Monday, December 13, 2010

The Magnificent Niagara River Gull Migration

I am moving a little away from Protection Farm with this blog entry. This is a revised version of an earlier post which also appeared in the WNY Traveler. It is about both the Niagara River Gull migration and about conservation strategies in general for our region. I am not sure where it will end up or in what form, but I have been working on this essay and am publishing this here for comments from my blog friends. thanks.




Promoting Conservation and Appropriate Economic Development

Migration has been getting a lot of attention lately. If you have cable television you may have watched the 7-part “Great Migrations” series, which aired this fall on the National Geographic Channel. This spectacularly photographed and edited series reveals stunning lessons about how migrations and migratory areas are important building blocks within the web of life that makes the earth’s biology work.

Migrations are remarkable natural occurrences that are a part of the life cycles of many species and many individual animals. Migrations help populations of plants and animals to reach out and touch each other across the earth. Migration helps the earth’s ecosystems interconnect. The biodiversity of the earths connected ecosystems naturally sustain life on the planet.

The Great Lakes, diverse and intersecting watersheds, ecosystems, and habitats characterize our water region.  The Great Lakes and the ecosystems that maintain them contain nearly 20% of the earth’s fresh surface water. That is jaw-dropping important.

Clean fresh water is a valuable asset that will only grow in value. Some have even suggested that our culture will transition away from an oil economy and into a water economy.  That is not impossible to imagine. Our region is at the nexus of a vast water wealth. How we manage that wealth may help to tell the story of humanity and a living planet for the next millennium.

A corridor that helps to connect Lake Erie to Lake Ontario surrounds the Niagara River strait.  This connection links the western upper lakes and the interior of North America to the east and eventually to the Atlantic Ocean.  The water and other natural resources that flow through here including wildlife are abundant and valuable on many levels. It is part of a planetary biosphere that is physically connected to the Niagara region. It is both historically and ecologically important that as a central part of the region the Niagara River Corridor is a world-class migration corridor.

This is part of an ancient and continuous trail of dinosaurs and mastodons, birds and beasts of every description, and fish and other organisms that comprise the living essence of our planet. Migrations through here connect from the highlands, plains, lakelands, and mountains of the west, through lakes and rivers, along the shorelines, wetlands, forests, meadows, across the ridges and hills and out to the lowlands and ocean worlds to the east.

It is also jaw-dropping important that the Great Lakes Basin is a bioregion that supports nearly 10% of the US population and 25% of the population of Canada.  People have a long history here. This area is part of the passages and stories of extinct and ancient cultures. The area in a physical and ecological sense has helped to characterize the migrations and the stories of our modern societies.  This history and human actions especially during the last 200 years have had a tremendous impact on wildlife, ecology, and biodiversity. This has resulted in changes to the natural environment that staggers the imagination.  And yet the water still flows, and many kinds of wildlife endure.

Today migrating animals continue to travel through our yards and gardens, our cities and towns, our vast urbanized environments, our farms and other agricultural lands, our industry, and through our terrifying brownfield empires. They have no choice. These habitats affect their health.

What happens in the coming decades to the water and to the wildlife should be a critical part of our approach to living here. It would be a great mistake to continue to broadly ignore the probable consequences of continued depredation upon the natural world.

There are remarkable natural contexts in our region. The region that holds almost 1/5 of the Earths fresh surface water is biologically and physically connected to the Niagara River corridor. The growing challenge of conserving the quality, abundance, and availability of this water will characterize the well being of future generations.

Our Vanishing Wildness
Nature still has a strong foothold here. The ecosystems and habitats support wildlife, underpin human quality of life, and truly help regulate the global biosphere. We are incredibly benefitted by our location and by the abundance of natural resources and activities. But they are fragile, and vanishing.  We have to better understand and identify these systems including wildlife and migration. As part of an inventory of our natural places and activities it is important to recognize watchlists of the threatened and endangered.  Many organizations have them, but because of economic needs, even these watchlists are threatened. We do not invest enough in understanding even the most superficial analysis of ecosystems and habitats.

