April 13th trip to Highbanks Metro Park. We were going to join the Columbus Audubon outing that afternoon in the rain. We thought there would only be a couple of people there, but we were wrong -- a couple of dozen showed up. We didn't stick around for most of the walk since I was still pretty tired from the 2 am arrival time that morning. I did take some photos from the feeder area.
There were a lot of different woodpeckers around the feeders, including this cute Downy.
Chipping Sparrow
Another Downy Woodpecker
Field Sparrow
Red-bellied Woodpecker
White-breasted nuthatch
Tufted Titmouse
Another view
Jack-of-all-trades, master of some pretty much describes my life. This blog has several themes: wood turning, photography, travel, science, fieldwork, family, friends, music, and miscellaneous things I encounter. I hope you enjoy it - feel free to leave a comment to let me know you've been here.
Friday, April 25, 2008
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Quick Denver trip last weekend
I flew to Denver, Colorado April 10th, and back home again on the 12th (well, actually, because of flight delays I arrived home at 2:30 am on the 13th). We had been having beautiful springtime weather in Ohio, but there was a bit of snow that had just fallen in Colorado - 8 inches in some areas. This is the view I had at the hotel where I stayed for the two nights I was in town.
Friday morning was for a quick trip to the Denver Botanic Garden to pull some specimens of Penstemon and representatives of Scrophulariaceae s.l. for some workshops I would be leading the next day for the Colorado Native Plant Society.
I had not been here before, and so it was fun to see the place.
It's a relatively new facility and it looked very modern. There were hundreds of school kids arriving as we finished the work in the herbarium.
Here's a view of the atrium area of the building.
I gave a talk at University of Colorado, Denver for the biology department at noon and then met with faculty and students for the rest of the afternoon. My host was Leo Bruederle, and he brought me in to visit with his students who are working on Penstemon.
My workshops were scheduled to start at 9 am on Saturday. Leo is an early riser and I was on east coast time, so we organized to meet very early so we could go do some birding at Cherry Creek State Park. The first bird of the day was a life bird for me - Western Meadowlark. I know I've seen this species when I was a kid growing up in Oregon, but I wasn't keeping a list back then.
The song is similar, but distinctly different from the Eastern Meadowlark (pic posted a couple of weeks ago).
AHV alert!
This was the start of an interesting display behavior that began when I approached too near this Killdeer. It might have been near its nest, but I couldn't tell for sure.
The bird fanned its tail feathers and wagged its tail for several minutes.
It pretty much kept its back to me the entire time.
After a few minutes, it quit doing that behavior and then just kept its eye on me. I always thought killdeers were rather plain, but in their fresh plumage I think they are very pretty.
The reservoir was chock full of aquatic fowl, including white pelican, hooded merganser (shown here), western grebe, pied-bill grebe, American coot, Canada goose, mallards, and California gulls.
This gull was all tangled up in fishing line. I felt pretty bad for it.
Here's a juvenile California gull.
American White Pelican. I have no idea why that growth is on the upper bill - most of the pelicans looked like this.
Lots of American coots were on the water.
I did two workshops for CONPS - one on the break up of Scrophulariaceae, and a second one on my Penstemon research.
L to R: Leo Bruederle, Lorain Yeats, Carol English.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Look's who's coming for breakfast
I've been pretty busy all this month, but I found a couple of minutes to start processing some pictures I took Apr 2, 2008. There was a juvenile Cooper's Hawk scoping out our backyard feeders.
We feed a nice variety of birds (cardinals, house finches, goldfinches, song sparrows, yellow-throated sparrows, Eastern Towhee, grackles, blue jays, red-bellied woodpecker, downy woodpecker, northern flicker, mourning dove, robins, carolina wren, and many more). We noticed this winter that we're also feeding Cooper's hawks - one snatched a goldfinch from the feeder only about four feet from where I was watching.
Two additional views: