Gorgeous pics @Welshman1952, especially the baby robin - they are so impossibly cute!Apologirs for my disappearance ... a nasty case of family responsibilities got in the way if my nature ramblings.
Anyway, while I was out birding today, I managed to capture this handsome little Sand Martin in mid flight. Thought I'd share it along with one or two others from my stroll around the reserve.
Hope you enjoy.
Sounds like a full-time job!Thank you for the info @debrasue. My hubby is the birdman so I'll pass the info on to him presently. He's currently filling the bird baths for the fourth time today. We have two sizeable stone baths set into our garden plus drinking stations and as we have had no rain for over three weeks now keeping the baths topped up is labour (his) intensive at the moment.
Bless.... Nothing like cuddling up to your pillowcase and finding that a bird has been there before you! LOLYep! Ditto. Plus, we have old-fashioned washing lines where the birds perch, then deposit their doings all over the clean laundry as thanks for feeding them
Feisty, too - they are taking on all comers, yet they're tiny little chaps!Lovely pics @debrasue they are handsome wee fellows
What a beautifully descriptive piece of writing, Galja! It makes me long to be there.....As we have three kinds of mosquitos in the DC area that can literally kill you, we have to be careful about standing water but I've noticed many birds taking dust baths.
Today a quite gigantic raven was swooping over the Potomac River as I was stuck on one of its bridges. I thought it a real blessing to have come at that moment when I was stopped so I could enjoy its flight, rushing swirling water below, a lovely cerulean sky and the only other creature moving, bikers in various states of undress.
As we have three kinds of mosquitos in the DC area that can literally kill you, we have to be careful about standing water but I've noticed many birds taking dust baths.
Today a quite gigantic raven was swooping over the Potomac River as I was stuck on one of its bridges. I thought it a real blessing to have come at that moment when I was stopped so I could enjoy its flight, rushing swirling water below, a lovely cerulean sky and the only other creature moving, bikers in various states of undress.
What's the problem with the crickets? Too noisy?And here I was mourning the fact that it is high season for North Carolina Cave Crickets, our prehistoric local friends. Diplomats get tropical pay for having to endure Washington summers
Our cave crickets have been in the US since prehistoric times. After an earthquake we had that was 5.8, my chimney cracked a little and tiles came loose inside . We started having humndreds of the save crickets but didn't know they were living in the chimney. TRhe darlings were part of the reason we decided to reline in metal instead of clay, both flues :
http://www.yourwildlife.org/2012/03/a-cliff-notes-guide-to-camel-crickets/
There's also a greyish brown kind, locally. One above is more or less life size. The only thing you can do is glue traps since they jump very high and are therefore hard to catch.
http://www.yourwildlife.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/P2231666.jpg
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