If we continue to lose the natural systems that make up our lakes, rivers, shorelines, wetlands, forests, uplands, and meadows, we are sacrificing future generations.

Migration Indicators
While many species of birds such as raptors, shorebirds, songbirds, and warblers live and breed here, others are transient, visiting mainly during migrations.  Many avian species move through our area in great numbers in the spring and in the fall during migrations. 

Some of these populations are in steep decline. Others are relatively stable. Habitat plays a critical role. Conserving or recreating habitat is one of the most important things that we can do to ensure healthy populations of birds.

There are world-class migratory events here. Globally significant events.

The tiny Ruby-throated Hummingbird, familiar in WNY, is an important example. They breed here. They are important pollinators and nectar sippers. They visit feeders and gardens and are very accessible. They are the only hummingbird that can be found in the Great Lakes and the Northeast. They are vulnerable to pesticides and other lawn and garden chemicals that we use.

They annually migrate from WNY to the mountains of Costa Rica, and beyond, and back. In doing this they help to maintain healthy natural hemispheric links between bioregions. These are critical elements for a healthy biosphere and planet. Part of this astounding migration takes them on a non-stop journey across the waters of the Gulf of Mexico!  Last years oil catastrophe in the Gulf may have had significant impacts on these migrating birds by damaging habitats. We can do our part by insuring that they find healthy habitat here.

One of the most spectacular and world-class migrations involves the vast winter populations of migrating waterfowl on the Niagara River. The waters there are often the first and sometimes the only open water that migrating ducks, geese, and swans moving south from northern breeding grounds find. If you look, you will find hundreds of thousands of individuals, representing dozens of species of these spectacular and often colorful birds, feeding, rafting in the river, or socializing along the shorelines.

Insects have a variety of migration patterns and impacts.  Some cover only a short distance and others many miles. The familiar but seemingly fragile Monarch Butterfly is a great example of world travelers that depend on habitat in our area. They are important wild pollinators. They arrive here in the early summer, breed, and are on their way out of the area in a dramatic and colorful migration in the fall. They travel to a mountainous region in Southern Mexico.  Descendants of these former WNY residents, return a year later, up to six generations removed. Monarch butterflies are the only known insect to fly 2,500 miles in a single journey seeking a warmer climate. They are an essential part of our summer landscape.

And then there is the gull migration!


Niagara River Gulls

Bonaparte's Gulls feed along Fort Erie Canada shoreline

 Every year from mid November to mid January, one of the great planetary migrations is taking place right here in the Niagara River Corridor.  This is worthy of National Geographic treatment.  This is the annual gull migration.

Right about now you may be saying to yourself, “gulls?”  Yes gulls.
If you are like most people, you may not think much of gulls. You may refer to them generically as  “seagulls” -a very common if somewhat disparaging epithet. However, all gulls are not the same. There are different species of gulls. There are about 50 species of gulls worldwide, spread throughout the temperate regions.  Gulls are not common in many places.  For example, only three species are known on the entire continent of Australia. However, here, in the Niagara River Corridor, we have identified 19 species. This is very important.
Tundra Swan, Greater Black-backed Gulls, and Ring-billed gulls are just some of the birds that you can see on the Niagara River during winter months.

Birding and nature enthusiasts want you to know that gulls are anything but common. Gulls are remarkable birds, -resourceful, powerful, graceful, and very intelligent.  Many kinds of birds including gulls have complicated social interactions that reflect family and flock relationships.  Most gull species are very social.  Their interactions with the complicated and large communities of other wintering birds along the Niagara are entertaining, educational, and pretty damned interesting.  Like most birds they have extraordinarily language and communication skills. And they are highly evolved and adaptive creatures and they survive even in some of the toughest weather conditions imaginable. They also play important ecological roles. For instance they have feeding habits that help to recharge and restore ecosystems such as those in the Niagara River corridor.

