Here we can see the butts of two pigeons who have decided that the eaves of my house, above the porch, are an acceptable substitute for a cliff face. It looks like some previous owner built a little box on this spot (the mirror-image side of the porch doesn't have this box) ...perhaps that person really loved the oh-so-melodious sounds of pigeons courting?
Meanwhile, on the side of the house, a robin has raided the recycling to make a cushy nest of used tissues.
There also seems to be a house finch pair trying to nest in the rafters above the porch, but it was so high up I didn't get a picture.
Looking forward to seeing some babies!
Monday, May 9, 2011
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Peregrine Falcon sighted at SF Palace of Fine Arts!
Haven't posted in a while, but I thought this was worth sharing. A co-worker at the Exploratorium, Walter Kitundu, recently took some great photos and video of a peregrine falcon that has been roosting on the Palace of Fine Arts. The dramatic friezes make for some picturesque shots!
Click the picture to go to the gallery:
PFA PEFA from Kitundu on Vimeo.
Another photographer, Glenn Nevill, also got some great shots of the falcon.Click the picture to go to the gallery:
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Elkhorn Slough
Back in June I went down south toward Monterey. I was dreaming that I'd perhaps spot a condor from Hwy 1 (there are sightings on ebird all along that area) but as it turns out during the summer, all the condors hang out inland. Even though I didn't find any condors, it was a nice drive along the rocky cliffs.
And there were plenty of other birds to spot. These black specks on the rocks turned out to be a bunch of murres and cormorants, nesting:
Murres are kind of like the penguins of the northern hemisphere. They're black and white, they swim after fish, they hold themselves upright... also, they can fly, so they'd probably win against penguins in a fight.
If you zoom in on the cormorants, you can just baaaaarely see that they have some purple and gold on their throats. That's how you know these are Brandt's cormorants and not your standard old double crested cormorants. Finally, a sea creature named after someone other than Steller!
Evidently these cormorants like to live near kelp beds... so seeing them around might mean that there's a good chance of seeing other kelp-loving things, such as floating logs:
Just kidding, those are totally sea otters.
While photographing them from some sand dunes near Elkhorn slough, we ran into a researcher who was collecting data on the otters' reactions to passing boats. Apparently there is a recommended approach distance (200 yards) but that number hasn't been actually been well-confirmed. So, whenever a boat passed, she had to record its distance from the otters (in otter-lengths) and the otters' reaction. Mostly their reaction was "continue being adorable."
We kayaked a bit and also spotted a pigeon guillemot. I didn't get a picture, but as one would expect from something with "pigeon" in the name, it had red feet and it was hanging out under a bridge that smelled like guano.
And, finally, here's a raven, familiar friend of cold, foggy lands.
Aaaaand, some rattlesnake grass.
And there were plenty of other birds to spot. These black specks on the rocks turned out to be a bunch of murres and cormorants, nesting:
Murres are kind of like the penguins of the northern hemisphere. They're black and white, they swim after fish, they hold themselves upright... also, they can fly, so they'd probably win against penguins in a fight.
If you zoom in on the cormorants, you can just baaaaarely see that they have some purple and gold on their throats. That's how you know these are Brandt's cormorants and not your standard old double crested cormorants. Finally, a sea creature named after someone other than Steller!
Evidently these cormorants like to live near kelp beds... so seeing them around might mean that there's a good chance of seeing other kelp-loving things, such as floating logs:
Just kidding, those are totally sea otters.
While photographing them from some sand dunes near Elkhorn slough, we ran into a researcher who was collecting data on the otters' reactions to passing boats. Apparently there is a recommended approach distance (200 yards) but that number hasn't been actually been well-confirmed. So, whenever a boat passed, she had to record its distance from the otters (in otter-lengths) and the otters' reaction. Mostly their reaction was "continue being adorable."
We kayaked a bit and also spotted a pigeon guillemot. I didn't get a picture, but as one would expect from something with "pigeon" in the name, it had red feet and it was hanging out under a bridge that smelled like guano.
And, finally, here's a raven, familiar friend of cold, foggy lands.
Aaaaand, some rattlesnake grass.
Point Reyes. "Reyes" in Spanish means "Crazy windy," right?
