Saturday, November 6, 2010
Out and About: Round Lake Nature Notes November 2010
In mid-September, driving home from Michigan, through Ontario, Canada, I found myself in the midst of a monarch butterfly migration. One monarch after another fluttered over the highway. This continued for over two hundred miles! It amazed me and kept me entertained while driving. Surprisingly, I don’t think any hit my car, although I found myself occasionally ducking down. Mixed in with the monarchs were clouded and orange Sulphur butterflies. Back home, I checked on-line and discovered I had been driving through the Great Lakes monarch migration route. In my own garden this fall, monarchs fed on butterfly bush and asters. I planted a second butterfly bush after being so in awe of the monarch’s migration. I think it’s a marvel that they travel all the way to California and Mexico for the winter. Monarchwatch.org/waystations will tell you how to attract butterflies to your yard and become a waystation for these long-distance migrants.
In October, I went to the spot in the woods where I do a spring/summer bird study to see who was around for the fall. Passing the Peterson yards, I saw a flock of dark-eyed juncos flitting through the shrubs. I wondered where they had been all summer. Upon doing a little research, I discovered that they head for the hills in the spring, actually the higher elevations of the Appalachian Mountains and west into Canada. They come back east for the winter, earning them the nickname, snowbirds. Walking down the trail into the woods, I heard chickadees, nuthatches, crows and robins. After making a lot of noise crunching through fallen leaves I stood still and listened. A white-throated sparrow sang the first three notes of its song very softly. After about ten minutes I mainly heard and saw robins. They were busy eating wild grapes off vines twisted around trees or down on the ground flipping over leaves to find insects. I counted at least a dozen and noted how they flew through the pines with great speed and agility! Reading up on robins, I learned that they form flocks in the fall and winter and gather in trees to roost and eat berries.
A week later I visited the same spot to see what was going on. A bird flew up into a tree right in front of me. I put up my binoculars expecting to see a robin. Instead a bird with white eye rings, streaked chest, and pink legs and feet looked back at me. An ovenbird! I was surprised because as a migrant wood warbler I thought it would have headed south by now. Apparently, sometimes they linger around. Maybe it’ll stick around for the holidays!
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Thanks Diane for an interesting and informative blog. How wonderful it must have been to drive along with the butterflies. I am interested in learning more about our local birds, we have a cardinal family that lives next door. Am hoping to get some binoculars soon!
ReplyDeleteCathyB LVHS75
Very nice Diane! I may have to swing up your way with my camera and peek around!
ReplyDelete@Cathy - I love to watch the cardinals when I visit my Dad back in LV.
MarkA-LVHS75
Hi Cathy and Mark! Cathy- a great website is WWW.birds.cornell.edu and click on All About Birds. There's a lot of info that will help with identification, calls and behavior. Hey Mark-if you come up to Round Lake to take pictures let me know. There's a variety of birds on the lake. Bald eagles, osprey, great blue herons and double crested cormorants to name a few. In nice weather you can borrow one of our kayaks.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to know how long the wood warbler stayed, and why? Also, who coined the nomenclature, Ovenbird. Or dare I query.
ReplyDeleteI study behavior of the human kind. Hansel & Gretel come to mind as the closest kin to the Oven.
My notes do reflect similar characteristics.The latter based on cohort grouping, shared habitat, Social Learning Theory, Nature, biology, gender parental rearing practices, nutritional intake, etc. But there are the exceptions. A lot. Some behaviors defy "text book" empiricism. replicable, validated, interobservable reliability, and for the inevitable confounding variables.
Do you see diversity of behavior in the same bird species? What do you account for those observations.
The ovenbird gets its name from the shape of the nest it makes. That was the last sighting I had of it. At that time there was still food in the woods and he/she may have been following the flock of robins to find food. When the food ran out it was time to move on. As far as diversity of behavior in the same bird species, in my experience ,I do not see diversity.
ReplyDeleteThat's a cool-shaped birdnest. Gene thinks we might get the Yellow-Brested Warbler down here, but we can't the book.
ReplyDeleteGene & I think it would be nice to belong to the feathered species. Sometimes our species drive us crazy!