The Niagara River Gull migration involves hundreds of thousands of individual gulls each day.  Some of these birds are traveling from breeding grounds in the western Arctic and are heading toward the Atlantic and south. Many layover here for weeks at a time. Some roost in large floating rafts in nearby lakes Erie and Ontario and travel the river to feed and socialize. Some of these species of birds are extremely rare.  Some come through here in concentrations representing significant portions of the entire global population.

One species, the Bonaparte’s gull, nests in trees in the boreal forests of Alaska and the Yukon.  During migration the Niagara River can be filled with tens of thousands of this unusual species.  They are on their way to the Gulf of Mexico.  They are commonly seen feeding near the Peace Bridge and in the parks and observation areas along the river from Buffalo to Tonawanda.  It is incredible but some have estimated that as many as 50-75% of the world’s population of Bonaparte’s gulls, the largest concentration of these gulls anywhere, come through here during migration. This is very jaw-dropping important.
Bonaparte's Gull on the Niagara

Threats and Stewardship
We are very fortunate to be able to have a front seat to these important natural areas and events. Sadly, as we move into the year 2011, human development continues to present significant threats to both the quality of the Great Lakes and the health of the life that depend on these ecosystems.

We are in an important place at an important time.  Having a seat is only part of the solution.  What we do with that seat in terms of conservation has planetary level implications. We must become better stewards. The conservation of the precious sweetwater seas that are the Great Lakes ecosystems and the global biosphere and life that they help support must be stepped up on our watch.

Threat Indicators
The Buffalo and Niagara Rivers are internationally recognized as “Areas of Concern” due to our legacy of industrial and urban pollution. Restoring ecological integrity to these AOC’s and the associated brownfields that characterize much of our landscape are tricky, expensive, and long term issues that we are only beginning to seriously address. And yet if we do not address the clean-ups appropriately future generations may not have a workable future. Local and regional human health and well-being has been compromised and continues to be threatened by the lack of ecological integrity of the natural resources that we have here.  It is really not a stretch to suggest that our stewardship is an essential link to the health and well-being of planet earth. This makes what we do very important, not only to within local communities, but on a global level. For generations to come.

Many argue that it is difficult or impossible to balance the needs of a healthy environment with the needs of a growing society that is dependent on an expanding economy and the need for more jobs. Environment traditionally takes the fall.  Over the past two decades, legal authorities such as the NYDEC, trusted watchdogs, are being downsized and made irrelevant.

But we must.  We need to re-envision the role of a healthy DEC and other regulatory actions that will help protect our environment. And we can. If we don’t we will continue to build a legacy that festers with new and un-remediated Areas of Concern, brownfields, a toothless State Environmental Quality Review Act, and clusters of legalized pollution and ecological depredation. It is still important to understand that a sustainable planet has at its true bottom line, the environment.  To argue otherwise is at best specious and at worst catastrophic.

We need to start with a stewardship plan. A plan that identifies the biodiversity of our natural resources, identifies the character of our current ecological integrity, identifies the threats to our natural resources, and outlines an action strategy for conservation, restoration, and sustainable development. We can do that.


Our Environmental Tool-Kit
We already have some pretty important resources and tools. Our sweet water location and our legacy of biodiversity has caught the attention of the world.

The Niagara River Corridor “globally significant” Important Bird Area (NRCIBA)
The Great Lakes, the river, and the gull migration are truly globally important assets that have garnered worldwide attention. In 1996 a coalition of government, community, local, national, and international organizations designated the Niagara River corridor not only as one of the worlds “Important Bird Areas” (IBA), but due in large part to the gull migration, a “globally significant” IBA.  This designation puts our area in the same league as Yellowstone, the Everglades, and Hawaii Volcanoes National Parks. These, including the Niagara, were some of the first IBA sites in North America. The NRCIBA was the first “bi-national” globally significant IBA designated.

