Showing posts with label indigo bunting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indigo bunting. Show all posts

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Ooops! But Still Good Birding

Ooops! I forgot to bring the feeders in two nights ago, and the bear took down the suet and destroyed the tube feeder. Blame it on the little gray cells getting older and forgetful.

The birds noticed the absence and were feeding in different places, but I am confident getting every bit as much seed as before, while the squirrels perhaps got less.

Highlight of the day was the Indigo Bunting. Not a new yard bird, but one that does not visit the yard or feeders every year. This year he has been here and what a treat! ...

Indigo Bunting

Indigo Bunting

Indigo Bunting
Also, a rare treat was the female Baltimore Oriole which came briefly to the (replacement) suet feeder. Only once several years ago have I succeeded in attracting the orioles to the feeders. BTW, the oranges in the previous photo were put out in hopes they would draw the oriole. No luck there. The oriole did not cooperate on photos, so this is the only documentation I have ...

Baltimore Oriole (female)

With the absence of the tube feeder in the yard, the grosbeaks came to the window feeder right by the kitchen table - up close and personal with these gorgeous, if voracious, birds ...

Evening Grosbeak

Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Rose-breasted Grosbeak (female)

And while I am on the grosbeaks, this is the first time I have seen a Rose-breasted Grosbeak visit the suet feeder ... just visible on the back side of the feeder ...

Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Finally ... just because ... at least two pair of Gray Catbirds have been in the yard and visiting the suet feeder, along with Downy, Hairy, and Red-bellied Woodpeckers, represented by the Downy below ...

Gray Catbird

Downy Woodpecker

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Spectacular Backyard Birds

When bringing in the wash this afternoon, a Baltimore Oriole was singing amid the crabapple blossoms in the tree at the side of our home - spectacular!

Baltimore Oriole
Baltimore Oriole

Baltimore Oriole
Meanwhile, the courtship among the Evening Grosbeaks has been hot and heavy, perhaps due to there being (by my count) an extra male vying for the hand of a lady ...

Evening Grosbeak displaying
The courtship stepped up a notch today. Besides demonstrating his overall sexiness through displaying, the males have had to demonstrate that they know what to do when a youngster begs for food ... feeding of females has been more noticeable this year than in any previous year.

"Feed Me," she says.
"Now."
("Perhaps he will know what to do with my young.")
The Indigo Bunting continues to appear off and on, and is heard singing in nearby trees.

Indigo Bunting

Few people will put the Common Grackle in the spectacular category, but the iridescence of the bronzed body and purple head are breathtaking this time of year. And if anyone reading this says that they don't like blackbirds, remember that blackbirds (Icterids) include grackles, red-wings, and Northern Oriole.
Common (Bronzed) Grackle

Good Birding!


Wednesday, May 14, 2014

The Joy of S*x

Ah yes ... the joy of the Spring activity. A couple of bird walks this weekend yielded many warblers hurrying toward their breeding grounds, feeding frenzily, and singing lustily. Most were high in the canopy, but this Black-throated Green Warbler was closer to lens ...

Black-throated Green Warbler
The walks in the woods are marvelous, but for theatrical entertainment, sitting quietly on the back porch provides front row seats to drama, intrigue, and rivalry.

Five Evening Grosbeak males (perhaps six) are vying for the attention of four (best count) females, so there is sorting, accommodating, and liaisons to figure out. The guys are getting serious, with raised crest, raised tail, and flared wings becoming prevalent and insistent ...

Evening Grosbeak
 Rose-breasted Grosbeaks (we have had five males and a lesser number of females) are gentlemen toward one another, but they have their moments ...

Rose-breasted Grosbeak
For shear truculence, there is nothing that can match the 1 gram package of the Ruby-throated Hummingbird. This guy perched 15 feet in front of us, until an intruder came along. He did his rapid "U" shaped display and totally cowed the poor rival who sped off - tried again - and again - and was driven off each time ...

Ruby-throated Hummingbird
By contrast, the dispute between Northern Cardinal males was almost gentlemanly, but no less serious ...

Northern Cardinals
Two transients made brief stops in the yard - welcome visitors not seen in the yard every year ...

Brown Thrasher ...

