Sunday, April 23, 2023

This spring is for the birds!

Yesterday we had a number of what I believe were warblers hopping around the back yard. For reasons that aren’t clear to me, I’ve seen so few warblers over the years that I haven’t really paid much attention to identification and I’m not enough of a birder to have a life list. That said, I think there may have been a Bell’s Vireo and a Yellow-rumped Warbler Myrtle among the usual suspects checking out the feeders and the ground thereunder.

a mixed bag of birds
a mixed bag of birds
Photo by J. Harrington

Today we saw the first blossoms in the front flower garden. The Better half tells me that helebores and scilla are the culprits that have the effrontery to bloom while the back yard pond still develops overnight ice cover.

A couple of young fellows asked permission to hunt turkeys at the edge of our property. They made me realize how unseasonably cold the spring has been for an extended period. I’m glad I’m not trying to hunt in the weather we’ve been having. Working a turkey call or trying to align a head shot while shivering severely is not a productive situation. Funny, though, I’d probably consider the recent weather at the warm end for duck hunting.

That’s about it for today. At least I’m not a fan of Minnesota’s professional sports teams. This spring that would definitely be likely to add insult to injuries such as frost bite.


For the Birds


For the abundant along with the rare birds at my feeder of late
For all kinds of birds I’ve lived with here are turning rarer
For the chestnut-backed chickadee, who carries her sunflower chip to the buckthorn to dine on between her toes
For the chickadees once came to my feeder in bunches
For the big round plain brown pair of California towhees who eat in parallel from the bird-crumb table
For though they crumb it clean without a glance or a cheep, I believe this remote old couple is as entwined as any two polarized photons
For the fearsome indigo Steller’s jays, black hooded and crested, Tapper and Sly, as I call them
For Tapper taps twice on an overhanging plum branch at two clucks from my tongue so I’ll know him
For Sly hangs back and shrieks me over and only shows himself after I place on the table their morning quincunx of unsalted peanuts
For he knows Tapper will quack to announce them and then squawk indignantly when he slyly swoops in
For the vast majority
For the dark-eyed juncos, the wide-eyed titmice, the narrow-eyed redbreasted nuthatches, who feed right-side up as they see it, the other birds upside down
For Audubon’s yellow-rumped, Wilson’s and Townsend’s warblers, nobody’s birds, who feed, drink and breed as they can
For the song sparrow’s song and the sparrow who exults in singing it
For a song—how long will that phrase mean what it means
For them all I refill the feeder, even this morning, when all blown-down things crackle underfoot and the Diablo wind seems to growl diabolically and scrape from all corners at once against a sky the color of flint
For the lesser goldfinches, symbolically fierce, who part their beaks at any other kind who would peck a chip in their presence
For the pine siskins, their symbolic match, who used to expose their underwings back at them with its dreadful yellow stripe
For two years running, no siskins at the feeder
For the brown-crowned, as-yet-unkindled sparrows, wintering from Oregon or the Farallon Islands, I sing my two-note welcome, hel-low, pointless
For they won’t learn it with my face masked against wild smoke migrating from the north
For the species too little or big or otherwise unsuited for the feeder
For Anna’s hummingbirds, who love to suck on our pineapple sage
For the red-tailed hawk perched in the smoke-fogged redwood
For soon it’ll be pestered by a twister of crows cawing hawkawkawkawkaw
For a red-tailed hawk I mistook it—something larger, ruffled molten
For the golden eagle it turned out to be—weird—hunched in the chill
For another flew up out of thick air and followed it south out of eyeshot
For those two—not migrants—evacuees clasping their emotional baggage
For the birds, then, what have I to offer
For what kind of refuge is my catalog
For I can’t reckon how to make good their losses
For I meant not to make a life list I meant
For others to partake in my pleasure
For it pleases me to look after the birds


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Thanks for visiting. Come again when you can.
Please be kind to each other while you can.

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