The Niagara Escarpment Biosphere Reserve
In 1990, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has designated part of our region and part of the Niagara River corridor around the Niagara Escarpment, a Biosphere Reserve. This designation was largely awarded because of an abundance of biodiversity, unique character, and threats.
This Reserve stretches along the Escarpment for 725 km. in Canada from the tip of the Bruce Peninsula to the Niagara River. It does not include any territory on the American side.

We also have a wide variety of local individuals and organizations that are beginning to breathe life into local and regional conservation strategies. Significantly the WNY Environmental Congress, which is being organized by leadership from the Community Foundation for Greater Buffalo has begun to bring together groups and ideas that may help to chart a proactive course for our region well into the coming decades.


Promoting Conservation and Economic Development
The Great Lakes Basin is a region that supports 10% of the US population and 25% of the population of Canada.

In the coming decades nature, habitats, and clean water will continue to become vanishing resources for these populations. Our local nature, habitats, and water resources play a significant role in regional well-being.  The impacts of local our actions on planetary ecology that sustains life on earth and human health and well-being  is not insignificant.

If we act to develop and use our tools to protect, conserve, and restore these resources we can become a place that is far ahead of other regions in both the Great Lakes and around the globe. Our area can become one of the most important conservation, ecological, and sustainable economic development areas on the planet. 

If we spring into action we become a unique place.

Imagine our outer harbor becoming a year round center of urban wilderness, ecology, and recreation instead of a reindustrialized wasteland littered with failed technologies and abandoned brownfields. 

We can do it. It starts with a clear vision. The goal is to promote ecological integrity and an economy based on eco-development and tourism.  Our region is wealthy with culture and heritage.

Thanks to decades of community activism, our region has a blossoming heritage tourism program. We could add to that an ecotourism campaign that is every bit as world class as our architecture and culture.  Part of the promise of the Niagara Greenway plan is a focus on the environment. The jury is still out on where that will go. But now, we have renewed opportunity on the Buffalo Waterfront. Thanks to advocates such as Congressman Brian Higgins and his predecessors we have an anchor in such areas as Times Beach Nature Preserve, Gallagher Beach and potential new recreational areas that surround the outer harbor. The recent Canalside Community Alliance approach led by Mark Goldman has brought community attention to the development planning process by the Erie Canal Harbor Development Corporation.

-According to the Economy Watch ecotourism is one of the flourishing industries of the world. The eco-tourism market makes up 6% of the global GDP. The yearly growth rate in this industry is 5% which makes it one of the fastest growing economic sectors.

-According to the International Ecotourism Society, Ecotourism is responsible for 230 million jobs worldwide.

Bird watching alone is a significant contributor. According to a US Fish and Wildlife Service report issued in July of 2009, one in every five Americans identifies themselves as a “birdwatcher”. That is an astonishing 50 million-person market from US birdwatchers alone. They contribute $36 billion to the U.S economy in 2006, the most recent year for which statistics were available. 

Buffalo Niagara is bi-national and draws from tourists from around the world. Niagara falls is one of the premier tourist destinations in the world with over 5 million visitors annually on the American side alone. World class recreation including fishing, hiking, boating and canoeing, and all of the other outdoor adventures that you can imagine can bring jobs, investments and population growth to our area.  This kind of economic development will also focus our strategies on ecological integrity.  As we develop this approach to economy, we will find ways to invest in conservation, restoration, and ecological integrity. If we build a place that celebrates biodiversity, natural resources, clean water, and quality of life, we will build a place that is important. We will build a place that attracts attention. We will build a place that people want to be a part of.

We can smartly position ourselves to develop an ecotourism economy that will greatly benefit future generations. We have the fundamentals. Location, resources, and tools that put us on a par with some of the great places on earth. As the world undergoes changes and challenges in the coming decades we can become a vital place that future generations will cherish.  Taking this approach now may be the best possibility that will allow future generations to flourish. Message to the planners- Couple culture and heritage with conservation and recreation. Go local. If we build it they will come. Let us seize this day.


