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Dennis Goulet

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Winter Bird Photography

January 7, 2009 by Dennis

On December 20, 2008, we had a snowstorm that dropped 10 inches of snow in our yard.  Since we feed the birds a variety of foods, we attract a large variety of birds that say over the winter. Not only do we get the typically wintering birds such as Blue Jays, Chickadees, Cardinals, Juncos and Titmouse, we also have a resident Carolina Wren and a Northern Oriole which stay for the winter.  I believe the oriole is the same one that stayed last winter as it has learned to eat the variety of food we put out; peanuts, bread, and seeds from the feeders.  Orioles are insect feeders and have a soft bill so cracking seeds is not an option. This one has figured out, or learned by watching the others, how to perch on suet feeders as well as the tube feeders hanging in the yard.

The day after the storm, I went into the back yard to photograph birds while it was still snowing a bit to make the images shown here.

Bird photographs in my backyard, 2008

blue-jay-2.jpg
blue-jay.jpg
carolina-wren.jpg
downy-woodpecker.jpg

hairy-woodpecker.jpg
northern-cardinal-female.jpg
northern-oriole-2.jpg
northern-oriole.jpg

nothern-cardinal-male-2.jpg
nothern-cardinal-male.jpg
nothern-junco.jpg
red-bellied-woodpecker-2.jpg

red-bellied-woodpecker.jpg
Post Views: 42
Category: All Posts, Backyard, Birds, WinterTag: Backyard, Birds, Winter

Seeing is Believing

While mostly true, occasionally the eye can be fooled. This appears to be an earthworm on some leaf litter. It is. But the worm is four feet long and 1-2 inches in diameter. Photographed in Sumaco, Ecuador.

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