Brown Thrasher

Indigo Bunting

Indigo Bunting
Not to be overlooked in the profusion of life bursting forth as the tiny gems at our feet, like the trout lily ...

Trout Lily
... or in the garden, the Crown Imperial ...

Crown Imperial
Listen to the birds ... visually consume the flowers ... celebrate Spring!!

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Summer Songster

I usually see our summer songster at the top of a tree along a woodland edge, singing his cheerful, finch-like doublet song - a dark spot on the tip of a branch. On and on he sings, proclaiming his rule, serenading his mate, or perhaps caroling just for the sheer joy of it.

She is no where to be found. She is on her tightly woven little nest in a bush near the ground. She is incubating, and when her eggs hatch, she will feed the young. Eventually he will come down from his high perch and assist with the young. On a couple of occasions I have happened upon these busy parents as they are tending their fledglings. He has little time to sing then, so maybe that’s why he sings with such persistence when he is able - as long as a half hour from the same perch before he flies across the road to a new perch atop a different tree where he reprises his aria.

He is the Indigo Bunting. Silhouetted against the sky, he looks black. But when he comes to the ground to feed, forage, court, or chase a rival, he is blue. No - to call the Indigo Bunting blue is to do him a disservice. He is “indigo blue” - rich and sparkling blue, like the treasured blue dye of the plant genus Indigofera which the classical Greeks and Romans imported from far distant India (hence the “indigo.”)

When he comes down from the tree top so that a closer look is possible, he is stunning. Breathtaking. So indigo blue! - except for his gray beak, and a dark tinge on his wing and tail feathers, or possibly some traces on brown.

Through most of the breeding season, it is rare to get leisurely looks at the Indigo Bunting, but during migration, if you are lucky - maybe. When spring is in full flower, or in August when breeding is complete, the Indigo Bunting may visit backyard feeders. Usually those visits are brief, and he is wary and skittish. But not always. And for me, not this year.

This year I did not have one Indigo Bunting - I had three. The first arrived on a Sunday morning, to be joined by two more the next day. For ten days they were regular visitors to my yard, taking seed from the feeder and the platform, scratching through the grass, perching briefly atop the plant hanger or quince. One morning through my bedroom window, I watched the three males feeding among the crab apple blossoms, spots of deep indigo-blue animating the profuse pink branches.

Occasionally as I walked through the yard, I would hear an Indigo Bunting sing, but it was just a warm up song. They were not quite ready to begin the breeding season in earnest. At least, I assume that is why the two or three males were able to feed together with only brief hints of hormonal rivalry and why the songs were still brief ones rather than the extended arias heard in mid-June.

Opportunity for rivalry was certainly present. At least two female Indigo Buntings enjoyed my bird feeder largess along with the three males, but there was none of the wild antics among the males or between the sexes usually associated with pairing and mating. That would come soon - the task for which they had come north.

The Indigo Bunting is a tropical bird. Passerina cyanea (from Latin, pertaining to a sparrow, and dark blue) was once classified in the finch family - seed eating birds generally characterized by large bills.

More recent studies have refined the classification and it is now a member of the family, Cardinalidae. Other New England species in this family are the Northern Cardinal and the Rose-breasted Grosbeak.

An aside is in order: never assume that there is a relationship among birds which share name elements. For example, the Painted Bunting (a southern breeder which occasionally strays north to New England) shares Family and Genus with the Indigo Bunting. But the Snow Bunting (a winter visitor) shares neither; it is a sparrow family member.

Common names, so it seems to me, reflect the observations of common people. Hence, a very large beak might result in a common name containing “grosbeak” - big beak, even though the scientists later determine that relationships among various “grosbeaks” is distant.

In the case of the Indigo Bunting, the “indigo” part of the name is obvious. The bird is a dramatic “indigo blue.” For the “bunting” part of the name, we need to dig deeper. It has nothing to do with flags or decorations. “Bunting,” as applied to birds, comes from a Middle English word that meant “a plump or thickset person or creature.” The first recorded use of the word, bunting, for a bird is found in the early fourteenth century and applied to the plump Corn Bunting of Europe (this according to Lockwood in The Oxford Dictionary of British Bird Names, 1993.)