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Where to See the Birds
There are numerous places to observe gulls and gull behavior in the Niagara River Corridor. Virtually where ever there is access to the water you can see the gulls and other waterfowl. From Times Beach in Buffalo, the waterfront parks including LaSalle and the foot of Ferry Street, Austin Street near Rich Marina and all along the water all the way to Lewiston and Fort Niagara offer great spots. Some of the best places are above and below the falls. The Niagara Parks offer parking and observation opportunities. One of the best is at the Niagara Power Plant overlook, where you can actually drive down into the gorge to a fishing access point. the Canadian side of the River also offers great view opportunities from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario. As always be very mindful of weather conditions. Do not risk your life by traveling into the gorge unless you know the conditions are safe. If you have good binoculars, and good bird books, your expedition will be well rewarded.

For more information on bird sightings: Dial-a Bird, sponsored by the Buffalo Ornithological Society and the Buffalo Museum of Science is updated frequently with local sightings and observations 716 896 1271.

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Checklist of Niagara Gulls

Black-headed Gull (Larus ridibundus)
Black-legged Kittewake (Rissa tridactyla)
Bonaparte’s Gull (Larus philadelphia)
California Gull (Larus californicus)
Franklin’s Gull (Larus pipixcan)
Great Black-backed gull (Larus marinus)
Glaucus Gull (Laurus hyperboeus)
Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)
Iceland Gull (Larus glaucoides)
Ivory Gull (Pagophila eburnean)
Laughing Gull (Larus atricilla)
Lesser Black-backed Gull (Larus fuscus)
Little Gull (Larus minutus)
Mew Gull (Larus canus)
Ring-billed Gull (Larus delawarensis)
Ross’s Gull (Rhodostethia rosea)
Sabine’s Gull (Xema sabini)
Slaty-backed Gull (Larus schistisagus)
Thayer’s gull (Larus thayeri)

Thursday, December 2, 2010

A most Amazing Day January 16, 2009

January16 2009
A most amazing day!

The last two days have been COLD!  Yesterday a ground blizzard warning was posted for the southern tier.  High winds, up to two feet of snow, and cold, predicted over a nearly 48 hour period lasting until tomorrow morning.  At dawn today the temperature was minus 8 and the weather station reported -28 windchill.  It is cold inside and out.  The cats are cold, we are cold, the world is cold.

Late yesterday I filled up the feeders with a mixture of oil sunflower, niger thistle, safflower kernels,  corn, and more. Filled the suet feeders. Filled them all, knowing what to expect.  By dawn the feeders were very active.  Snowing hard, almost a foot overnight, and the chickadees, junco’s, Downy woodpeckers, four separate cardinals (2 male, 2 female) white and red nuthatches, siskins, Tree sparrows, white throats, mourning doves, red bellied woodpecker all making early visits.  Five red squirrels also visit and gorge. After about 20 minutes I shooed them away because, (1) their mouths were full,  (2) there will plenty for them tomorrow, and (3)  I want to make sure the birds have enough.

About 2 pm, jonna is on the couch under the picture window, and I am at the computer set up in the kitchen editing a slide show.  There is a break in the storm, and the feeders are very active.  Suddenly a big shadow comes across the feeders.  All of the birds panic.  They take off in different directions.  6 chickadees come toward the picture window. They don’t exactly collide, but rather come up against it, while flying, and try to push their little bodies through the window. They are desperately flapping their wings, and flattening their faces against the glass.  I jump up and get a good look at their faces. They are in a panic.  I assume that there is a hawk nearby, although I have not ever seen one make a run on these feeders. And then, there it is. A beautiful sharp shinned (I assume because of its forked tail). The sharpy flys through the yard and lands in the pine tree just next to the gazebo frame.  After 10 seconds there are still birds flying against the window, but then they fall one by one onto the porch. (Not because of a collision, but because they just decided to drop.  I rushed to get my boots and pants on, and by the time I get the door open the Sharpy has moved on. I am not sure if it got any food, but I don’t think that it did.  I am thinking that it will return having found a treasure here. It is cold, and so I close the door, come back inside shivering after only  afew seconds out.

