It's been a terrific year for the birds that come to the oriole feeder; including the Baltimore and orchard orioles, indigo buntings, purple finches, catbirds, rose-breasted grosbeaks and red-bellied woodpeckers. Sometimes a ruby-throated hummingbird will pay a call. Anecdotally, I've observed more orchard orioles than in any previous year.
Best of all, for a couple of weeks the fledglings of all of the foregoing are now coming to the feeders to be fed by mom and dad before figuring it out on their own. By the time you read this I will have gone thru fifteen, 32 ounce (two pound) jars of grape jelly and a pile of navel oranges. And taken thousands of digital images with a trail camera strapped to a post on the west side of the porch.
Anyway, here's a selection of this year's graduating class since the last time I've reported on the subject.
Fun Fact: Fledglings of these species oftentimes look like females. They're all adult-sized. Male orchard orioles share the coloration of a female (the lack the distinctive ruddy brownish red of an adult male) but share the distinctive black hood and bib of an adult male.
No comments:
Post a Comment