(Wrote this in May... finally posted...)
Lots of wildflowers blooming at Point Reyes.
I didn't managed to photograph many of them though, because they were waving around all crazy in the wind! (Wind not pictured; effects can be estimated by the angle of the tree.)
But this little sedum was a sturdy fellow:
Supposedly, lots of migrating birds are around too. The day I went there, though, the only birds I saw were migrating backwards--blown by the 100 mph winds.
Actually, the white-crowned sparrows were huddled in the bushes, and the ravens managed to use the wind to hover close to the hillside.
Though mostly they were just lurking on the ground.
Lots of wildflowers blooming at Point Reyes.
I didn't managed to photograph many of them though, because they were waving around all crazy in the wind! (Wind not pictured; effects can be estimated by the angle of the tree.)
But this little sedum was a sturdy fellow:
Supposedly, lots of migrating birds are around too. The day I went there, though, the only birds I saw were migrating backwards--blown by the 100 mph winds.
Actually, the white-crowned sparrows were huddled in the bushes, and the ravens managed to use the wind to hover close to the hillside.
Though mostly they were just lurking on the ground.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
House Finch Nest
Tom found a house finch nesting in the eaves of his work building.
The babies are pretty small and gross looking now. You can see the yellow edge of their mouths in this picture--the "gape."
Many baby birds have a color changing mouth--it's thought to help the parents see where to put the food. Baby finches have particularly interesting mouth-interiors. Some of them kind of look like they licked a psychelic black-light painting of a clown. I couldn't find a picture of the house finch's version though.
The babies are pretty small and gross looking now. You can see the yellow edge of their mouths in this picture--the "gape."
Many baby birds have a color changing mouth--it's thought to help the parents see where to put the food. Baby finches have particularly interesting mouth-interiors. Some of them kind of look like they licked a psychelic black-light painting of a clown. I couldn't find a picture of the house finch's version though.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Mt. Diablo: Spring
It's been 6 months since I last went to Castle Rock/Mt Diablo. It's rained quite a bit since then, which makes a big difference in the landscape, both birdy and flowery (as symbolized by this shot of poppies and a bluebird nest box).
Not a single acorn woodpecker showed itself, but I did spot a Nuttall's woodpecker fighting a bluebird for a nest cavity:
(FIERCE!)
And speaking of fierce, here's a terrible and blurry picture of a Cooper's Hawk lurking in the undergrowth.
Also going strong: lizards.
Darkling beetle in its tiny world:
Dragonfly
I think this is a tent caterpillar.
And the highlight of the season, all the flow'rs:
Blue dicks:
Owl's clover:
Monkey Flower (and a cool holey rock)
Not a single acorn woodpecker showed itself, but I did spot a Nuttall's woodpecker fighting a bluebird for a nest cavity:
(FIERCE!)
And speaking of fierce, here's a terrible and blurry picture of a Cooper's Hawk lurking in the undergrowth.
Also going strong: lizards.
Darkling beetle in its tiny world:
Dragonfly
I think this is a tent caterpillar.
And the highlight of the season, all the flow'rs:
Blue dicks:
Owl's clover:
Monkey Flower (and a cool holey rock)
Labels:
cooper's hawk,
flowers,
mt diablo,
nuttall's,
spring,
woodpeckers
Friday, April 16, 2010
Blackbirds
I mentioned to my co-worker that I was seeing blackbirds on my way to work, and she responded "big deal, blackbirds, they're everywhere, who cares?" Brewer's blackbird is, admittedly, one of those trashy birds that is usually seen lowering property values in McDonald's parking lots, but there's something special about them for me, because they're absent in winter, and every spring they return to the same cluster of trees to nest. They're like robins,but cranky. Some of them also may be Narnia fans--they like this one particular lampost:
I see them chasing each other, but the magical moment where one pecks my head is still just a dream...
And just because, here is a video of the Brewer's Blackbird's cousins, Red-Winged Blackbirds, singing in Briones:
I see them chasing each other, but the magical moment where one pecks my head is still just a dream...
And just because, here is a video of the Brewer's Blackbird's cousins, Red-Winged Blackbirds, singing in Briones:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)