Tulip Trees and Turkeys    I have both!

a nature and wildlife blog ...

A Winter’s Pond …
It’s the first significant snowfall of the season and what a beauty it was! It turned a drab winter garden into a white fairyland …Amid the deer-prints in the snow, the brightly colored plumage of the cardinals and bluejays truly brightened a gray day. Mr. and Mrs. downy woodpecker dined on both sides of my suet feeder, while a tiny wren combed the snow at the bottom for tidbits of suet. My butterfly bushes were filled with juncos, their dark little bodies almost looking like buds, as they waited for their turn at the feeders that were covered with black-capped chickadees, tufted titmice and red-breasted nuthatches. My robin was back, frantically looking for a holly berry he might have missed. then it was off to my cotoneasters which still have plenty of berries … but I guess they are not as tasty as the holly berries. And, of course, after they filled up on corn, my crow family yelled and cawed for some table scraps. And, I obliged with some leftovers.

A Winter’s Pond …

It’s the first significant snowfall of the season and what a beauty it was! It turned a drab winter garden into a white fairyland …

Amid the deer-prints in the snow, the brightly colored plumage of the cardinals and bluejays truly brightened a gray day. 
Mr. and Mrs. downy woodpecker dined on both sides of my suet feeder, while a tiny wren combed the snow at the bottom for tidbits of suet. 
My butterfly bushes were filled with juncos, their dark little bodies almost looking like buds, as they waited for their turn at the feeders that were covered with black-capped chickadees, tufted titmice and red-breasted nuthatches. 
My robin was back, frantically looking for a holly berry he might have missed. then it was off to my cotoneasters which still have plenty of berries … but I guess they are not as tasty as the holly berries. 
And, of course, after they filled up on corn, my crow family yelled and cawed for some table scraps. And, I obliged with some leftovers.

A Cold Winter’s Day …

It was a very cold, cloudy day here on the East End … the kind of day I like to stay inside by the fire. It felt like snow and, I guess my “wild-friends” thought so too because, outside, there was a flurry of activity.

The resident robins, with their dusky red breasts not yet bright, came from their hiding places in the woods and devoured the purple berries on my callicarpa bushes. They haven’t as yet started on the holly berries or the cotoneaster berries.

A large raucous flock of bluejays mobbed the sunflower seed feeders and the cracked corn bowls. Their beautiful blue plumage brightened a gray day.

The crows here are the biggest I’ve ever seen. I believe they call to me for scraps of food. They look directly into my windows and yell and then wait for me to come out and put some leftovers in the woods for them. As soon as I head back towards the house, they fly down from the trees for their dinner.

Two large bucks ran quietly along the railroad tracks that abut the edges of my woods, their white tails held high.

The turkey “family” returned after an absence of a few weeks. They were maturing and I had to laugh at myself … You would think that, after raising three boys, I would have known, by their raucous behavior, that the turkey “family” I was nurturing, amid dreams of baby turkeys cavorting in my garden, was not a family at all but a group of “young studs”!

There were so many little birds in my garden … wrens, tufted titmice, red-breasted nuthatches, juncos, chickadees, sparrows and woodpeckers … they were zooming around at top speed, filling up, I guess, before the snow fell.

And the squirrels were so funny, climbing, jumping, performing like the dare-devil acrobats they are. I watched one test the ice that had formed on my pond and then decide to take his drink of water in a safer spot - a little nearer to the waterfall … pretty smart little guy!

A little snow fell … just enough to be pretty … just enough to give my pond a sparkly coating … and just enough make my wintry garden look like a fairyland.