Outstanding!There is now a couple of breeding pairs since I put up a peanut feeder.
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We have Nuthatches in New Jersey also. Ours don't seem to be as colorful as your pictures. Maybe there are many different species of them. Beautiful pictures. I love them.
Oh yessss. That’s it.Some in the park seem lighter colours and male and female differ in colour. There are different colours in different countries![]()
Same here. We have 100 acres of forest behind us (not ours ) and at one point in time we had over a dozen feeders and attracted all kinds of them. I think the forest & farm fields attract a lot of migrating birds as well. We get a flock in the thousands of grackles every spring. It’s magical listening to that many all singing in the trees around us and when they leave you can actually hear a swooshing sound. Plus it looks really cool.I live on over 50 acres surrounded by woods an farms. I used to have maybe 10-12 different feeders set up, and proceeded to check off the birds I identified.
My favourites were the goldfinches. I set up a thistle feeder all by itself at the far end of the yard, and loved watching their roller coaster flights to it.
Since the bear arrived, I no longer put bird feeders out.
Not carried away at all. Enjoy it all.Same here. We have 100 acres of forest behind us (not ours ) and at one point in time we had over a dozen feeders and attracted all kinds of them. I think the forest & farm fields attract a lot of migrating birds as well. We get a flock in the thousands of grackles every spring. It’s magical listening to that many all singing in the trees around us and when they leave you can actually hear a swooshing sound. Plus it looks really cool.
Gold finches are so pretty, so are purple finches but probably the most attractive birds I ever saw land on our feeders were evening grossbeaks. We had a flock of them one year but didn’t see many after that. We get quite a few red breasted grossbeaks, lots of nuthatches, ( white, red breasted, brown headed ) woodpeckers ( pilated, downy , hairy) , loads of blue jays, the odd grey jay, cardinals( we have a few pairs ... they mate for life) the odd indigo bunting which are stunning, hummingbirds, Baltimore Orioles who love oranges, mourning doves, junkoes, chick-a-dees, flycatchers ( we have one that keeps nesting in one of our sheds and is the friendliest little bird.
Feeding the birds was a true privilege. I’d make my own suet from scratch with all kinds of dried fruit, seeds, and nuts. They loved it. The unfortunate part was , so did the field mice and feeding the birds was encouraging them to hang out in our house so we stopped feeding the birds but I gave away most of our feeders. I don’t miss the mice though.
I’m sorry. I got totally carried away.
AS USUAL!![]()
As we move to different places through our lives, sometimes our favorites, birds, are lost. My loss is when i moved to town from the farm.One bird I rarely see anymore are red-wing blackbirds. Of course, being in a condo, our bird sightings are rare. Really miss the blue jays and cardinals we had in our trees when we were in a house.
I am as enthusiastic as you.Same here. We have 100 acres of forest behind us (not ours ) and at one point in time we had over a dozen feeders and attracted all kinds of them. I think the forest & farm fields attract a lot of migrating birds as well. We get a flock in the thousands of grackles every spring. It’s magical listening to that many all singing in the trees around us and when they leave you can actually hear a swooshing sound. Plus it looks really cool.
Gold finches are so pretty, so are purple finches but probably the most attractive birds I ever saw land on our feeders were evening grossbeaks. We had a flock of them one year but didn’t see many after that. We get quite a few red breasted grossbeaks, lots of nuthatches, ( white, red breasted, brown headed ) woodpeckers ( pilated, downy , hairy) , loads of blue jays, the odd grey jay, cardinals( we have a few pairs ... they mate for life) the odd indigo bunting which are stunning, hummingbirds, Baltimore Orioles who love oranges, mourning doves, junkoes, chick-a-dees, flycatchers ( we have one that keeps nesting in one of our sheds and is the friendliest little bird.
Feeding the birds was a true privilege. I’d make my own suet from scratch with all kinds of dried fruit, seeds, and nuts. They loved it. The unfortunate part was , so did the field mice and feeding the birds was encouraging them to hang out in our house so we stopped feeding the birds but I gave away most of our feeders. I don’t miss the mice though.
I’m sorry. I got totally carried away.
AS USUAL!![]()