By Beth Sullivan
The transition from 2017 to 2018
hasn’t exactly gone as planned. Being hit by the flu really set
me back on any resolutions to get out and hike, not to mention the
bitter cold and a blizzard to boot.
However, I have really been able to
enjoy some great winter bird watching right from my windows and have
had the opportunity to contribute to Citizen Science as well. The
local Audubon Christmas Bird Count has ended, and while I haven’t
seen specific results, a glance at the eBird website
is a great way to check up on highlights and rarities. Sitting
stuck indoors, it is hard to get excited over a rare goose that has
strayed from Greenland that I can’t get to. But I can be excited
about the flashes of color outside my window and centered around my
feeders. The miracle of these littlest of birds who are constant and
reliable, no matter what the weather, is what I have concentrated on
this last week or two, and to make it count, I report to Project
Feederwatch. You can find out more about Project Feederwatch here.
For now I am concentrating on
observing how these sweet fragile creatures withstand the weather
that has had us all complaining. There are two main groups of birds
to watch now: those that are migrants, that come here for their
“southern getaway”, and those that have been here all along, our
residents.
The most common migrants are the
white-throated sparrows and the dark-eyed juncos. They most often
arrive in flocks of varying sizes, and once they have established
their winter home territory, they don’t move very far.
The White Throated Sparrows arrive in September and leave in May, not seeming to mind the snow. |
A resident, the Titmouse will puff up and cover its feet in the cold. |
Many locals to see
The locals are those that probably
nested within “an acre” or so of your house. The cardinals, house
finches, Carolina wrens and even blue-jays may have nested within
eyesight of your house. Each of those species had a nest I could
watch this summer. It’s fun to guess which of the birds I am
hosting now may have been raised under my watchful eyes. As cavity
nesters, the chickadees, titmice and nuthatches probably nested more
into the wooded areas but are easily drawn out into our yards and to
our feeders. Banding studies have shown that family groups of these
species will stick together, sometimes in mixed-species flocks, and
loosely roam, but not very far if they have a food source during the
winter.
During cold, a bird has one mission:
to stay alive. To do that it must eat. A lot. A bird’s
metabolism is normally very high, and in order to keep up that rate,
to keep warm and maintain vital functions, a bird will spend almost
all its daylight hours searching for and consuming food. Our local
winter birds have a couple of choices. Most rely on seeds of some
kind. Volumes have been written about seed choices and feeder
styles, but generally speaking, offering a variety will attract a
variety. Nuts and seeds provide fats and proteins essential for
winter survival. Suet is even more concentrated energy and is very
attractive to the woodpeckers in our area. Woodpeckers have the
added ability of digging deep into rotting wood to uncover grubs and
insects that may be hiding deep under bark. More protein.
Along the
woodland edges I often watch birds foraging in the vines and shrubs.
Many plants have not yet been stripped of their fruits. Vines of
Virginia creeper, fox grape and even poison ivy provide seeds that
persist. Juniper and red cedar fruits are waxy coated, and the seeds
within are ripening now. The same is true of many of the hollies and
viburnum species. If you gardened with native plants, you have
offered seeds and fruits that will remain as ‘feeding stations’
well into the winter.
Bluebirds prefer berries, but in the winter, suet is welcome. |
Providing a variety of feeding stations will attract a variety of birds as they express their feeding preferences. |
Goldfinches are residents but they will form flocks and roam the area during the winter. |
Check all the views
As I move from window to window, I
can enjoy all of my birds. I can watch as they choose their favorite
manner of eating. I can enjoy the relationships: tolerance or
intolerance among species as they take places on the feeders. I
watch them hop and scrape to find the snow-covered seeds on the
ground or enjoy the antics of birds that are not used to clinging,
attempt to balance on suet like a woodpecker. They will puff up their
feathers, seek a sunny lee side of a tree trunk, and never really
complain about how cold it is.
Grab your binoculars, a note pad,
and a warm cup of tea and enjoy watching the littlest of the hardy
winter creatures. Then when it warms up…..wander farther afield.
The birds will await you there as well.
This Red-bellied Woodpecker will work the trees for food, but also will visit the suet feeder. |
Like many birds, this Nuthatch seeks out the sheltered side of a trunk. |
Photographs by Beth Sullivan.
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