Sunday, November 21, 2010

Dogwood berries and rusty blackbirds


Dogwood berries are a popular food item with the outdoor critters. As the fall progresses our anticipation of the dogwood berry feasting spectacle grows. Who will come this year? For the last month squirrels have taken some. Mockingbirds appeared and began guarding trees. Then in mid November robins descended and began munching.

We speculate on what brings on the invasion. Are the berries "ripe" enough? Does a roaming flock come through the area and eats what it finds? I suspect the answer is the latter as everyone's trees are stripped at different times. Then there are berries on other tree species that remain untouched.

This year there were lots of American Robins, a few mockingbirds, some Northern flickers showing off those golden feathers and a few Rusty Blackbirds. No starlings or grackles were seen at the trees this season.





One of the blackbirds was caught in a mist net and so I obtained the close up photographs of the exquisite rusty edgings on feathers. The detail is rarely visible when a bird is viewed through binoculars amongst leaves in the uneven lighting of a tree.



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