Interesting Sightings in My Yard

With COVID restrictions and below-freezing temperatures, I haven’t been going out beyond my own yard much. It can be pretty depressing when your birdwatching is limited to the chickadees out your window! Still, I’ve had a pretty great week. On Tuesday, I reported the Common Grackle that’s been hanging around my feeders all winter to eBird, and it counted as a rarity for this time of year, which was pretty exciting for me. Grackles are normally migratory birds, and all the others flew south last October. This guy, though, stuck around. I was an hour into watching the feeders when he showed up for just a few seconds, but I spent another half-hour waiting for him with the camera until he came back long enough to photograph! It payed off plenty, though, to get those shots.

Common Grackle in January!

The very next day, I happened to be looking out the window (not very surprising, do I do anything else?) when something landed in a tree above one of my feeders. All I saw was a flurry of wings, so I thought it was a Pileated Woodpecker, a fairly unusual bird in my yard. I went and got the camera in hopes of getting some pictures of it, but by the time I returned, it had moved onto a different branch where it was much easier to see, and I realized it was a hawk! I absolutely love raptors, so that was better than a Pileated. Within seconds, it was mobbed by the Blue Jays at the feeders and got out of there, but I got good enough photos to identify it as a Cooper’s Hawk. It was covered in brown streaks instead of red barring, so it must’ve been a juvenile. I hope he found something to eat elsewhere!

Juvenile Cooper’s Hawk

Both of those were exciting, but neither was a new species for me, so my favorite sighting this week was definitely on Friday, when something unusual turned up during my window-watching. What I thought was a Blue Jay landed at the very top of a big evergreen, a popular spot for jays, but when I fixed my binoculars on it, I realized this was something different. It was grey, with a shorter and slightly rounder bill than Blue Jays, and had black-and-white patches on its wings. I immediately knew this was a Northern Shrike- one for the life list! I love it when a new species turns up right in my own backyard. I grabbed my camera, but it flew away before I could get a picture, and didn’t come back no matter how long I waited. I braved the outdoors to look for it, but though I saw a lovely Ring-necked Pheasant, I just couldn’t find that shrike! I’m still holding out hope that it’s lurking somewhere in the neighborhood, and that it’ll come back to my yard soon, but until then, I’m content with a short sighting of an awesome bird to add to my life list.

Winter Waiting

These days it’s so cold out I have to really bundle up just to fill the feeders, but even those little five-minute trips have some interesting sightings. Today I saw a Mourning Dove, which isn’t very common in my yard. I’ve also seen lots of Northern Cardinals at the feeders, and yesterday I found a flock of twenty House Sparrows out my window, eating seeds off the ground. I even saw a Common Grackle, a species which has usually migrated by now, eating fallen seeds below my feeder this morning! And of course, there are always plenty of Black-capped Chickadees, which make me smile no matter how cold it is.

Black-capped Chickadees are the friendliest birds at the feeders, and tough for their size- they stick out the winter with me instead of heading south.

Winter can be pretty dull for a birder, since so many birds have gone south- only a few hardy species join us humans in toughing out the winter here. I haven’t seen any winter finches this year, which is a disappointment, but luckily or unluckily there’s still a lot of winter left for that to happen!

One of the only things for me to look forward to this winter, as far as birding goes, is the trip to Sax-Zim Bog I’m hoping to make. I went last year, and it was a blast! This year, I’m hoping to find some owls- the bog is known as a hotspot for owl sightings, but last year I didn’t see a single one. I only wish I could visit during the annual Winter Bird Festival, which is canceled this year due to COVID-19. Still, I’m really excited just to be there and hopefully rack up some new species! In the meantime, I’ve been lurking on their website, which is awesome and even includes some video birding trips for those of us who can’t wait to visit.

I saw this Canada Jay at Sax-Zim Bog last year. It was such an amazing experience!

So until that happens, I’ll be filling the feeders and watching out the window- got to save up all the warmth I can before I brave a day in the cold!

Making A DIY Plastic Bottle Feeder

I was very excited to welcome the first day of spring, which arrived this past week! Unfortunately, I had a problem. This whole week has been super windy, and one of my feeders, which I’ve had for probably ten years, was knocked down and the base literally broke off, leaving a hazardous broken edge. Obviously, I didn’t want to just hope my birds wouldn’t cut their feet on it, so I took the nearest feeder material – a plastic limeade bottle – and set out to make a replacement that would attract every bird in the neighborhood. Here’s what I did!

The base of my feeder – or what’s left of it!

I had never made this type of feeder before, and there were no ‘how-to’ videos about making one out of a limeade bottle on the internet, so I decided to take inspiration from the classic bottle-and-spoon feeder, and wing it from there. I don’t have any experience with power tools, so I got some help with cutting four holes on each side. Two sides were for bigger birds, with a perch farther below the seed openings, and the other two were for small ones, with perches closer to the holes. I also had the narrow top cut off, to make filling it easier.

Limeade bottle marked with Sharpie where I planned to cut.

The next step was to make the perches. I was going to use wooden spoons like the traditional spoon-and-bottle version, but it turned out they didn’t fit the holes, so I used un-sharpened pencils instead. They actually fit pretty well! That one used the spoon shape to catch any seeds that fell from the holes, but since mine didn’t use spoons, I couldn’t do that, so I attempted putting something there to do that instead. That didn’t work, and as I was using large sunflower seeds and my feeding ports were pretty small, I decided it would be fine without.

Now it was time for the final touches! I strung a cord through two of the seed openings to hang it from, and then to spruce it up, decorated it with some ribbon bows.

The finished product!

And there you have it! I’m pretty proud of it, though it looks a little scrappy due to my relative inexperience with making feeders like this. I don’t have any photos of it hanging, but I’ll provide those once I get some!