12/13/2010
Winter Woods Birds
Even the Sudbury River near Carmel Terrace was frozen on Saturday! We did manage to get some pretty active Downy woodpecker action in the woods on the steep river bank, though.
Not quite sure why he's going into the black hole. (Black hole! Pretty funny, huh?)
You don't see them like this everyday! He's flying straight up from one branch to another!
He is peeking at something through the branches. I love the black and white eye ring - it gives him such a sweet looking expression.
Tom managed to capture this White-breasted Nuthatch. He also snapped a shot of a Red-breasted Nuthatch, but it was too blurry to post. I never even saw the guy!
12/12/2010
Last duck show for the year?
Yesterday all my favorite sites were frozen over and barren of bird life. I hope the rain brings everything back to normal. but just in case here's another look at last weeks duck species bonanza. This is the perfect Northern Pintail.
Male and Female Hooded Mergansers - don't you love 'em?
Male American Wigeon in first winter plumage.
Mallard mates.
Last weekend's winter wonderland of ducks and geese; now a frozen wasteland.
12/09/2010
Pintails, Wigeons, and Mergansers
Two of my favorite ducks together in one shot. The elegant and gorgeous Northern Pintail, and the always adorable female Hooded Merganser.
I saw my first Pintail this year, but the pictures I took then were deplorable. But isn't he a stunning fellow in this shot?
How can anyone not love a hoodie? Female Hooded Mergansers always make me smile. They are amusing and adorable, and I can't help thinking of the 'I Love Lucy' show whenever I see one.
I saw my first wigeon about a month ago, and I'm thrilled to finally get a few half decent shots of this species. An adult male and an adult female are in ront, a first winter male in the back.
The green crescent sported by male wigeons remind me of a tonsured monk for some reason.
12/06/2010
A brand new bird species in Massachusetts!
I thought, at first, that I had finally caught sight of one of the rare geese in the area. This bird wasn't in any of my field guides, though, so I knew it was either a strangely mutated Canada Goose (which seemed unlikely considering the shape and size of the bill, which looked like a whole different species of goose), or a Canada Goose hybrid. It turns out to be a hybrid of a Canada Goose and some other goose.
The pictures are horrible, so you'll have to take my word for it when I say it looks very much like the head of a Snow Goose attached to a Canada Goose's body. A little bit disturbing, actually! I found out that geese do hybridize quite a bit, and I even found a picture of one like this one: Bill Schmoker's possible Canada x Snow Goose
Jim Berry, from the massbird email list, said that "the size of this goose (same as the Canadas) implies that it's a hybrid with a white domestic goose". He could very well be right.
The black bill and small head has me thinking Snow Goose X Canada Goose hybrid still, but you know me - I always go straight for the exotic if at all possible!
11/30/2010
Funny Feeder Birds!
11/29/2010
Snow Goose!
Snow Goose! A LIFE-LISTER FOR ME! The photo quality is pretty horrible, but the lighting was poor and we were very far away from the goose.
Snow Geese breed in the arctic, and are rare in Massachusetts. Unfortunately, they are all too common elsewhere, and their population explosion in recent years threatens the very arctic lands they need in order to breed.
The Snow Goose with two friendly Canada Geese in Sudbury, MA. We were thrilled to see this beautiful bird. After seeing him, it seems all the more tragic that drastic methods such as allowing spring hunting of Snow Geese is necessary to keep the population in check.
They really are quite lovely. I wish I had better pictures so you could see for yourselves.
It seems strange to think that this one little white goose is such a problem - even more of a problem than the hundreds of Canada Geese blanketing the landscape. Very sad, in any case.
11/25/2010
Happy Thanksgiving to all!
11/24/2010
11/23/2010
Winter Finches have arrived!
Winter Finches have taken over! They are all over the feeders as I start another year of Project Feederwatch backyard bird counts.
Seen in my very popular Eastern Red Cedar tree. There are usually bunches of birds hidden in the inner branches, invisible to the human eye.
Through the window shot.
Empty Pepsi bottles are strung along the feeder line, effectively eliminating squirrels from any of those feeders. They don't even try any more!
A lone goldfinch to round out the bunch. There was also a single purple finch, but he wouldn't sit still for a photo.
11/17/2010
11/16/2010
Cold Weather Backyard Birds
He's checking me out - and not overly pleased with the result.
Throwing water down his throat.
Just a house sparrow, I know, but pretty nonetheless.
I saw my Red-breasted Nuthatch yesterday, but couldn't get a photo. The White-breasted performed nicely.
There were actually three White-breasted Nuthatches eating suet yesterday.
11/08/2010
Concord and Sudbury
I could barely hold my camera in the gusty wind, but despite a little blur I really liked this image.
A family of Mute Swans flew in while I was there, making so much noise I thought there must be a dozen or more. In fact, there was only five; one adult and four juveniles. The juvenile swans will turn white over the winter.
Hager Pond in Sudbury, MA is right next to a nice looking restaurant, and the fenced in pond contains quite a few domestic ducks and geese. I truly hope they aren't there in case a customer orders a duck dinner!
AN interesting view of the male Mallard's head feathers. The feathers are shaped in such a way that they sometimes appear green, sometimes blue, and sometimes both! The male Mallard's head feather's are actually black.
leafcircle
A lone leaf blown onto the water.
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