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

  • Recent Birds

    So you got twice your recommended daily natural supplement yesterday because I accidentally scheduled two posts for the same time. Guess I’m going to pile on this morning…This foot looks like it may be infected. Tiny piece of wet grass on a tiny bill. Hunting so intently didn’t mind me sitting nearby. Tombstones are closer…

  • Black-throated Green

  • Persimmon Attractants

    Insect life is winding down. But on a brisk Saturday morning, I spotted some activity around fallen persimmon fruit. Blue Blowflies and Vespula yellowjackets… Downy Yellowjacket. (First one for me, and my fourth Vespula species in Brooklyn.) German Yellowjacket. Green-Wood’s tiny grove of American persimmon took a hit in the big storm, losing some substantial…

  • Raptor Wednesday

    This is, approximately, what the chapel looks like from the road. The point here is that the female American Kestrel up there saw a two-inch long grasshopper on the road and swept down to pluck it right up. She flew back up to the chapel top to dispatch it. Same bird, nearby. Further afield in…

  • Finches

    American Goldfinch. Purple Finch. Check out that touch of pink in the throat. Not seen in this one. (That’s a sunflower seed-still-in-shell, not a tongue.) Pine Siskins, and more sunflower seeds. Bit of a challenge for these fine bills, but the Siskins are swarming around the feeders in Dell Water. It’s an extraordinary year for…

  • Fall Galls

    You may be-galled out, but I’m certainly not. All of the above were gleaned from under a great white oak, the mother (?) of galls, on October 10. Five species of gall wasps are represented here. Pea Gall (Acraspis pezomachoides). Philonix nigra. Round Bullet Gall Wasp (Disholcaspis quercusglobulus). Andricus wendi. Clustered Midrib Gall Wasp (Andricus…

  • RBN

    At least two Red-breasted Nuthatches were in the magic wych elm with all of yesterday’s birds. Usually whacking away at nuts, these birds weren’t about to let an invertebrate hatch-out go to waste.

  • Feeding Frenzy

    A wych elm, a lot of tiny gnats (or something Diptera-y), and a mess of birds. To be continued tomorrow….

  • So Many Birds

    Song Sparrow. Purple Finch. Blue-headed Vireo. Ruby-crowned Kinglet. Golden-crowned Kinglet. Solitary Sandpiper. Solar-and-fish-powered Belted Kingfisher. Dark-eyed Junco. White-crowned Sparrow. White-throated Sparrow. White-breasted Nuthatch. Red-breasted Nuthatch.

  • Bathing Spot

    The area flanking a weeping Bald Cypress that reaches over the water is a great place to get a drink and bathe if you’re a bird. Here’s a trio of sparrows, Field, White-throated, and a Song in the background if I’m not mistaken. The baldy provides quick cover. Catbird shakin’ it. Two Blue Jays. Three…