Thursday, July 30, 2009

Gold Finches


To encourage goldfinches into your yard, plant native thistles, sunflowers and other composite plants, as well as native milkweed. Almost any kind of bird feeder may attract American Goldfinches, including hopper, platform, and hanging feeders, and these birds don’t mind feeders that sway in the wind. You’ll also find American Goldfinches are happy to feed on the ground below feeders, eating spilled seeds. They’re most attracted to sunflower seed and nyjer, which is a thistle seed.

Thursday, July 23, 2009


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The killdeer (Charadrius vociferus) is a medium-sized plover.
Adults have a brown back and wings, a white belly, and a white breast with two black bands. The rump is tawny orange. The face and cap are brown with a white forehead. They have an orange-red eyering. The chicks are patterned almost identically to the adults, and are precocial — able to move around right after hatching. The killdeer frequently uses a "broken wing act" to distract predators from the nest.
Their breeding habitat is open fields or lawns, often quite far from water, across most of Canada, the United States, and Mexico, with isolated populations in Costa Rica and in the Pacific coast of South America. Killdeer nest on open ground, often on gravel. They may use a slight depression in the gravel to hold the eggs, but they do not line it at all, or line it only with a few stones. Since there is no structure to stand out from its surroundings, a killdeer nest blends marvelously into the background. Furthermore, the speckled eggs themselves look like stones.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

FOLK ART WELCOME BIRDHOUSE


Invite a family of feathered friends to help you welcome all visitors in true countrystyle! This quaint ceramic birdhouse has the homespun appearance of a handmade treasure. Even the little birds will enjoy the roominess of this backyard birdhouse.

Monday, July 13, 2009

The Birth of Hummingbirds...


This made the rounds a few years ago - but it is worth seeing again. Enjoy......

Birth of a hummingbird This is beautiful and probably once in a lifetime experience, not many pictures.The Birth of Hummingbirds...Keep in mind the egg is smaller than a tic tac and a quarter fits theopening of the nest!This is truly amazing.Be sure to click on NEXT PAGE at the bottom of each page; there are 5pages in all. The last picture is amazing, the size comparison!A lady found a hummingbird nest and got pictures all the way from theegg to leaving the nest.It took 24 days from birth to flight. Because you'll probably never inyour lifetime see this again, enjoy; and please share. http://community-2.webtv.net/Velpics/HUM/

Monday, July 6, 2009

Birdhouses Plus: Hummingbirds

Birdhouses Plus: Hummingbirds

Hummingbirds


This past weekend we traveled to Missouri to visit with Uncle Les and his wife Rhonda. If you've been following along, you know how much we love birds....especially hummingbirds. I was so entralled I had to write again about the hummingbirds. Everyone always seems excited when they see a hummingbird. They are so small, and their ability to hover is a wonderment. We sat for hours watching their feeders!! Never have I seen so many hummingbirds at once!!! There must have been ten or twelve and on the last evening closer to twenty. Their feeders were hung from the patio roof so we were very close, in fact, we were able to stand within inches of the feeders watching these little guys come in for their treat.
They had 4 feeders. One hummingbird was named Moe and he would guard "his" feeder carefully, not letting the others come close much less drink from it. Besides the hum produced from their flying there was also some chattering which I had never before heard. Moe actually scolded the others as they attempted to fly near his feeder. I learned so much more about their traits as I studied them. If you don't have a feeder you really should get one, there are so many on the market, you will surely find one that fits into your decor. Won't you like to give it a try?