Snowdrops in March. |
A true native sign of spring is lichen greening up, which in spring, unlike its dry, gray, cardboard-stiff status in summer, is now plump and verdant with moisture provided by winter snow melting off its granite home.
Rock Tripe Lichen. |
This week we had more warm, beautiful days as well as some rainy ones, and what are usually small streams, sometimes even dry streambeds in summer, are now gushing with snowmelt.
And as a result, the lakes are flooding.
A flooded shoreline along Lake Wicwas. |
Frost still in the ground keeps low spots from draining. |
With all the runoff along the shoreline I decided not to venture out to measure the ice thickness, but I'll bet it's still a good foot thick away from shore. I may not trust it, but the animals do, so we know it's thick enough to support the weight of a bobcat.
A bobcat makes its way across the lake one morning. |
Cold ice on a warm day condenses some interesting fog banks as the moist air spreads across the lake.
We did take in the birdfeeders this week after they were emptied out, but I sprinkled a few seeds on the railing to give the birds a little more food while the rest of the snow melts. It provided an opportunity to watch the birds in action.
In this first video, a couple of White-breasted Nuthatches sort through the seeds to find one worthy of eating or taking away to hide somewhere.
In the next video, one bird works away on a hard-shelled safflower seed, then finds a few small seeds to gulp right down while it searches for another large seed worthy of hacking open. You can see how much effort it takes to extract that little bit of high-energy fat from the shell.
At first I thought they were eating seeds that had fallen into cracks, but I soon realized they are smart enough stuff thier seed down in the crevice to hold it in place while they crack it open. In this last video it hacks away at a safflower seed, then finds a few smaller ones to gobble up whole, before selecting a couple more safflower seeds to work on, finally taking one more large seed off to hide away in a tree bark crevice to save for later.
I guess that's how they can climb straight up and down tree trunks!
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