Thursday, January 29, 2015

Ruby Thursday

Have you missed Ruby?   It's been quite awhile since she has been on the blog so I'm letting her take us wherever she will today.  Literally.

Ready?  Let's go!
Nose to the ground, anytime of year - but in the winter is when we can actually see what Ruby is 'seeing' with her nose.
So many tracks!
But Ruby must investigate who has been in this pipe.
Back to the trail, whoops-- caught by a goldenrod.  Ack!
Ruby pulls.  Still stuck.  Okay, she'll sniff instead.
Well, this is a good photo opportunity.  Goldenrod keeping a basset in place for a moment.
How about a close-up?  Cute, Ruby.
Ruby yanks some more... she's free!  

And there is so much she'd like to explore.  But, bassets are best on the leash.  Sorry, Ruby.
Let's go this way.
No wait, maybe this way...
Down into the creek.  What happened to the creek?  It's solid!
Okay, enough of that... watch me charge up the bank!
Over the river and thru the woods to Grandmother's house we go (or, over the creek on the bridge...)
"Hey, these tracks smell like a basset hound... oh wait, that was me!" says Ruby.
Almost back, and that's a good thing since it was 0.3 degrees this morning. (Why do we have digital thermometers-- Ruby thinks that is a little too exact!)
 The house is in sight (even for short dogs), but Ruby does not take the easy route.  
Whoops, forgot that bush was there.  Oh.
Ruby will just make it an opportunity to look around.  (Didn't she make a nice ear print in the snow in that photo?)
Not sure what made those other big holes in the snow.  Footprints going by, too.
Ruby says thank you for joining her on her walk!  (Actually, she's already napping, but if she was awake she'd say thank you).
















Saturday, January 24, 2015

Missing Color but Being Content

I'm a person who likes color.  I don't have just one favorite color, I have two.  (Green and yellow, and oh, I like blue really well, too).   I like those big boxes of crayons with 64 colors... make that 96, or best of all-- the bonus box with 120 colors.  When I paint with watercolor I tend to use too much pigment (hey, it's going to dry paler, and I don't want that to happen!).

So, on mornings like today when it has snowed overnight and I get up to everything being white... well, you can guess it's not my favorite thing.  
Now is when I could proceed into a discussion of the scientific technicalities of 'color'.  Are black and white actually colors?   I'd say it depends on your definition of 'color'.  There are black crayons and white crayons, so they can be colors in my (coloring)book!  (You can tell I'm not very scientifically minded, eh?)  

All that to say, this time of year I miss COLOR!

I know, there are still some colorful things around.  Male Cardinals,  Blue Jays, and such.  And the 'artist' in me knows there are subtle colors, too.

You couldn't paint this White-throated Sparrow without some burnt sienna and a tiny bit of aureolin for the lores.  You would even need some very pale alizarin for the winter buds on the apple tree.
I played around changing some color photos into black and white-- to see if I would appreciate the subtle colors more.
How's that White-throated Sparrow look in black and white?  Not bad, really, because of its pretty patterns.  But it does show how much color there is in the first photo, doesn't it?

I was going to post the next photo in both color and black and white, too.  But I couldn't tell them apart!  
That is a section of our woods I call the "Warbler Woods" because in May it's full of singing songbirds, like this Black-throated Green Warbler. 
Does all that green make you think "aaahhh" like it does me?  

Another place I walked this morning in the whiteness was our Marshmarigold Glen.
Today it looked like this:
In May, it will be filled with these:
Although, last week when I visited, there was some very pretty ice!
Winter is definitively a time when I appreciate patterns and textures more, whether it be a field filled with dried goldenrod...
or the beauty of years etched into an old tree.
Although I miss the colors of spring, summer, and fall, I must say I always find something beautiful when I walk thru God's creation.  I'm thankful to live in such a beautiful place.  

One of the highlights of my walk today was this Red-tailed Hawk.
It was snowing when I took its picture.  Not too much color in it, even 'enhanced'.  But it is gorgeous, I think, anyway.  (Though, if I were to paint him, no 'red' would be involved, even in its tail, especially in today's light).

Heading back toward home, another magnificent sight greeted me.  Our huge hemlock tree, covered in snow.
I do look forward to when it will look like this again:
 But for now, I'll try to be content with winter.  



Sunday, January 18, 2015

Our Wonderful Woodpeckers

I've been hoping to writing this post for about as long as I've been writing this blog.  My dream was to get a good photograph of a Pileated Woodpecker, and then write about all of our woodpeckers.  This seemed to be a fairly ambitious (and most-likely unattainable) goal, because my sightings of these shy birds are usually fleeting.  I'd never taken any photos of this bird, let alone a good one!  Until Friday...
Female Pileated Woodpecker
This female Pileated Woodpecker swooped in and spent about 5 minutes eating the winter berries by our bird table.  I stuck the stems with berries there a month or so ago, thinking they might brighten up some of my bird photos, and perhaps some birds would eat them.   Maybe Cedar Waxwings if I was lucky.  Well... I was really thrilled and blessed to see the largest woodpecker in North America eat them!

