-
Recent Posts
- Flickers mate in midair?
- Lunar eclipse, red with blue
- White-winged Crossbill
- Killdeer mid-Feb
- Trumpeter Swans a plenty
- Ice blocks on pond
- Muskrats
- Trumpeter family
- Icicles
- Dippers fighting
- Then there were two
- Tundra and Trumpeter
- Turkey display
- Fencing, whitetails
- Combative female whitetails
- Birds and berries
- Squirrel provisioning
- Horned Lark
- Black bears
- Grizzly sow & cub
- Eagles
- Two uncommon birds
- Steam devil
- Otter visit
- Squirrel’s find
- Canada Jay
- Black bear
- Feeding on spawners
- Pileated Woodpecker
- Red Crossbill and Pine Siskin
- Osprey and fish
- Sabine’s still here and
- Harrier chasing
- Juvenile Bald Eagle
- Sabine’s Gull
- Bear and fish
- Heron and
- Pileated Woodpecker
- Bear fishing
- Odd antlers
- Osprey captures
- Heron and fish
- Osprey and Kokanee
- Kingbird chicks
- Four dragonflies
- Heron nest, more
- Heron nest
- Flying birds
- Grizzlies
- Loons & Osprey
Archives
Categories
Subscribe/Unsubscribe
Category Archives: birds
Eurasian Wigeon
This seems to be a season for visitors that have wandered off course from the Coast. Last October there was a Pacific Loon, and a couple of days ago, a Eurasian Wigeon couple. I did not see the wigeon … Continue reading
Posted in birds
3 Comments
Mountain Bluebird
Mountain Bluebirds turn up in March. But, just try to get a picture this early in the season. A Mountain Bluebird hunts from a fence post for insects, something still difficult to find. From its perch, it headed out … Continue reading
Posted in birds
6 Comments
Dipper courtship
Throughout the winter, whenever I saw one dipper encounter another, the competitor was driven off. That all changed this fine sunny spring morning. In courtship, the male will strut and sing in front of the female. If he makes a … Continue reading
Posted in birds
Comments Off on Dipper courtship
A crest would be a drag
Only a few birds sport crests. A bird with a crest can raise or lower it, but will raise (erect) it to communicate aggression or sexual arousal. While a crest is sometimes lowered (collapsed) on a perched or floating … Continue reading
Posted in birds, commentary
4 Comments
Cormo‿rants
Cormorants are uncommon here. Monday was the first time I saw their breeding plumages. The Double-crested Cormorant is named for its breeding plumage: two tufts of feathers on its head. The eponymous crests might be either white or black. … Continue reading
Posted in birds
7 Comments
Hunting party
No sighting on the Lake quite matches that of a hunting party of Common Mergansers. They spread out in a phalanx as they hunt for fish, often with their heads down as they course across the water scouring the depths. … Continue reading
Posted in birds
3 Comments
Spring transition
We are having a transition to spring. Two days ago, a posting (still here) showed two birds that spring will send on their way. But yesterday, a friend spotted a Bald Eagle nesting on the north side of the … Continue reading
Posted in birds
Comments Off on Spring transition
Still here
Are we experiencing winter or signs of spring? Some wildlife still consider it to be winter. Pygmy Owls are altitudinal migrants: cold months are spent at the valley bottoms; warm months, high in the mountains. This one is still … Continue reading
Posted in birds
7 Comments
Redheads
Redheads are not common around the Lake, but there is something about a cold winter that draws them to the Nelson waterfront. About four dozen have been hanging around there for a while. The duck is named for the … Continue reading
Posted in birds
4 Comments
Dabbling pits
The low water of March is the time to see freshly exposed mud spotted with dabbling pits. Why mud? Why dabbling pits? Turn back the calendar to the normal water level of the previous summer. Waves wash the sandy … Continue reading →