When I stumbled upon this bit of derivation trivia, it was revelatory. I have always thought of the Indigo Bunting as a neat and compact little bird. However, during their recent stay in my backyard,  I took batches of photographs through my kitchen window. Many of those pictures show a decidedly plump bird on my feeder platform. The Indigo Bunting is a plump bunting - a redundancy, as you and I now know.


For all of the beauty of the male Indigo Bunting, his mate is as plain as can be. She is a dull, drab, brown little bird with just the slightest tint of blue among the wing feathers. You can only see that touch of blue on her when she is close up, and almost none of the bird guides show that blue in their illustrations or refer to it in their descriptions. Her inconspicuousness goes with her breeding role; she is almost a single parent in the raising of her young.

Audubon knew the Indigo Bunting as an abundant breeder east of the Mississippi, and in some areas it may still be one of the most abundant songbirds. It does not particularly like urban areas or places of intense agriculture, but in brushy rural areas it does well. It prospers is in spite of the fact that it is often parasitized by cowbirds. Thirty years ago I saw my first male Indigo Bunting in northern Michigan; he was busily feeding a fledgling half again as big as he was - a cowbird.

The Indigo Bunting is one of the joys of our temperate summers. Forbush captured the joy which this tiny bird brings to our summer landscape: “The male seems to delight in singing during the hottest part of the summer day, when other birds are resting in the shade. He will sing his way from the bottom of a tree to the top, going up branch by branch until he has reached the topmost spire, and there, fully exposed to the blazing sun, he will sing and sing and sing.”

Good birding!

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

LBJs - IDs for Exercises 9 & 10

If you are following these LBJ posts, I hope they are getting easier for you. Exercise 9 was posted last Thursday. Exercise 10 was posted Sunday.

#41 - American Tree Sparrow - similar to juvenile White-crowned and juvenile Chipping. Note warm wash on sides, sometimes a breast spot. Study the bird guides for differences in size and shape
#42 - Chipping Sparrow
#43 - Indigo Bunting, female - Note traces of blue on the wings, finch-like beak
#44 - House Finch, female
#45 - Swamp Sparrow
#46 - Rose-breasted Grosbeak, female
#47 - Savannah Sparrow
#48 - Song Sparrow
#49 - Song Sparrow - See! You don't need to see the breast spot to ID this sparrow.
#50 - Pine Siskin







Good Birding!!

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Primary Colors

Short selection of some primary colors that live in my neighborhood, and feed from the largess of my feeders - or as our British friends say - the bird table. I am sure Easterners need no introduction, but for those North Americans who are less fortunate in where they live, or for readers from elsewhere on our fragile planet, I shall introduce them. All three are males in breeding plumage (or as some prefer, alternate plumage).

Rose-breasted Grosbeak ...

Indigo Bunting ...

American Goldfinch ...

... and that's Good birding!!

Thursday, May 08, 2008

New Arrivals

Indigo Bunting made his first appearance this morning.


I saw the White-crowned Sparrow along the Connecticut River yesterday. Today one stopped by for some free seed.

Becoming rather common in the Connecticut River Valley, the Red-breasted Woodpecker is beginning to expand into the out-lying areas of Windham County. This handsome male spent most of the day visiting the feeder; other times he was "singing" in the trees.

Mustn't forget the Evening Grosbeaks busy with their pairing up.


And a follow-up on the Baltimore Orioles. Females are beginning to appear and the males are giving more and more time to singing and less time to feeding on the oranges. They flit around, but I haven't seen them lingering today as they did the previous several days.

Good Birding!!

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Leucistic Goldfinch, Indigo Bunting, New Feeder Birds

Since returning from our travels, I haven't gotten into the field for birding, but the backyard has been great.

A leucistic goldfinch has been a regular visitor.



We've had 3 (maybe 4) Indigo Buntings and at least 2 females for the last week.



Gray Catbirds have been regular diners on our suet. I don't recall seeing them on the feeders before.



Also, a female towhee was on the feeder, another first. Usually they're on the ground when they come to the yard.



Apologies for the fuzzy last photo. These photos are through our not real clean kitchen window using a Sony cybershot DSC-H5 w/12x zoom. For other examples of the photos from this camera, see "Recent Photos" on the sidebar.

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