After about 15 minutes the small birds begin to return to the feeders. I take a brief note, but am busy at the computer.  And then the panic comes back. Birds fly, this time only three chickadees (and only chickadees) come to the window. Two hit halfway up and crawl/fly their way along the sheer glass to the sides, and fall under the porch.  One poor bird is left dead center in the window trying to figure out what to do, and then the hawk is here.  It comes across the yard and again lands in the pine tree beside the gazebo. The little chickadee stops flapping its wings and slowly slides down to the bottom of the window. It is an amazing sight.  The little bird is pressed hard against, almost into the window. As it gets to the bottom of the window it has one eye pressed into it, and it has flattened its body.  It is trying to sink into the little snow piled at the bottom window sill. It is still, but its one eye is facing me, and it sees me.  I come to the window and it watches me, making sure that the exposed body part is motionless to the outside. I don’t think that the hawk sees it. Then the hawk flys from the pine to the pin cherrys next to the porch.  Closer.  There it perches facing away, flicking its tail. It may or may not be eating something, but it is definitely occupied by something. I cant tell if it is preening, or eating.  I grab my camera and take a couple of shots. I make myself very obvious in the window as I do not have on my shoes, or pants, again and am not prepared to go outside to chase it down.  I watch the window, watch the chickadee, it watches me, and I am sure that the hawk sees me as it keeps glancing over its shoulder back at me. It is probably 20 feet away. The chickadee, I notice, is half covered in snow at the bottom of the window.  If it doesn’t move, it will be nearly impossible to see from the outside.  The chickadee knows this. The hawk is not noticing.  I find my pants and my boots, take a few more photos, and some video. The Hawk flys off before I can get the door open.

By the time I do get the door open, the chickadee still has not moved. It has been at least two full minutes since it originally came to the window.  It is watching me, watching every move I make as I walk back and forth across the room.  What a face. This one big eye pressed up against the glass.  I cannot easily describe except to say a look of panic and fear fills the face of this little bird.

I go outside and go to the window and reach for the chickadee. As I come close it turns to face me. It lets out a screech and then flys away, under the porch.  As it screeches six other birds, -four chickadees and two juncos emerge from inside a nearly snow covered bird feeder on the porch rail. this feeder is sort of a platform feeder with a roof, that is almost totally enclosed by snow except for a few tunnels made by the squirrel. They hid there, I do not know how long, and came out upon the signal of the chickadee. They also flew directly under the porch, and I came directly inside to the warmth, where, several hours later, I still sit and shiver.






Winter Birds I

I have been itching to post winter bird photos here for several weeks. Today we are in the midst of a pretty big snowstorm, the Interstate 90 and 400 are pretty much closed down and parts of Buffalo have driving bans, so I am sitting at home with a little extra time on my hands, and.....

Northern Cardinal and Mourning Dove in the yard
There are birds at the feeders and they are really beautiful and have been subjects all day of photos. It is a real honor as a human being to be able to share places and spaces with these remarkable creatures. Its more than honor, its a privilege and a celebration of life and living on earth. I am complimented by what they share with me. They are intimate, direct, bold, friendly, and very expressive, uninhibited, and engaging.  Here are some of my photos and stories.

I started this blog to find a place to publish Protection Farm Journal pieces that I have been keeping for the years that I have lived here. I have many neat stories and photographs and videos about birds. Over the next months I will post about species, individuals, and encounters with birds.  This post is a primer.

In order to help learn about birds, I am linking to the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology Web Site “All About Birds” with most of the species shown here.  

Each bird shown here will have a link to the corresponding All About Birds pages- Each “home” page will include a link to identification, life history, sound, and video. I especially like the “sound” files and urge you to listen to them. Hearing them will help you to understand the beautiful cacophony of sounds that are part of the living landscape here at Protection Farm.

All photographs on this blog are mine, unless otherwise credited.



