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Friday
May012015

Spring birding

If this family/homeschooling blog is beginning to look a little like a naturalist's birding blog, well, it's a temporary but hopefully enjoyable shift. Although we will be spending all summer doing science in the field, over the next few weeks we will be focusing on three ideas—spring wildflowers, wild animal reproduction, and bird migration—and to focus on these things, especially the last one, the next few weeks are crucial as our local birds return and a brilliant rainbow of rarities pass through on their way elsewhere.

Over the next two to three weeks we'll hopefully get out for almost daily hikes in local birding hotspots. Our science goal is to observe bird migrating tendencies, compare male and female characteristics, and hopefully observe mating habits. Another goal is to see as many migrating species as possible (collect them all!), and practice our bird IDing. So far we've already seen about different 50 species, most of them local or winter birds. I'll share our list some time soon.

Dolph Nature Area

Northern Rough-winged Swallow (summer resident)

Wood Duck (summer resident)

Cedar Waxwing (resident)

Scio Woods Nature Preserve

Red-bellied Woodpecker (nesting, resident)

Swamp Sparrow (summer resident; our first unique sparrow ID!)

Field Sparrow (summer resident; our second unique sparrow ID, on the same day as the first. Note the different beak color and lack of distinct eye stripe and head cap)

Painted turtles

Yellow Trout Lilly (one of Michigan's earliest spring wild flowers)


Dolph Nature Area

Tree Swallow (nesting, summer resident)

Eastern Phoebe (summer resident)

Great Blue Heron (summer resident, possible winter vagrant)

Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (summer resident)

American Robin (resident; beautiful variation on the color!)

Swamp sparrow (again; summer resident)

Yellow Warbler (summer resident; first warbler to return)

Fox Squirrel

Eastern Kingbird (summer resident)

Eastern Bluebird (summer resident, possible resident)

Cedar Waxwing (again; summer resident)

Friday
May012015

Week 17, in pictures

April 23: The early bird
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

April 24: Two by two
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

April 25: Frame filled
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

April 26: The right light
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

April 27: Highlight
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

April 28: Under a canopy
by Cortney

 

April 29: Candlelight
by Calvin

Sunday
Apr262015

Deep freeze spring

Of course right after I posted about spring being in full swing, and right after a weekend of beautiful, sunny, seventy-degree weather, we woke up on Monday to snow showers. I love snow, but I love it best in the winter. Right about now I'm done with it.

Snow or no, though, we got our weekly hike(s) in. The forest floor is really beginning to look green, and the bird species are increasingly active. We're still a week or so away from when the migration will really take off (pun intended), but we're seeing plenty of fun flutterings in the tree tops already. Here's a few highlights.

At Independence Lake on Thursday, we bundled up and braved the wind for about an hour and rewarded with a welcome party: walking towards the lake from the parking lot we found hundreds of swallows diving as only swallows do. We observed without disturbing them for as long as we could, but when we got too cold we went ahead and walked through their ranks towards the woods on the other side. We expected them to leave the area, or at least to part the seas, but they kept right on going. There were a few close calls, in fact. The rest of the hike was unremarkable, except for the biting cold, and the Sandhill Crane that was waiting for us at the edge of the woods.

Over the weekend the three of us went together to two preserves that were entirely new to us. On Saturday we spent a couple of hours hiking an old wood/swamp area on the edge of preserved farm land. The entire time we were serenaded by a Brown Thrasher perched high in the tree tops. That was a new one for us, and a very intersting one, too. He's a mimic, and his song was so varied that at times we were convinced he had to be two different birds.

Then on Sunday we went on a guided birding hike with our favorite county parks naturalist. Although it was sunny, it was still pretty cold at 8am, and the hike itself wasn't entirely successful as far as bird species go. We saw one Hermit Thrush, a few Kinglets, and some odds and ends sparrows, but on the way home we stopped to enjoy an American Coot that was floating around in some farm-edge wetlands. That was another new one for our species list.

Independence Lake

Barn Swallow

Sandhill Crane

Black-capped Chickadee

DeVine Nature Preserve

White-throated Sparrow

Brown Thrasher

(photo by Calvin)

Mayapples (photo by Calvin)

(photo by Calvin)

Brauer Nature Preserve

Chipping Sparrow

Song Sparrow

Ruby-crowned Kinglet

Ruby-crowned Kinglet

American Coot

Thursday
Apr232015

Week 16, in pictures

April 16: Naturally Bright
by Calvin

by Cortney

 

April 17: Flashy
by Calvin

by Cortney

 

April 18: Collection
by Calvin

by Cortney

 

April 19: Symmetry
by Calvin

by Cortney

 

April 20: Words
by Calvin

by Cortney

 

Apri l21: Both sides match
by Calvin

by Cortney

 

April 22: Hands full
by Calvin

by Cortney

Sunday
Apr192015

Full swing spring

Though the forecast for the coming week is less than rosy, this weekend we're enjoying delightful spring weather with warm temperatures and brilliant sunshine. And the birds, blissfully unaware of weatherchannel.com, are going on with their usual spring travel plans. The first wave of migrators is here, and on our hike this weekend we spotted our first warblers of the season. Things are really picking up, and we are looking forward to the spring birding explosion over the next few weeks.

American Robin

Painted turtles

six Bufflehead ducks (three male, three female), with one Lesser Scaup (female) right in the middle

Red-bellied woodpecker

Red-winged Blackbird (female)

Red-winged Blackbird (male)

Yellow Rumped Warbler

Palm Warbler

can you find the moth? (by Calvin)

an acorn growing (by Calvin)

feather (by Calvin)