November 2020
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Piranga ludoviciana
A Western Tanager has been in town for almost a week. I got to see him yesterday morning. Even more exciting, the bird called before coming out into the open! Not a call I know in these parts. The bird has been faithfully returning to these sapsucker holes in a yew. He’s picking up insects…
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Sourwood
Oxydendrum arboreum: the leaves are sour, hence the alternative name sorrel tree; a nice honey is made from the flowers, they say. A tree of the southeast, presumably making its way north. This one an arboretum specimen: you knew Green-Wood was also a ranked arboretum, didn’t you? *** Yet another primer on how important masking…
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Raptor Wednesday
Red-tailed Hawks are commonly seen here in Brooklyn. It’s notable when I don’t see one on a walk in Green-Wood. They not even uncommon sights from the apartment window. A couple of weeks ago, on a very windy morning, I watched four of them simultaneously riding the wind. But this is something different. All these…
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Solar Powered
A 73-degree November day early this month kept the lizards slithery. Have we seen the last of them until the spring? I saw my first years ago in a Queens cemetery where Harry Houdini is supposedly buried. (Well, he got out of a lot of things, right?) Podarcis siculus. iNaturalist’s lizard crew marks them as…
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More Fall Birds
Black-capped Chickadee joining American Goldfinchs and Purple Finch. Purple Finch, on the right, rotates the sunflower seed in her bill to crack the shell open, then flicks off the inedible bits. Black-capped Chickadee takes a seed and flies nearby to pound open. Tufted Titmouse on the left. Still a few Pine Siskins around.
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Catharus guttatus
This Hermit Thrush was unusually confiding/unconcerned about my presence. The bird rapidly shook its legs on the ground. Like an American Woodcock, but more spasmodically. Calling forth the invertebrates… Admittedly, at first I thought this was a nervous disorder! I’ve seen a lot of thrushes over the years, but this was surely the closest, and…
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Cooper’s Redux
The next time I passed this thicket, there were no Blue Jays to be heard. But right out in the open, albeit on the other side of a chain-link fence, this Cooper’s looked alert. Note the bulging upper chest. This means the bird’s crop is full of lunch. *** Was it as long ago as…
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Raptor Wednesday
The D train takes a sharp turn and comes out into the open air down in a below-grade cut at 4th Avenue before disappearing back underground about half-a block, or half a train length, east, heading towards 5th Avenue. High fencing surrounds this cut on all sides. A wilderness of trees and vines adds an…