Birds and Beers Reminder

This is a reminder that there's a Birds and Beers Saturday at Nelson Creamery (right across the river from The National Eagle Center in Wabasha.  I'll be at the Eagle Center all day at a Swarovski booth giving pro cleanings to optics then the Birds and Beers is from 4pm - 6pm.  Stop by and say hi!  Should be GREAT eagle watching weather and sandhill cranes have been reported there all week.  Take advantage of this early spring day before the river floods.

Birdchick Podcast #13 Migration, Nest Watch & Punk Rock Big Year

For Friday's podcast, we covered migration, big years, Cornell Lab or Ornithology and...Nicholas Cage (don't see Wicker Man but do see Moonstruck). BadBirdz Migration RADAR--for all your spring migration predictions.

Hummingbirds.net for all your spring ruby-throated hummingbird reports

A live cam of an Allen's Hummingbird nest.

Project Nest Watch

March Madness Bird Bracket.

Punk Rock Big Year!  Check this guy out.

Very cool bird watching shoes...shoes for bird watching females, not necessarily to go bird watching in.

If 10 people join the ABA (and email us he confirmation) Non Birding Bill will join his first bird club ever.

You can subscribe to this podcast on iTunes.


Honey Covered Titmouse

  This is a problem that only I could have.

Non Birding Bill and I had one of those exciting married people dates: did a little dinner, sorted some tax receipts, pretty much got down last night.  While we were enjoying some sushi, my phone went off and I noticed the number was from Mr. Neil's housekeeper, Merry.  She rarely calls unless there's a bird emergency, so I picked up.  Her daughter Alicia walks Mr. Neil's dogs in the evening and when she arrived, she found a honey covered bird unable to fly on the ground.  Merry sent this photo:

Oh no!  A honey covered tufted titmouse!  How the heck did that happen?  I felt so guilty, it was as if the 2 loves of my life, birding and beekeeping found out about each other and got into a fight.  I advised Merry to do what wildlife rehabbers do with oiled birds, use luke warm water and a little bit of Dawn Detergent and gently was off the feathers.  I also asked her to check if it was banded (it was not).

So, she took to gently cleansing the feathers of the sticky bird, even carefully using a cotton swab to get the feathers around the face clean.  Laura Erickson has had experiencing cleaning a red-breasted nuthatch that got caught in some grape jelly and she warned that it might take a few washings to get the bird totally honey-free.

I told Merry the bird would need a warm, dark and dry place to settle, dry out and preen its feathers. I mentioned that titmice like suet, peanuts and sunflowers too, so she put some peanut suet in the cage, covered it and let the bird be til morning.  I tried to puzzle how this would happen.

None of our hives survived the winter and it's been a group effort of the groundskeeper, Hans gathering the hives and all of us taking a turn at extracting the remaining honey before too many deer mice move into the empty hives and eat what the bees did not.  Some of the hives have been left outside the house to await extraction.  What would make a tufted titmouse explore the hives?  They are not honey eaters.  I wondered if our 50 degree weather brought out some early spring insects and they were attracted to the honey, which in turn attracted the titmouse?

I also recalled last fall setting out frames that were covered in wax moth larvae for the chickadees and titmice to eat.  Did this bird recognize the frames as a source of larvae?  It could have hopped into the open box inspecting the frames, only to come out covered in honey and unable to fly?

Thank goodness we didn't have any active hives.  With that warm weather, the bees would have been out and would have gone to the titmouse to clean off the honey.  The titmouse would have struggled, causing them to sting...ew, don't even want to think about that.

When Hans found out, he went back to the house last night and moved and covered the open brood boxes so no other birds would make the same mistake as the titmouse.

I got a text this morning that the titmouse was dry and feisty so it was immediately released back to the yard, hopefully a bit wiser.  Thank goodness Alicia found the bird, had it been left out, it probably would've succumbed to the chilly air. It's sticky feathers wouldn't have been able to maintain a proper temperature in the cold night air.  No doubt a raccoon would have found it and ate too.

Who knew beekeeping would be hazardous to birds?  Now Merry has another talent to add to her resume: honey extraction from titmouse feathers.

Birdchick Podcast #12: Jeff Gordon & Bustard Job

It's time for the Birdchick Podcast and we have a special guest in this week's podcast: Jeff Gordon the president of the American Birding Association.  Find out of Jeff why you should join the American Birding Association and what the plans are for this organization's future.  Remember, if 10 people join the ABA as a result of this podcast, Non Birding Bill will get his own membership.  Email me your confirmation email sharon at birdchick dot com Also, at the end, Non Birding Bill and I discuss an exciting bird job opportunity with houbara bustards.

