conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
We definitely have a white-throated sparrow somewhere and a chipping sparrow and field sparrows - this may go a long way to explaining why I couldn't quite identify that other sparrow if it's three different species pretending to be one... and possibly also two birds I'm sure I've never seen before in my life, much less my yard, a carolina wren and a red winged blackbird! (And a goldfinch... I'm editing as I listen, guys. Edit: And a house wren and a tufted titmouse and an eastern towhee and a killdeer... and an american kestrel and a chimney swift and a northern flicker... and a red eyed vireo...)

Now, how do I lure them into my yard so I can see them?

Also, way back when I was a kid I read a book The Hermit Thrush Sings by Susan Butler, and sometime later, as an adult, I was reminded of that book and looked up the song of the hermit thrush. And then this year I looked the bird up and saw that the reference photo on whatever website was taken in Union Square, and if you can find hermit thrushes in Union Square you've gotta be able to find them on the North Shore. Or at least in a park, I'm thinking? Like a park park, not Union Square? So now that's my dream for this year. Gotta dream big!

(Well, it's not impossible. There are wild rabbits (hares?) on Staten Island, and just a few days ago one of my neighbors claims she saw a deer in the back alley, which is just wild to me, because I was pretty sure they weren't this far North on the Island. Actually, I think the city is still selling the story that they just swim over from Jersey, but that's ridiculous, there is definitely an established population Mid-Island and probably another one on the South Shore. But the point is, there was one here on our block, which is unprecedented.)

Date: 2024-04-28 12:58 pm (UTC)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
From: [personal profile] redbird
Oh, I miss living next to the water in New York City! The whole city is along the Eastern Flyway, so you'll get a lot of birds migrating through.

Red-winged blackbirds nest near water, often in low shrubs. We saw them moderately often in Inwood Hill Park, the bit that's right along the Harlem River, with a baby tidal marsh. (One once attacked me for coming to close to its nest in the Bronx Zoo: I didn't realize they were nesting in a rose bush, when I leaned over to smell the flowers.

We used to see killdeer on the mudflat at the edge of the marsh, when the tide was low enough to expose the mud.

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