|
Winter Wren |
When the month of April started my yardlist for the new house was at 46 species and I had just worked my last day for a while as my worksite went to minimum staffing on a volunteer basis. When the choice came of lead, follow or get out of the way.....I got the hell out of the way.
On Wednesday April 1st I added an Eastern Phoebe to the yardlist when one perched on the rail of the deck and looked in our living room window. It was too close to get a photo with the big lens so I had to wait for it to land a little farther away.
Thursday I added 3 more birds to the list to get it up to an even 50. Including the two birds pictured below plus a few unphotographed Double Crested Cormorants.
|
Brown Creeper |
|
Female Eastern Bluebird |
That brings us to today, the remarkable day that saw me add 12 birds to the yardlist. It started early when a Red-headed Woodpecker flew by. Around noon a Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker briefly landed in a nearby tree and it left me one woodpecker(Pileated) short for the day of the set of seven members of the Picidae family that lives or passes through Mason County. Unfortunately I was only able to get shots of a Northern Flicker.
I added two sparrows....Chipping and American Tree.
|
American Tree Sparrow |
Besides the activity on the ground, a lot was happening overhead.
|
Sandhill Cranes |
|
One of 35 Turkey Vultures that migrated through today |
|
Northern Harrier |
|
Common Loon |
|
Greater Scaup |
Then a little later in the day three Mallards flew by.
And 3 or 4 Golden-crowned Kinglets made their debut in my yard. They brought the yard list species total to 62.
I had 48 species during the daylight hours then I heard a Killdeer flying over when I went out around 9 pm to check out Venus as it passed through the Pleaides Star Cluster. It had hazy clouds built up too much for me to get a photo of the planet but the International Space Station was an acceptable consulation prize.
Thanks to Matt McConnell for alerting me to the favorable ISS flyover.