A light snow fell almost all day, but it
didn’t amount to much. In between doing other things I occasionally stepped
outside with camera in hand to photograph some of the birds at or around the
feeders. Like many people we feed birds in the winter, not to help them get
through the lean months – they can get along quite nicely without us – but
because we like to see them.
As usual, the black-capped chickadees, the
“little boys of the woods” as they are sometimes called, were virtually
fearless. They let me get within three or four feet before they flew and, if
the feeders hadn’t been almost full, would probably have eaten from my hand –
They were joined by their close relatives the
tufted titmice which are far less numerous and far more wary –
These birds feed throughout the woods in aggregations called feeding cohorts that also include white-breasted nuthatches
(the upside-down bird) –
Nuthatches habit of traveling head down along
large branches and tree trunks opens up feeding opportunities that other birds
miss. They also jamb nuts and large seeds in grooves in the bark and hack them
open with repeated blows from their beak.
Those cohorts usually include downy
woodpeckers which also eat sunflower seeds from the feeders –
They wedge the seeds in bark fissures and
pound them open with their beaks.
Other birds also visited the feeders:
goldfinch in their drab winter garb –
And the downy woodpecker’s larger cousin the
hairy woodpecker –
A special treat was the red-bellied
woodpecker with its brilliant red nape –
The largest birds that came this day were the
blue jays that swooped in and scattered all the other birds –
And mourning doves came to glean fallen seeds
and other scraps from the ground beneath the feeders –
Missing this relatively warm and snowless
winter were the northern birds that have graced the yard in such numbers in years when seed crops have failed in the far north. The common redpolls –
And pine siskins –
But always present are the squirrels that
also enjoy the sunflower seeds –
On another day, beside the common visitors,
we’ll see other species perhaps even some of those northern birds that have
been conspicuous by their absence this winter.