Tag Archives: Audubon Society

Birds in the Yard

When I opened the back blinds this morning, the first thing I saw was the impossibly vivid red of one of the resident cardinals feeding in the grass. A mourning dove sat serenely in a feeder and a migrating yellow … warbler? goldfinch? … grabs a bite of sunflower seeds from a hanging feeder in the Rose of Sharon. Before long, a hummingbird swoops in on the freshly filled feeder hanging on the back porch, back on the mountain after its annual northern migration across the Gulf of Mexico.

I’ve begun to think of my current existence as a full-time caregiver as a hermitage and the back yard activities (and a book) provide entertainment and release. I keep the feeders filled, scatter more seed in the grass, and am aware of the birds fluttering to the nearby trees to watch and chatter among themselves whenever I emerge to maintain the services. I go about my tasks and go inside and to the window to watch as they return to their business. If I sit quietly on the porch glider, they will resume despite me, and I can get a closer look. Or maybe a decent photo.

A squirrel will join in on occasion and eat its fill; the spicy bird mix I scatter doesn’t seem to deter the squirrels and that doesn’t bother me. The chipmunk that has burrowed its own hermitage under a small storage shed in the back makes cautious and fleeting appearances; when Lulu the intrepid chihuahua was still alive, she’d begin and end each backyard foray by sniffing at the chipmunk tunnel. She was thinking I know you’re there. Come out please! Actually, I have no idea what Lulu was thinking but it’s easy to assign personalities to them all as they scurry about.

Some fowl are easily identifiable for me, and others fall into categories like “little grey bird.” I hesitate to be more specific for fear of misidentification; I’ve been called on it by eagle-eyed readers in the past. I frequently have a pocket-sized copy of a color-coded “Birds of Alabama” handy and a heavy volume of Audubon’s The Birds of America sits on the coffee table at my house. I contribute to Audubon societies, but when I am offered access to a bird-watching expedition, I pass. I prefer to be a solo wanderer in the bird world, blissful in my relative ignorance, identifying what is readily identifiable and leaving the others at peace. If I have a need to know, I can easily find out. The birds know who they are and I don’t have to be a maven of identification. (On a related note, have you ever been to a truly serious wine tasting? Pretty joyless affair, isn’t it? They spit it out!?!)

Happy Spring, whether it’s in the backyard or far afield. Or maybe you’ve just flown across the Gulf of Mexico.

The Birds of Autumn

Through an unusually hot and deplorable November amid drought conditions, the activity of the birds at the backyard feeders has provided respite. Trees and plants seem confused and bees, wasps, flies, and mosquitoes are taking advantage of the extended warmth, but butterflies have recently been spotted in the lantana that still bloomed in the raised bed until this week. Every time Lulu, the dog, goes out, a mosquito comes in.

The bird population seems to have thinned out but they still frequent the feeders. Cardinal sightings are more likely in early morning and dusk and the mourning doves still come in groups but they don’t hang out on the fence quite as much. I always leave the hummingbird feeders out longer than necessary; I always think there may be a stray after the rest have left. In fact, the last hummingbird we saw this year was quite late and seemed more frantic than usual to get fed and get gone around the time a hurricane was churning down in the Gulf.

A murder of crows converge on occasion. Lulu loves to dash out the door to chase them away. On first chase, the crows usually just fly up into a nearby pine to wait her out. If we go back out and I clap my hands and she barks, black crows can be seen scattering off in all directions, caw-fussing as they go. Once, I banged some pot lids and Lulu joined in with her happy dance, hopping up and down on her front legs. Neighbors were pleased with the commotion, no doubt.

A frost is forecast for sometime next week. Maybe some rain. I dread cold weather, but the earth sorely needs it. The plants will save up some energy, the leaves that haven’t decided yet will turn. I have tried to let the last grass mowing wait for the leaves to fall but it’s past time to mow the grass and the leaves can just take their time. The bugs will go away. The birds that stay will stay. The birds that go away will go.

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I didn’t realize it until recently, but I have found some peace in watching birds as long as I can remember. Even when they are acting up, they bring me peace. The grace and freedom they seem to represent may be part of the attraction. My grandparents had glass bird figurines on the mantel, in the china cabinet, and around the house, one of which lingers on my mother’s mantel. I have been looking at those cardinals all my life.  Mother also has a cabinet full of hummingbird-related items – plates, figurines, ornaments. My one and only piece of Howard Finster art is a white crane sculpture covered with his scribbled preaching. “My entire life is a sacrifice for you,” he writes.

Margaret Renkl’s book, The Comfort of Crows: A Backyard Year, is a beautiful book of essays published last year. Renkl knows how to watch and appreciate birds and savor the nature all around us if we just pay attention. A big edition of Audubon’s The Birds of America sits on the coffee table in my living room. I visit it often when I am at home. In admiration for Mr. Audubon’s work, I contribute to the Audubon Society. I support the society’s mission, but I’m not really interested in becoming a “birder.” I can identify the birds that I need to identify by their obvious characteristics, but I don’t identify the ubiquitous small greyish birds that are delightful and plentiful and look too much alike to my untrained eye. I misidentified a nesting bird in this space a year or two ago and got my hands slapped by a reader. So I appreciate them, but I keep their (perhaps mistaken) identity to myself. An organized bird-watching expedition sounds as deadly dull to me as the wine aficionado who can’t enjoy the glass without extemporizing ad nauseum on its qualities (or lack of). It’s kind of like a round of golf; I’m bored with the game but I enjoy the walk in nature.

Rarely am I aware when a bird has died. They come and go and I like to assume that the returnees are the same birds I watched last year and years before. I guess that’s the reason I think Alison Krauss and Gillian Welch’s version of the old hymn “I’ll Fly Away” would be a good selection for my funeral, if I have one.

‘tis the season for pensive posts, I guess. This is what’s on my mind this morning. So savor your birds. Enjoy their songs. Feed them and protect them to the extent possible. Make it a good fall. Despite …