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Northern Flicker-Yellow-Shafted Flicker hybrid © Diane B. Reed
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Fall is a busy time for nature around the pond. The Flickers have staked out their winter perches and are busy feeding on berries and the like. They particularly like the Sourwood tree next to our kitchen window, where they've been gorging on berries for the last week. One of the Flickers is an unusual one, an apparent cross between the Northern Flicker and the Yellow- Shafted Flicker subspecies found in the East. Although this type of variant is not that unusual in our area, this one is particularly distinctive, with both the red malar (cheek patch) of the Northern Flicker and the red crescent of the Yellow-Shafted Flicker on the back of his head.
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Buffleheads, Mallards and Muskrat share plant debris on the pond © Diane B. Reed
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We've started to see a few migrants on the pond, including the first Wigeon who arrived a week ago. The larger group of wigeons who winter at the pond should be arriving early next month. This morning three female Buffleheads stopped by, and a pair of mallards and a muskrat took advantage of the water plants their diving stirred up. We expect a few stopovers from migrants, although last year we had a single Coot and a Snow Goose who hung around for several months.
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Great Blue Heron © Diane B. Reed
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The Blue Heron(s) are still hanging around, one of them was perched high in a Cottonwood tree the other day, soaking up a little sunshine. The birdfeeder is full of Pine Siskins, with House Finches and Chickadees jockeying for position. The Juncos have moved down from the Blues and are scratching around under the feeders along with the California Quail. The Sharp-shinned Hawk is lurking in the walnut tree hoping to pick off an unsuspecting visitor to the feeder. As you might imagine, with everything going on these days, it's hard to tear myself away from our window on the pond.
Wow, Diane, your photos are truly gorgeous! You must be using some camera that's a lot more sophisticated than my little point 'n shoot. Thank you for the beauty!
ReplyDeleteThanks, they were taken with my trusty Canon EOS Rebel, which has proved to be a great choice.
DeleteLove the bird photos & also the news that the wildfires have been extinguished. We even had air quality alerts here on the Western side of the Cascades, from the fires burning in the East. As Timothy Egan says in today's Times, this has been a year of climate-change induced disasters, of which the many fires in the West are a part.
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