 Black-capped Chickadee (Poecile atricapillus)



Both of the above photos are of Black-capped Chickadees. They are by far the most familiar and abundant species of birds to visit the winter feeders at Protection Farm.  They are fun to be around and challenging to photograph. They are playful. I try to get them to look at me, and they tease me mercilessly. They almost always turn their face away just as I am snapping a photo! These Chickadees live here year round.  In the spring, summer, and fall they cheerfully follow me around when I am out walking. Small groups of them have traveled with me on long and short walks, sometimes all the way to the marsh and back. They fly next to me, perch noisily in trees and bushes as I walk by and overall seem to enjoy the experience as much as I do. In winter they delight in looking in the window at we who are warm and cozily looking out. We love to watch them and they seem very curious about us. These two-way observations can occur just about every daylight hour.  Sometimes we put our faces right up to the glass and so do they.  It is intimate and interesting being a few inches apart.  Sometimes there is a stare downs with the cats who sit on the couch looking out. Generally the cats are pretty cool about this which took a little adaptation since the cats are seething killers.

The chickadees very vocal and have a variety of songs and calls. Remarkably these birds, like many other birds are known to have regional accents.  Check out the Cornell Lab Sound Page:

http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Black-capped_Chickadee/sounds

In the winter, if the feeders are empty, they will perch in the trees near the feeders and make the dee dee dee call incessantly. When I come out to fill the feeders, I usually whistle a little jay version of  dee dee dee. If they are not in the area, they hear it and come within a few seconds. They will surround me an noisily scold me.  Occasionally one will land on me and eat from the feeder scoop that I am using to fill the feeders. They seem to lack patience with this part of the life.
this is an interesting article about Chickadees from Enature:

"Chickadees are Cold Weather Machines"

Last winter we were watching the feeders from inside the house on our warm couch perch when a dark shadow passed through the yard. It was a Coopers Hawk and it landed in the trees adjacent to the feeders. All of the birds in the area panicked. Several flew into the big picture window and one slowly slid down the glass into a snow pile at the bottom of the window. There it slowly tried to bury itself, in order to hide from the predator, all the while looking at me. It ended up getting away. Meanwhile I grabbed the camera and was able to snap this photo. I will post a more detailed account of this remarkable event in the coming days.


Black-capped Chickadee presses against glass as it tries to bury itself in the snow at the bottom of the window, all in order to avoid the clutches of a Coopers Hawk looking for a meal






Red-bellied Woodpecker (Melanerpes carolinus)







Tufted Titmouse (Baeolophus bilcolor)




Northern Cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis)
This one quite literally had its head stuck in the snow until I rescued it. Post on this coming soon!





Nuthatches
Jajean refers to the Nuthatches as Squeek-toys. this is because they sound so much like a squeek- toy. They are friendly and hang around the feeders when we are filling them, or just when we are outside near them. They dont follow us like the Chickadees, but they do like staring at us, looking right into our eyes. These are really beautiful birds.

White-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis)
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/White-breasted_Nuthatch/id





Red-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta canadensis)





Mourning Dove  (Zenaida macroura)



Blue Jay (Cyanocitta cristatta)

I have had such remarkable experiences with Blue Jays, all of my life. I am particularly fascinated by their vocalizations and social life. I have an article that I am working on for early January.





White-throated Sparrow (Zonotrichia albicollis)

This is a very familiar but not common winter bird at Protection Farm. It is a beautiful looking bird and has a pretty song that helps to characterize the winter outdoors.  I saw the first one this season today, after the snowfall started. Didnt get a great photo, but I have some and will post them.






Pine Siskin (Spinus pinus)
Two years ago we had an irruption in WNY of these interesting winter finches.  About 25 made the feeders in our yard part their winter territory. Last year they were not here at all. They breed in the far north (Northern Canada) and occassionally make it this far south in the winter. This year there is news that they are being seen all over WNY again and I look forward to seeing them again at our feeders.

male Pine Siskin

probably a female


This is one of my favorite shots of a Canada Goose. They are abundant here as in most years. These and the Mallard Ducks have colonized the creek behind the house and make a racket 24/7.