Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 June 2021

                          Brown-throated sunbird

A family of sunbirds came to visit us on April 7, 2021 here in Kuching Sarawak and have been coming back daily since then. Mom an dad arrived with four fledgelings in  tow looking for a safe place to leave the family amongst our orchids while they went about foraging to feed this hungry mob. This went on for a few days with the family coming early in the morning and leaving before nightfall. On April 10 only two of the youngsters arrived and then on the April 15 only one arrived, but this little fellow stayed with us for another two weeks. It has been an entertaining time for us watching this family. The two in the photos below, sure did like to mimic each other.








                                                 ^^   Male Brown-throated sunbird  ^^
                                                   ^^ Male Brown-throated sunbird  ^^
                                   ^^ Female Brown -throated sunbird in Aloe vera flowers  ^^
                                     ^^  Male Brown_throated sunbird in Aloe vera flowers  ^^
 


Friday, 16 May 2014

Sandhill crane

^^Pitt Meadows, B.C.
^^Pitt Meadows, B.C.

^^Pitt Meadows, B.C.

^^Pitt Meadows ,B.C.

^^Pitt Meadows, B.C






Friday, 11 October 2013

Info cards about Great Yards

Yardmap from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology is 
a free, social, interactive, citizen science mapping project
about habitat creation and low-impact land use




Cornell Lab of Ornithology Yardmap project
Collect the cards at YardMap Facebook or YardMap Pinterest

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Piliated woodpeckers, family affair

 
 

 
^^Pileated woodpeckers mating - May 2010

 
^^ fledgling Pileated woodpecker 
- Aug. 2010 - Maple Ridge B.C. Canada

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Counting woodpeckers

STILL WANTED:
Lewis’s Woodpecker
The Lewis’s Woodpecker or Melanerpes
lewis occurs throughout much of BC’s
Southern Interior, but is most abundant
in the Okanagan Valley. Federally, the
Lewis’s Woodpecker is considered to be
a threatened species due to its small
and locally distributed populations,
restricted range, and loss of habitat.
It is estimated that fewer than 1000
individuals occur in the province.
This bird has a glossy greenish-black
head, back, wings and tail, a rosy belly, grey collar and breast and
a red face. Its flight pattern is distinctive from other woodpeckers.
Lewis’s Woodpeckers fly slow and direct, similar to crows or jays, with
long glides and aerial manoeuvres. It nests in cavities of Ponderosa
Pine, Douglas Fir, or Cottonwood trees.
The nesting period of this migratory woodpecker is mid-June to mid/
late-July. We need your help in recording sightings and nest
trees of this rare woodpecker. If you spot a Lewis’s Woodpecker or
identify a nest tree, please report it to the Wildlife Tree Stewardship
Program Coordinator, Lisa Scott, at 250-404-0115 or email her at
witsos@shaw.ca.

Thank you for the many reported sightings thus far. Please continue
to watch out for the Lewis’s Woodpecker throughout July and call or
email if you see one and/or their nest trees. Thank you very much!
source: Wildlife Tree Stewardship Program/2013