fact:
Great Horned Owls are known to eat scorpions, rattlesnakes and – gulp! – skunks! Also, those "horns" are not ears or horns, but tufts of feathers called Plumicorns.
BALD EAGLE
Ecstatically spotted on two separate occasions for a few brief moments soaring the skies over water district land while hiking Sea View Trail in Tilden Regional Park, and over a different area of water district land while hiking McDonald Trail in Anthony Chabot Regional Park. Bald Eagles, while having bounced back nicely from the brink of near extinction over the past several decades, are still rare in the Bay Area with six total nesting sites. I know of three in the East Bay, two on water district land separated by twenty air miles and the third nesting pair being observed in Chabot Regional Park's forest.
Fun Fact:
Bald Eagles can live for up to 30 years in the wild,
and their reusable nests can weigh up to – imagine! – 4,000 pounds!
Night-crowned Heron at Jewel Lake, Tilden Park |
SEAGULL
One day while lollygagging on a magnificent stretch of beach at Point Reyes National Seashore, I happened upon a small Seagull with a large pink seastar in his mouth. I’ve seen Herons stabbing up frogs, snakes gobbling down lizards, and Raptors swooping down for tasty rodent meals, but a Seagull in the prolonged act of masticating and devouring a seastar seemed highly unusual, rather impossible and a bit zany.
The Seagull about to masticate and swallow a seastar |
I stopped to observe the bizarre feeding moment as it unfolded before my eyes over the course of twenty minutes – no exaggeration! At first, the Seagull appeared nonplussed, bobbling around with the squiggling creature dangling from his mouth, unsure how to proceed, before realizing that by rotating it and chewing on different portions for a few minutes,
he could soften it up with saliva,
thus enabling him to “gull-p” it down in slick fashion.
Once the seastar was down the gullet, the Seagull gave a little smack of his beak and staggered momentarily due to the weighty cargo distending his stomach. Following a few unsuccessful flaps of his wings, the seagull finally managed to lift off and fly away like a lead balloon.
Seagull at coast's edge |
Fun Fact:
Most of the world's Seagulls are born in California.
Ten minutes of observation as this stealth creature engaged in a demonstration of sheer thrilling acrobatic hunting prowess in the rolling hills of Big Springs Trail in Tilden Regional Park.
Golden Eagle pair captured at Smith Rock State Park (OR) |
Fun Fact:
Golden Eagles eat tortoises by picking them up
and dropping them on rocks.
Tough to capture a good photo of Belted Kingfisher |
BELTED KINGFISHER
Numerous sightings at Briones Regional Park, Del Valle Reservoir
(one of the nesting sites of the Bald Eagle),
and little old Jewel Lake in our own little old Tilden Regional Park.
As I was saying (Belted Kingfisher) |
Fun Fact:
Kingfishers are the only perching bird that dives for food.
Horned Lark (my only sighting and only photo) |
HORNED LARK
Watched them feeding in a hillside meadow at Briones Regional Park.
I had never noticed (seen?) them before.
American Pipit |
Fun Fact:
Horned Larks walk instead of hopping!
Spotted at Codornices and Live Oak Parks in Berkeley. An interesting little guy resembling a sparrow, except with a curved scimitar-like beak to enable easy peckings to get at insects trapped in small crevices in tree bark. The skittery little bird scampers up and down tree trunks and branches like a little wind-up toy. Another moment in a local park I espied a sweet little Creeper feeding chicks in a Redwood tree slot.
Brown Creeper feeding chick through crack in Redwood tree |
Fun Fact:
Brown Creepers flatten their wings against the tree trunk,
making for perfect camouflage against predators.
An alarmed Sharp-shinned Hawk protecting her nest |
SHARP-SHINNED HAWK (maybe Cooper's)
Observed hanging out on a branch of the 108-year old Interior Live Oak in the side yard.
Sharp-shinned Hawk in 108-year old Oak tree in yard |
Fun Fact:
Adept forest Hawks are often seen chasing down songbirds
in urban areas at backyard feeders.
Seen foraging in a thicket of woods near a parking lot next to the Botanical Garden of the East Bay Regional Park District.
Just passin' through for the good pickins.
Secretive Varied Thrush, Mitchell Canyon Trail, Mount Diablo |
Fun Fact:
Varied Thrushes are wandering individuals,
regularly turning up far from home.
Three baby Blackbirds and their mama spotted in a dead tree nest living in a hole in the trunk. Mama'd fly off occasionally to snatch up some grub and return to parse it out to three wide open mouths at the hole entrance clamoring for more.
Grooming Crows on high wire act |
Fun Fact:
Seen in full sunlight, this so-called common bird is "a glossy, almost liquid combination of black, midnight blue, and metallic green."
Townsend's Warbler warbling |
So there you have it – a personal compendium of sightings, observations, and musing on our avian friends, near and far, near and dear, common and exotic, engaged in their instinctual survival modes interacting with and blending in with their natural surroundings in ways that astound, amuse and otherwise entertain – from our distinctly distant human vantage point.
Nice one Taaam!
ReplyDeleteYianni and I once swam to a little uninhabited spit of land off Salamina island here in Greece. Correction-- the islet was inhabited by a tribe of sea gulls. From the sea, it was quiet but as we got closer they began to squawk and the closer we got, more gulls joined in until by the time we waded ashore the whole colony was in an uproar. We climbed about 5 minutes up to the highest point and then a team of gulls began swooping down to attack us like a scene out of The Birds. We put up our arms in self-defense and ran down the hill back to the water. They didn't make contact but their blitzkreigs did the trick expelling the enemy from their home turf.
ReplyDeleteI was about 10 ten years old when I saw a broken egg on the sidewalk with a dead hatchling probably only minutes old. I leaned down to inspect and this frantic bluejay attacks me, pecking me hard on the head. Ouch! I ran away.
Great Stuff Tom! Love birds but don't know that much about them. Facts ARE fun! Carol
ReplyDeleteI wasn't going to read this blog because I'm not all that interested in birds, but I read this entry and it's great! I really enjoyed it a lot. The fun facts were good and I loved your depiction of your sightings. So I'll now put on my to-do list to read your first 3 postings as well.
ReplyDelete