Other things mentioned in the podcast include Birders' Exchange and Canopy Tower (the happiest birding place on Earth). Oh and here is a video to Alvaro Jaramillo--Jeff mentioned him in the podcast:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fTPZqMjm_Vg[/youtube]

You can subscribe to this podcast on iTunes

KARE 11 Segment 03-15-11

Here are links to some of the things I talked about on KARE 11 Today this morning:

Safflower is a great tool when dealing with grackles at the feeder.

Now is a great time to watch for bald eagles along the Mississippi River (especially before the flooding kicks in).  Drive down to the National Eagle Center this weekend and take part of their SOAR events.  I'll be there Saturday and Sunday with Swarovski scopes for people to use and will do a professional optics cleaning on your binoculars.  Saturday is a Birds and Beers gathering at Nelson Creamery from 4pm to 6pm--meet other birders and enjoy some tasty cheese and beer.

 

 

Favorite Live Cams At The Moment

There are a ton of live streaming bird cams going on throughout the year and two of my favorites are going on right now.

One favorite that has a brief window is the Sandhill Crane Live Cam at Rowe Sanctuary in Kearney, NE this month.  The cam is best viewed at dawn and dusk but it appears to run all day and the sound is INCREDIBLE.  If you've never birded Nebraska in March, you're missing out!  A million snow geese and a 60,000 sandhill cranes can be found at dawn and dusk along the Platte River.  If you cannot travel and sit in one of the blinds, you can at least enjoy the sites and sounds of crane cam.  I especially enjoy hearing the robins and red-winged blackbirds that haven't quite arrived here in Minnesota just yet.

The second cam is a live cam on an Allen's hummingbird nest.  The quality on the video is amazing and again, you can hear great birds like the house wren, giving us a taste of spring to come.  She has 2 chicks right now and they grow fast.

 

The Tsunami and Nesting Seabirds

Non Birding Bill and I talked about this on Monday's podcast, but here is a first had report. The stories and images coming for Japan after the earthquake and tsunami are heartbreaking. The tsunami not only devastated many towns in that country, but it also affect nesting albatross and petrels on Midway Atoll.  Albatross nest on the ground and petrels nest in burrows.  Chicks and adults were washed into and stuck in vegetation or washed out to sea. Some adults were so waterlogged that they could not fly off the water. Petrels in their burrows were buried. This blog is the story of someone on the island who was there to help. They couldn't save all, but they saved many. With all of the heartbreaking stories coming from this immense natural disaster, it's nice to find hope where we can.

For those who missed the podcast, the oldest albatross, Wisdom, did survive the tsunami as well.

 

Birdchick Podcast #11 World Sparrow Day, Oldest Albatross & Owls in Mail Boxes

  March 20 is World House Sparrow Day!

House sparrow feeder giveaway in India.

Oldest albatross survived the tsunami.

Jim McCormack's Ohio blog--owl in the mailbox. Another screech owl in a mailbox. And another!

Join the ABA.

Best bird shirts (and undies) EVER: Magnificent Frigatebird and Birdorable.

European Robin is a "bird of pray." Here's more on the bird Non Birding Bill refuses believes exist.

To donate to the Red Cross relief efforts in Japan, text REDCROSS to 90999 to make a $10 donation or visit the Red Cross website. There are other places you can donate, such as Doctors Without Borders.

You can subscribe to this podcast on iTunes

Siskins Are Moving

I went out to Mr. Neil's yesterday to deal with some of our beehives that died over the winter (it was a hard winter, lots of beekeepers lost hives, it's part of the hobby). While walking around outside, I could hear titmice singing territory song and then I heard a golden-crowned kinglet.

I looked out the window and among the goldfinches noticed someone a little streaky.

It was a pine siskin!  Some winters, we get tons and tons of siskins that show up, but this winter we didn't see very many pine siskins at all. I was glad to see this one siskin and thought it strange that it was alone--you generally get a buttload of siskins, not just one or two.

I looked out the window five minutes later and the number of siskins outnumbered the goldfinches.  I went outside and the trees were full of them, their chipping and trilling took over the chorus of other birds.  Here's a link to what they sound like--does that sound familiar?  Have you heard that in your yard?

I think this is definitely a sign that spring is on its way--even up there in the northern states (finally).  Between the kinglet and the large siskin flock, these are birds moving north.  Can red-winged blackbirds be far behind for me?  Watch for these finches at your feeder, you'll notice them from goldfinches by their extreme streaky plumage.  They love Nyjer (aka thistle) and above the birds are eating sunflower seeds.