Showing posts with label robin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robin. Show all posts

Thursday, July 20, 2017

Robin's Second Brood

It was late May, when I first noticed the robin darting back and forth by the window to the holly tree. After watching more closely, I noticed a nest. 

It was a bit high to reach easily and I just made note of it.



Some weeks have passed and I see again, that the robin is still hanging around, 
now at the viburnum bush, just 20 feet from the first nest over the fence.


I peek through it's branches and discover, that indeed, there is another robin's nest.
I grab a ladder to get a better look, as it's only 5 feet off the ground this time. 


I catch the mother straining her neck to see what I'm doing, as she digs around for worms in the mulch nearby. 


 I pull the branch towards me and 
there, there is the baby. 
Just one, flattened deep into the nest, 
with just one tiny eye watching me. 


I wait a long while for the mother to return, 


and there she is, with a big wormy meal for the baby. She wrinkles up her head feathers, 
not pleased to see me still watching.  


I retreat, satisfied with some good shots to share.




Monday, July 4, 2016

Carpenter Bees, Blueberries and Catbirds

In early spring, a queen Carpenter bee took up residence right next to our blueberry field. 
See the hole on the post to the right:


She regularly worked the blueberry blossoms, pollinating them, one by one, day by day. 
This helped ensure fully developed fruit.

She attempted to make additional homes in the poles, as you can see here, with her flying around, checking out different locations,  


and then actively chewing on the wood.


This is what her home looks like inside the post:

After mating, the female will burrow like this into untreated wood and lay eggs in a series of cells, providing balls of pollen for the larvae to feed on. The adults emerge in late summer.

(https://entomology.ca.uky.edu)

Four of the 14 bushes were netted to keep the birds out.


The 6' foot bushes were ladened with fruit this year, thanks to the excellent pollination by the Carpenter bee. These bees are also important pollinators for eggplants and tomatoes. 

Carpenter bees are the largest native pollinators in the US. 
They emerge in early spring and work early in the morning until late in the evening. 
They have a medium length tongue, are sturdy, with a hairy thorax and a shiny black abdomen. 
These bees can travel up to a mile. 

(See a previous blog entry on March 12, 2012)


Every day, at least 2 - 4 Catbirds found their way into the netted enclosure. 
This has gone on for 2 weeks. I went out twice a day to check and let them out, where they then dashed back into the thicket, turning to meow, squeak or squawk at me.

It was always Catbirds! 

Gray Catbirds especially love blueberries and other fruit. 
They are mimics repeating a variety of sounds and can sing a song for up to 10 minutes.


Here is the first bowl. 


Yesterday afternoon, I went out and found 5 Catbirds in the enclosure and decided to go ahead, take down the netting and pick all the berries. 

After picking over 2 hours, 
the total collection came to 19 pounds or 27 pints.

There were still lots of berries left on the bushes and as I came out to the field today, I found over 10 birds feasting, including Thrashers, Robins, Sparrows and 
Catbirds, of course!