Backyard and Beyond

Starting out from Brooklyn, an amateur naturalist explores our world.

As John Burroughs said, “The place to observe nature is where you are.”

mthew

  • Raptor Wednesday

    The wing-gap Red-tail has a blue band that seems to read 10 over A. (I’ve submitted details to the Bird Banding Lab…) With sticks for the nest. Which could use a renovation. The mate, I presume the female, in the nest. She was trying to break off some twigs in a nearby tree as well.

  • Chickadee in Magnolia

    While Magnolias certainly are showy, they’re not particularly pollinator-friendly. As some of the oldest flowering plants, they actually pre-date bees, butterflies, and moths. Beetles and flies are attracted to their flowers, and it’s these older insects who pollinate them. However, I’ve never seen much evidence of any insects in the flowers. Most of the magnolias…

  • Feathers

    Bathing is really important for birds, but the problem is where. From the blog command center, we see birds bathing in roof puddles and what are obviously backed-up gutters. A pond seems like a good possibility, but this one is walled in: the drop off is deep. This Red-tailed Hawk was long considering strategy here.…

  • New Book

    Highly recommended. Jared Farmer’s Elderflora is unexpectedly dedicated “To the caretakers, living and dead, of Green-Wood Cemetery.” He notes elsewhere in the book that he began to outline the book in Brooklyn, so one has to assume he wandered among Green-Wood’s vales and dales when he lived here. There’s another Brooklyn connection: Edmund Schulman, of…

  • Blazing Foreheads

    Golden-crowned Kinglet/Regulus satrapa. All over this particular day. This binomial means little king, crowned. Our other kinglet, the Ruby-crowned, turns out to be not all that similar to the other birds of the Regulus genera. Formerly known as Regulus calendula, the Ruby-crowneds were recently re-named Corthylio calendula. Corthylio calendula is the sole member of its…

  • Latest Insects

    Finally, a warm day! Saturday’s southwinds turned the temperature up to 70F for the first time, and the joint was jumping! Saw my first Eastern Carpenter Bees of the season: this one on Lesser Celandine and another on Japanese Andromeda. Sedgesitter fly of some sort on Lesser Celandine. Black-shouldered Drone Fly on Virginia Spring Beauty.…

  • More American Kestrel

    Marian the Falcarian, who has been monitoring this American Kestrel couple for two years, calls this the “Mean Church” because of these anti-bird spikes. Highlights of less than 45 seconds of falcon sex. Nest cavity in an old rotting cornice.

  • Raptor Wednesday

    There were sightings of an American Kestrel female all winter from the apartment, but in the last month she’s only been spotted once. About 10 blocks and two avenues away, however, I’ve lately come across a pair in courtship. The nest site. American Kestrels are unusual amongst raptors in that they nest in cavities. There…

  • All the way down the block

    Eight years ago, I saw my first Brooklyn Ravens at this very spot. They were grooming and cavorting on this building. Last Friday, this one flew towards me down what must surely be called Raven Street by now. The bird turned at 1st Avenue.

  • Ospreys Return

    Last Monday I saw three Ospreys in a two-hour walk, my first sightings of the year. The bottom two photographed were high over Green-Wood heading northeasterly at the same time. The first pictured was rather lower; the bird circled around 4th Avenue and then headed back water-ward (west) towards the bay. That’s the direction of…