The Cornell Lab Bird Academy › Discussion Groups › Joy of Birdwatching › Activities: Exploring Birds
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Yvonne Activity 1. We needed to pick a bird and expand on it: I've chosen the songbird, Red Cardinal. It has a beautiful song and sits on my porch railing and serenades me in the mornings. There are several different bird feeders on my deck with various bird feed in them. The Red Cardinal seems to enjoy eating out of more than one. I didn't know it liked cracked corn until I read about it. It really does like it and seems to visit it often. Of course it is a beautiful red color with distinct black markings. Really brightens up my day.
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This is a picture of the type of red-headed cardinals that we saw on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, in April. So different .... and beautiful. Enjoy!
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This is a photo I took of a Eurasian Green-winged Teal at a nearby park. Waterfowl are my favorite birds; the common merganser is my 'spark bird'; the one that inspired my passion for birding. I was on vacation at a lakeside house on the Oregon coast one chilly November and noticed that there were a lot of ducks. Then I looked a bit closer and said 'hey...those look like different kinds of ducks.' And there was a pair of binoculars and a Sibley's guide on a table by the picture window that opened onto the lake...and that was that.
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Reminder: For those doing Activity 2 and exploring birds online our Bird Cams are always hopping. Besides the live footage there is also plenty of fascinating archived footage. Some interesting recent videos:
- Dazzling Variety of Birds Visit Panama Fruit Feeder Cam
- Western Tanager Feeding Frenzy in West Texas with Scott's Orioles, Black-headed Grosbeaks, and an Acorn Woodpecker
- Family Time at the California Condor Nest
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This is a dark eyed junco nest that a mom made in a wreath that I have hanging on my front door! I have just recently moved back into my rebuilt home that was burned down to the ground in the 2017 CA fire. There were no birds here when we first moved back, but as I have put up bird feeders, baths and landscaping has come back, so have the birds. I think of this as my baby bird miracle. The only problem is we can't use our front door, LOL, but so worth it.
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Hi All, I really loved looking through the Wall of Birds and also through your posts. The Common Loon call reminds me of my childhood at the cottage and is still one of my favourite birds. It was nice to hear it again! Yesterday at a local park and pond I saw several Wood Ducks (Waterfowl), a White-breasted Nuthatch (Songbird) and two Downy Woodpeckers (Woodpecker). I had planned to just go for a little bit, but four hours later I told myself I better go home and take a break. Anyone else find that time just flies (pun intended..haha) when birding? About a month ago I set up a bird feeder on the window of my work-from-home office. After a few weeks, I was starting to get discouraged and wondered if I'd ever get any visitors. Last week some American Goldfinches discovered the feeder and they've been keeping me company ever since. I love watching how they arrive in little groups, each taking a turn at the feeder and looking for it when it's been knocked over by a squirrel.
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The Wall of Birds is amazing! I very much enjoyed clicking on all different sizes of birds and reading about them, even those that are extinct. I particularly like the Cassowary and the Shoebill. Their appearance is fascinating! I saw many birds today from the different groups in this lesson. Three that I saw are red tailed hawks, house finches, and Anna's hummingbirds. I just love watching birds, and listening to their sounds as well! It's hard to pick a favorite bird but I have to choose a bird I saw for the first time yesterday at my feeder, a black-headed grosbeak. I was so excited to see a new bird at the feeder! There was a male and female and they came back to the feeder today as well. They are beautiful and have such big beaks!
I also want to mention how much I enjoyed reading the posts from other bird lovers out there. It's awesome knowing there are so many people who get excited about birds.
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What an amazing bird feeder! Did you make it yourself?
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Great photo capturing the behaviour of a tree creeper going down a tree head -first!
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Hi, I am Karcsi. I am 12. I love the local white breasted nuthatches that come to my feeder.
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Our feeders and our neighbor's feeders bring in lots of birds. One of my favorites is a pair of Carolina Wrens. They actually nested in one of our deck side flower boxes last year. Before that, I had never even heard of them, let alone seen one. I am hoping they do the same this year. (Songbirds) Another favorite is Downy Woodpeckers. We have a male and a female that visit both our tube and suet feeders daily. I also had not heard of or seen a Downy Woodpecker before I started watching the feeders. (Woodpeckers) And lastly, I have always enjoyed Mourning Doves. We have between one and four that visit each day, picking up seed from beneath the tube feeder. They look elegant and make a wonderful cooing sound. (Pigeons and Doves)
Carolina Wren almost ready to fledge last spring.
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We have lots of Carolina wrens in our back yard in Austin, Texas. I love their plucky personalities and amazing determined loud singing!
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I have found birds mostly in my yard. The first is a songbird. I have a LOT of sparrows in my yard that I have come to learn are white-crowned sparrows. Another bird I saw while on a bike ride was a wild turkey-from the chicken-like group. There was even a big Tom Turkey showing off his feathers. My favorite part was his blue head. Another bird I saw in my yard was from the Hummingbird group. It was an Anna's Hummingbird. I was surprised to see it here in the late winter, but learned they hang around my area year-round.
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I forgot to include my favorite! It is so hard to choose just one! I will tell you an experience I had with a new one I enjoyed: I got a field guide for Christmas and was having fun looking through it. I came across this cute little guy, a black-necked stilt. I thought to myself-I'll never see him. I've never seen anything like that around here. Too bad, he's so cute. A few months later I went to a Nature Preserve near me to take a walk and look at birds. Guess what I saw right there wading in the water? Black-necked Stilts! And more than one! I was SO excited to see them! *sorry my camera didn't capture them very well
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I enjoyed exploring the Wall of Birds and spent time reading about many of the birds families represented on it. I hope to have the opportunity to see it in-person one day.