There are a total of about 215 species of woodpeckers in the world.  They live just about everywhere there are trees (and some live in deserts where they make nest holes in saguaro cactus).   There are 6 kinds we normally see here.  As I said, the Pileated is the largest in North America (unless an Ivory-billed Woodpecker is surviving somewhere, which is very unlikely). 

Our smallest and also most common woodpeckers are Downy Woodpeckers at 6 to 7" long.  They are one of the friendliest birds at our feeders, seemingly having little fear of me when I go out to fill the feeders.  Males and females are easy to tell apart, as the males have red on the back of their heads and the females don't.
Female Downy Woodpecker
Looking almost exactly like a Downy Woodpecker except for their size, next are Hairy Woodpeckers (about 8 - 10" long).
Male Hairy Woodpecker
Their bills are heavier and longer in proportion to their head size, too.  It can take a little practice, but after you've seen both kinds for awhile, it's pretty easy to tell them apart.  In the previous 2 photos, you can compare their sizes with the suet cage.

Speaking of bills, one of the interesting things about woodpeckers are the bristle-like feathers which protect their nostrils from all the flying sawdust when they are pecking at dead trees.  (They aren't hairs... since birds don't have hair, they have feathers.  Don't ask me why "Hairy"s are called that!)
Male Downy - notice nasal bristles
Both Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers live here all year.  So does the next one, the Red-bellied.  They are very similar in size to Hairy Woodpeckers (about 8 - 10").
Male Red-bellied Woodpecker
They used to be more of a southern bird, but have gradually made their way northward to live.  I'm so glad they did!  They are one of my favorite birds and have been featured in several other posts, most notably when they won the "Best-Dressed Bird Award".  Click here to read about that.

The one above is a male, with his full head of red.  The females have red on the nape only.
Female Red-bellied Woodpecker
And young Red-bellied Woodpeckers don't have any red to speak of (but they sure are cute)!
Many people call them Red-headed Woodpeckers, but that's a completely different bird.  Red-headed Woodpeckers' entire heads are red and their backs are solid black with white wing patches.  So, why is a red-bellied called what it is?  Here's why...
Although it is hard to see, and not all of them have the tinge of red on their bellies, their name does apply.

Those 3 types all live here year-round.  The next two are migrants and you can expect to see them in northeastern PA only in the warmer months.  About the time the tree sap starts to run, you can look for a Yellow-bellied Sapsucker.  At 8 - 9" long they are our next-to-smallest woodpeckers.
Male Yellow-bellied Sapsucker.  Females don't have the red under their bills.
They visit trees and peck rows of holes, then come back later to drink the sap.  All woodpeckers have special tongues (quite long and with barbs on them to help them pull insects out of wood) but sapsuckers have shorter tongues coated with fine 'hairs' to help them lap up the liquid.  Here's one drinking from a tiny hole near the base of a sugar maple tree.   It's really well camouflaged there, isn't it?
Other creatures benefit from their work, too, like the Ruby-throated Hummingbird that had a drink at our crab apple tree. Both species not only drink the sap, they eat the insects that are attracted to it.
Trees seem to be able to withstand the holes just fine, as several of the trees in our yard have been used by the sapsuckers for many years.
Sapsuckers and hummers are not the only ones who like sweets.  Downy Woodpeckers are commonly seen drinking from hummingbird feeders.
Male Downy
The next woodpecker is not called a 'woodpecker' but it's in the family just the same.  It's a Northern Flicker.
Flickers (10 to 14" long) live across the whole United States but there are some interesting variations in them.  Our eastern ones are Yellow-shafted (notice this female's tail).  The underneath of their wings and tails are yellow, whereas the western ones are reddish.  You can see a Red-shafted Flicker here in my post about Colorado birds.

Flickers are very commonly seen on the ground, because they love to eat ants.
By the way, both my photos of Flickers are of females, even though they have red on the backs of their heads.  Male Flickers have the same red spot, but also have a black mustache on the sides of their faces (red in the case of the western birds).

Now, we're back to the amazing Pileated Woodpecker.  They measure in at 16 - 19" long!  
I literally gasped out loud when I looked out my kitchen window and saw this one.
She didn't waste any time eating those berries... it was pop, pop, pop...
She'd grab one after another and each time quickly throw her head back and swallow.
She ate until all the good berries were gone, then flew off into our hemlock tree and I haven't seen her again.  She's a memory I don't think I'll ever forget!
In this photo you can see how strong her bill and head are.  Woodpeckers have special physical characteristics that allow them to land hard blows on wood and not get hurt (or get a headache)!

Though I rarely see a Pileated (and then usually quick glimpses) I know they spend time in our woods.  That's because of the holes they leave behind.  Look at the size of this hole, with a matchbox for scale.
That's an old hole, but there are fresh new ones in the same and nearby trees.
The holes are often described as rectangular-shaped.  I'd say it would be hard to mistake them even if they didn't have the distinctive shape, because of their large size.
That's quite a pile of sawdust, too.
People may think that Woodpeckers damage trees, but since the trees are already dead, that's not true.  Although, I'm not too happy when they decide to peck on the wood siding on our house.  However, I love our Woodpeckers so much, I forgive them!  


Hairy parent (on right) feeding youngster