The January thaw came early this year when we saw three days with the temperature in the 40s. Warm winter days always encourage a bit more activity in the outside world. I saw a chipmunk out looking for fresh food, and a red squirrel came to compete with the gray squirrels under the bird feeders.
| A red squirrel comes to visit. |
Prior to this I've noticed red squirrels finding lots to eat all on their own.
These holes in the snow are scattered around the forest, indicating where a squirrel's fine sense of smell detected something down under the snow, often an acorn, sometimes a pinecone.
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| Oak leaves tell me this squirrel was after acorns. |
A cone under the snow is most likely from a white pine that dropped it in the fall, because the cones from hemlock trees are still on the branches. For these, the red squirrel sits in the tree and strips the scales off the tiny cones to access the even smaller seed underneath each scale. A hemlock with a good crop of cones is noted by the large array of debris underneath it.
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| Debris scattered by a red squirrel stripping hemlock cones. |
Hemlock cones are quite small, the scales smaller, and the seeds underneath smaller yet, but they pack enough energy to make it valuable for birds and rodents to make the effort to extract them.
Larger bits of detritus found under trees are created by a larger bird hunting for larger prey.
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| Chips made by a pileated woodpecker can be two or three inches long. |
This dead pine will feed a lot of different animals both before and after it falls.
So far this winter we have seen all but two of our most common avian friends at the feeders; the only ones missing to date are mourning doves and juncos (aka snowbirds). To date we have seen chickadees, titmice, downy and hairy woodpeckers, white and red-breasted nuthatches, and goldfinches - lots of gold finches. This week they emptied one of the feeders in just a few days.
| Goldfinches can monopolize the feeders, but it didn't stop this chickadee from trying to claim a perch. |
Goldfinches are small but bold birds, able to fend off even the big bully of the feeders, the white-breasted nuthatch. They can also be aggressive to their own kind.
Although when a woodpecker shows up, even the smaller downy woodpecker, everyone moves over, at least for a few moments.
| Downy Woodpecker |
Other nearby birdwatchers with different local habitats have reported winter birds that we rarely see at our feeders, including bluebirds and cardinals. Over the course of the winter we usually get a few interesting visitors such as crossbills, purple finches, cedar waxwings, and the aforementioned bluebirds. We're surprised at how rarely we see blue jays, often thought of as birdfeeder bullies.
Put the dates February 14 and 15 on your calendar for the NH Audubon Backyard Bird Count. Anyone can participate and it only requires a few minutes in the comfort of your own home. I'll provide more information on that in the coming weeks.
As a result of the warm days and some rain, the lake once again offered excellent skating opportunities when, in typical New England fashion, the temperature plummeted overnight from the 40s to the single digits.
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| A very nice skating surface. |
Add in 20 mph northwest winds, and I didn't mind that a sore ankle gave me an excuse to not partake in skating on a cold blustery day. And the next day?
The snow was back and the skating over.
But there were some signs of spring this week if you squinted hard. On those warm days I heard chickadees singing their spring "dee-dee-dee" song, and the sighting of a chipmunk is always promising. And then there was this:
A few bits of yellow summer plumage peeking out from under the brown winter feathers of a male goldfinch is always a positive sign. It's still early in winter, but we're already one-third of the way to the spring equinox!
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