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Me too! Wouldn't that be fun!
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Last year I monitored Bluebird Boxes for our county parks. I found tree swallows instead of bluebirds. I enjoyed observing and learning about their habits. They were full of energy. This activity prompted me to take this course to learn more about other birds.
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My name is Nori. I am 10 years old. My favorite bird from the Wall of Birds is the American White Pelican. Pelicans eat fish. The white pelican scoops fish out of the water. My mom helped me with this.
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Great picture, Nori! I love the American White Pelican too! I recently saw a few of them on a little lake I ride my bike near. They are so pretty!
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Hi I'm Henry. I live in Merriam KS. I am 8 years old and I recently looked at the wall of birds and my favorite was the osprey
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Great job, Henry!
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Hey Henry, love your drawing, it’s spot on!
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I live in Berkeley, CA and have been enjoying identifying many new birds, but my favorite is the Bushtit. Though not very distinctive in color, they are adorable and rich in personality, tiny butterballs of pure energy. I love how they blow through the yard in berserk little flocks, peeping away and flitting about from shrub to tree for a minute or two before cruising on to new destinations. I don't have a good pic of my own, so I borrowed this one from the web.
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Activity 3: Ever since I was a little child I have always celebrated the arrival of spring. My mother says she doesn’t know how I developed my fascination with the first day of spring! Growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area, it’s not even that big of a transition out of winter! But now I have lived in Wisconsin for almost 40 years. The end of winter is a huge thing for me!! So every March I begin my American Robin watch. I make note in my calendar the first time I see a robin in my city, and again when I see one in my yard. It’s my own little victory celebration for surviving another winter.
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My first read in this lesson was yours about the American robin. It brought back memories of my childhood too in celebrating the start of spring. My family would have a contest for seeing the first few robins in spring. We had a ritual to perform to make our sighting “count”. If we saw a robin we needed to kiss our thumb then take that kissed thumb and press it into the palm of the other hand. Next we took our fist and “stamped” it on the thumb kissed palm. As we did so, who ever completed that routine first was the person who saw that robin. It was lots of fun as a child, and we continued stamping robins for at least a few weeks. this year I did stamp the first robin and I can not wait to share the experience when our baby granddaughter grows up.
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Activity 2: my husband and I are brand new to birding. We are loving the Merlin app! Of course we have always been able to identify familiar birds in our neighborhood: songbirds such as robins, swimmers such as mallard ducks and Canadian geese, and woodpeckers. But we were excited to identify a common grackle, a blackbird, in our visit to a nearby state park yesterday. This is going to be a fun post-retirement hobby!
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My favorite bird changes from day to day. Actually, I have two favorites, very similar. They are the Red-breasted Nuthatch and the White-breasted Nuthatch. The first is the color. Not many local birds have a lot of blue, so it makes them easy to identify. I love the intensity of the blue in both varieties. I like it that they are not shy. I can get relatively close and watch for more than a few seconds before they fly away. But most of all I like their climbing behavior. They are as comfortable upside-down as upside-up. While most backyard birds are active and persistent, the nuthatches seem so curious and thorough, looking at every crack from every possible angle.
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My favorite bird this year has been a mating pair of Red-bellied Woodpeckers that have been regular daily feeders in my front yard.
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Curious to find out about the "beautifully colored bird" that my daughter spied while in Mexico, I research it and we both agreed that it probably was a turquoise browed motmot. Finding it on the Wall of Birds, I learned that it has a really long forked tail that it swings back and forth like a pendulum while perching in trees watching for food. Fascinating!
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That’s an incredibly beautiful bird! Thanks for showing it.
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as a new homeowner in southern Maryland ( grew up in Massachusetts). i have been seeing a lot of the same birds from childhood me and my mother loved identifying. I've focused a lot of time and energy to see what feeders work for who and during the colder months been making sure my juncos are well fed but i must say i love my wrens! something funny about a little brown golf ball flying through the wind . A lot of new birds have caught my eye and the most distinct are my pine siskins! for the longest time i had no idea who they were and of course had to make a phone call to ole mom who apparently knows all. I've utilized a lot of my deck space, hangers, garden space in the front yard and many of dollars spent at wild birds unlimited but I cant get enough. the kids get excited to see a bird now and we all watch and identify and do our best to get pictures! happy hunting!
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What type of bird is this little guy?
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I’m going with molting Fox Sparrow!
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Activity 2 and 3: We saw surf scoters today! Along with Brandt’s Cormorants, and the ubiquitous (and my favorites) Buffleheads. Buffleheads-my favorite because of their up-then-down diving behavior- they are so cute! Greater and lesser scaups, redheads, and mersangers, bluebirds, Savannah and Song sparrows, ravens, red tailed hawks, white tailed kites, Anna’s hummingbirds. It was a lovely day for birding.
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Hi Amy! I'm fascinated by your list - please tell us your location?
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I'm very new to birding, and my current favourite bird is the ruby-crowned kinglet (zoom into the middle of the photo; my partner managed to get this with her phone). I also love the golden-crowned kinglet, but I love the cartoony eyes on the ruby-crowned. They are tiny and adorable and constantly moving, so incredibly hard to photograph, but I can usually count on seeing them at a park not too far from my house.
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Activity 2. I have been a long time bird lover, but very poorly educated, particularly with US birds, so the pandemic has given me time and opportunity to learn more about the birds I see. I have been keeping a track of the birds that I see on my feeders and on my property and there is a much greater variety than I expected. In fact I have seen 18 different species since I started taking note and I can confirm that the Merlin app is very good! Most exciting to me was three different species of sparrow, House Sparrow, Song Sparrow and White Throated Sparrow. In the UK we only had one type.
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