mthew
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Orwellian Toads
“But Persephone, like the toads, always rises from the dead at about the same moment.” George Orwell’s “Some Thoughts on the Common Toad,” first published in April, 1946, is a short introduction to spring. Good ol’ Bufo bufo; here’s one I saw in Sweden. Times change, we heat up the atmosphere, and the blackthorn was…
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Bald
Look who’s back! I mean, probably. Couldn’t see the bands on this bird’s leg, but assume they are the black rings marked R, top, and 7, bottom. Some call the bird “Rover,” but I don’t think the Adamic naming thing has turned out well, so I pass on naming wild animals. The bird was banded…
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House House
Airy and with a view. I’ve posted pictures of these traffic light support poles before. Practically every single one has a House Sparrow nest at both ends. And the birds are staking their claims over them now, actively! See also yesterday’s post. This was on the long 5th Avenue border of Green-Wood. Along this same…
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Sparrow Fight
A knock-down fight between two male House Sparrows. Bill-biting seemed to be the main strategy here. I wonder if this is to immobilize this fearsome weapon? (In social media discussion on another topic recently, an ornithologist noted that these birds can inflict a painful bite.) In his classic The House Sparrow, J.D. Summers-Smith notes that…
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Raptor Wednesday
I surprised this adult Cooper’s Hawk bathing in the Sylvan Water, in the only patch that was un-iced along the water’s edge. A couple of days later, in the same tree. The bird’s crop was bulging with a meal, and there was blood under the chin. In addition to having the russet rippled chest as…
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Ducks
Wood Ducks. And Hooded Mergansers on the Sylvan Water, largest of water bodies in Green-Wood. The Hoodies, nobodies’ fools, were not approaching anyone on the shore, unlike the shameless Mallards. Mallards are, by the way, some of our largest wild ducks. Bonus freaks of nature… Actually, it’s the aeration devices that keep these very round…
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Mammal Monday
There isn’t much meat on a maple samara, so this Eastern Grey was rootling and grubbing and chomping. Each picture above is a different samara. Then suddenly… She found a piece of paper bag. She stuffed one end into her mouth and crushed the rest of it to herself. And carried it across the street…
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One Moment
Next to a well-stocked bird-feeder, this Black-capped Chickadee goes for a black willow bud. *** I remember when the shutting down of the Gulf Stream was a wild hypothetical, the absolute worst-case scenario that would never happen in the lifetime of anyone alive today. But, as in a lot of the news about climate change,…
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Hunkered Great Blue
This heron was hanging out here on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. Not vociferating; perhaps yawning or working up a pellet of nocturnal fish and who knows, maybe rats….
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Brood X is Coming
Get ready! This year’s big Magicicada 17-year cicada emergence covers a lot of the eastern U.S. It’s “among the largest (by geographic extent) broods.” Here’s a map of the last Brood X emergence in 2004. Maryland/Delaware and Indiana are the places to be (get your shovels, the remains will be piled high!). Long Island is…