Speaking of unusual feeding, I saw something new just now: the Wood Ducks who
visit my pond each day, typically to dabble in the shallows or wade in the
spillway, climbed up the bank and onto a large ant hill (about eight feet wide
by ten feet long), where they seem to have begun poking around i
No Fox Sparrows, but I plan to observe and listen very carefully tomorrow
morning. Heard a drumming sapsucker this morning and another lone Barred
Owl last evening when I was taking down the feeders. Also a lot of Flickers
flushing from roadside areas and yards when driving.
You can have some of m
I think everyone is struggling to find any kind of food in this spring that
is mostly devoid of insects. Leaf litter would be a logical place to look.
Linda Orkin
On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 3:40 PM, W. Larry Hymes wrote:
> While walking through Mundy Wildflower Garden today, I came across both
>
While walking through Mundy Wildflower Garden today, I came across both
RUBY-CROWNED and GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLETS foraging together. That in
itself is not so unusual. What was really strange, however, was they
were foraging among the leaf litter *on the ground*!! That's a first
for me!
We ar