Showing posts with label sparrow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sparrow. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 6, 2024

collar choler

A couple of weeks ago, we had some amazingly cold weather.  

eerie and frigid sunrise

Below zero at night and barely above during the day.  Claudia was comfortably ensconced in our heated barn, and we were careful to keep the bird feeders filled.  Some lovely visitors...so puffed up against the cold!

dark-eyed junco

song sparrow

European starling

pileated woodpecker

blue jay

northern flicker

Everyone shared, with just a little grumbling!

red-bellied woodpecker pair

Then rain and fog...



...and now it's warmed up enough to do a little hiking!  Any morning that it's above 20 degrees, we're on the trail for a twenty minute walk...but on really nice days, we go a little longer.  Last week, we hiked for an hour.  Borga, however, is not the intrepid hiker that she used to be.  Now she frequently sulks and slips her collar...



...and stubbornly refuses to walk through water at all.


Maybe she'll be more interested as the weather gets warmer.  Right now, only the cats are enjoying the benefits of the chilly sunshine!


Have a great week!  


Tuesday, March 3, 2020

a roll in the grass

It was so nice outside today that I decided to do a little work in the garden.  I've been seeing a lot of weeds, which are back in the garden as soon as the temperature gets above 50 degrees.  But I was delighted to see so much new growth of the good stuff!



Especially when it looked like this a few days ago:


The older I get, the more I love spring.  Todd and I were both out working yesterday.  When we moved into our house last year, it was too late in the season to get a handle on fence weeds - and they were a mess.  Even now, with most plants dead or still dormant, they're weed-choked.


The multiflora roses are already greening up.


I will need to decide soon how many of the roses - and the blackberry bushes - that I want to allow along the fence.  I'm mainly interested in the fence lines bordering the barn yard and the front field, so I'm basically leaving the side fence and its brambles alone...for this year, anyway.

Thankfully, I got most of the front right fence line cleared out in the fall.  I'm going to burn out any new weed growth this spring, and plant flowers all along this front in mid-April.


We're going to pull up and replace the old fences and even move the fence line a bit, so we can potentially mow down the old fence line weeds.  But we still need to pull up the old brush and burn it, like Todd did yesterday.


Claudia did her best to enjoy the sunshine while we worked.



Borga had a romp, too!



After a while, she settled down to watch the fire.


The birds were out and about, too.  After I filled the feeders with sunflower seeds, a flock of American goldfinches descended.  This juvenile is molting.


All birds molt at least once a year, so if you see a scruffy-looking or bald bird, it's probably mid-molt.


We've always got lots of woodpeckers around...


...and more common 'reds,' our house finches and cardinals.


Lots of sparrows, of course!


I love working in the yard and hearing them sing.  The red-wing blackbirds are in full chorus now, and last night, for the first time this year, I heard the spring peepers in our pond!  Ah...spring!  Soon the front garden will go from this...


...to something like our old garden in Indianapolis.


I'm really looking forward to this upcoming growing season. Have a great week!

Monday, April 6, 2015

Needs More Cow [Bird]

When I heard a week or so ago that a friend was pregnant, I immediately started knitting.  I made these teeny tiny baby socks - aren't they cute?


I also baked her a batch of cookies.  I didn't have the time - or the skill - to do any elaborate decorating, so I decided to do a batch of half chocolate/half chocolate chip cookies (recipe here).  I didn't have any illusions about the success of the cookies.  No matter what I've tried...melted butter, softened butter, chilling, no chilling, 2 - 3 minutes of mixing, barely mixing, long bake time at low heat, quick bake at high heat...my cookies taste great, but they spread.  I never seemed to achieve that chunky, bakery-style look, and I'd given up.  I lumped the two doughs together with no care to proper size or shape...


To my surprise, they baked up beautifully...thick, chewy, and pretty much perfect.


Did I mention they were huge?  Here's one with a quarter for scale.


Next time I'll add chocolate chips to the chocolate dough, but otherwise...perfection!

Alas, for every kitchen victory, there's a crushing defeat.  I wanted to make little cookie "hamburgers" for April Fool's Day.  Despite the fact that I was absolutely swamped with work, I cleared a few hours for the task.  I discarded the idea of using a vanilla cupcake sliced in half for the "buns" and decided to make vanilla whoopie pies.  I used a new recipe, and they spread like crazy.  Argh!!  I used a cookie cutter to get the smaller, tidier shape, but of course the edges were rough.


I baked a batch of brownies for the "hamburger" portion, but was distracted by work and ended up baking them a bit too long.  They were a little too cake-y for my taste.  They were so fluffy, in fact, that I had to slice them in half through their middles to get the right height.  It was a mess.


Finally, I was nearly out of the red food coloring needed to turn the vanilla frosting into "ketchup."  I ended up using an old bottle that was well past its prime.  The frosting was flesh-colored, not red, and had a terrible taste.  Sandwiched together, it did not really resemble a hamburger.


The leftovers were tasty, though!


In my free time, I finished not one but TWO 2,000 piece puzzles.  I can lose myself for hours in a puzzle, but I keep one set up at all times so I can pick at it when I have a few minutes.


I also finished a pair of socks.  I've made these before, for a friend, but these are for me.  I love the scales.  If you look close, you can see the glitter!  There's a strand of glitter thread running through the yarn, so it's subtly sparkly.


Meanwhile, I'm still enjoying the azaleas...


...and photographing the birds.


I'm reading a book about the history of birding, and I thought I'd tally up the birds I could identify, off the top of my head, seen here at our house.  I counted 39 birds on my list, which was pretty exciting!  Just yesterday I counted a new bird.  "Large, glossy, blue body, brown head, seed eater, medium-sized..."  Out came the field guides.  It was a Brown-Headed Cowbird, lunching with two Southern Grey-Headed Sparrows. 


As I watched (half-hidden in an azalea bush), the Cowbird shook and fluffed his feathers aggressively...


...and chased off the Sparrows.


Cowbirds are clever and resourceful.  They don't make their own nests, but sneak into the nests of other birds to lay their eggs (sometimes several dozen a season!).  The unsuspecting nest owners feed and raise the young cowbirds as their own!   Pretty smart!

Have a great week!