SoTier Posted June 16 Author Posted June 16 More interesting bird sightings in my yard this weekend: I think I have catbirds nesting in the arborvitaes that line the north side of my yard. Last week I heard one calling from my arborvitaes. Then Saturday I saw one in a lilac bush near the arborvitaes. Today I heard one several times. Gray catbirds have a distinctive call. It's supposed to sound like a cat (hence the name) but it sounds like a very sick cat or maybe a squirrel to me. Previous years, the catbirds only showed up when the choke cherries fruited. The bluejays have competition for the peanuts. Except for an occasional cardinal, they've pretty much had the peanuts to themselves. A few days ago, a hairy woodpecker was working on getting peanuts out of the feeder. I'm not sure if he liked the peanuts, but he's back to the sunflower seeds in the wire tube feeder. A grackle has also been visiting the peanut feeder. Unlike the jays who take the whole peanut and fly off to parts unknown, the grackle takes his peanuts over to the driveway and uses the hard surface to help crack the shells so he can eat right there in the driveway. I also spotted a red breasted woodpecker at the sunflower tube feeder. Quote
Gugny Posted October 26 Posted October 26 https://m.facebook.com/100064322187148/posts/25081572288131262/? Quote
Sweats Posted October 26 Posted October 26 If by backyard "birding", you mean stand on your back porch and wave your junk at your neighbors? Yes, i have been known to occasionally do some backyard "birding". Quote
Augie Posted October 27 Posted October 27 2 hours ago, Sweats said: If by backyard "birding", you mean stand on your back porch and wave your junk at your neighbors? Yes, i have been known to occasionally do some backyard "birding". Seen any Wild Turkey lately? Quote
SoTier Posted Sunday at 11:20 PM Author Posted Sunday at 11:20 PM Not exactly in my "backyard" but while driving back to Jtown from our family camp in the Town of Persia in northern Cattaraugus County, I spotted a bald eagle in the Town of Conewango. He flew overhead and landed in a pasture. He was really impressive. While not exactly "common" like robins, cardinals or bluejays, bald eagles are numerous in Cattaraugus and Chautauqua Counties. There are numerous nests in these counties including some right around Jamestown. It wasn't always that way. Bald eagles in the lower 48 states were almost extinct (along with other top level raptors like ospreys and peregrine falcons) in the 1960s when the insecticide DDT was banned. In the 1990s, the first bald eagles were raised and fledged in NYS from eggs brought from Alaska, including a group that was raised and released in the Montezuma Wildlife Refuge between Rochester and Syracuse. 1 Quote
Bob Lamb Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago On 11/16/2025 at 6:20 PM, SoTier said: Not exactly in my "backyard" but while driving back to Jtown from our family camp in the Town of Persia in northern Cattaraugus County, I spotted a bald eagle in the Town of Conewango. He flew overhead and landed in a pasture. He was really impressive. While not exactly "common" like robins, cardinals or bluejays, bald eagles are numerous in Cattaraugus and Chautauqua Counties. There are numerous nests in these counties including some right around Jamestown. It wasn't always that way. Bald eagles in the lower 48 states were almost extinct (along with other top level raptors like ospreys and peregrine falcons) in the 1960s when the insecticide DDT was banned. In the 1990s, the first bald eagles were raised and fledged in NYS from eggs brought from Alaska, including a group that was raised and released in the Montezuma Wildlife Refuge between Rochester and Syracuse. Bald eagles are now found in all 49 states. Not sure about Hawaii? We watch the Eagle Cam at Big Bear Lake in California. There is a successful breeding pair caught on high def cameras. I live on Grand Island, NY now between Lake Erie & Ontario - lots of water and lots of woodlands. We have nesting pairs of bald eagles and more hawks/ospreys than you can shake a stick at. My personal backward count is 47 different now. Also around are trumpeter swans, herons, cormorants and there was even a pelican on Lake Erie last year. Wild turkeys abound. Bird watching is FUN! Bob 1 Quote
US Egg Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago Pheasants have all but disappeared in the area. Use to see them routinely as a kid running through small fields. Quote
SoTier Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago 8 hours ago, US Egg said: Pheasants have all but disappeared in the area. Use to see them routinely as a kid running through small fields. Pheasants aren't native birds. They were introduced in the late 1800s and early 1900s to establish populations in about 40 states, but changes in agriculture -- especially clearing hedgerows around small fields to create much larger fields -- has decimated those breeding populations, and so most birds used for hunting today are stocked birds. Pheasants need the brushy areas between small grain fields (wheat, oats, corn) for protection and nesting. Quote
RichStadiumGuy Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago On 11/16/2025 at 6:20 PM, SoTier said: Not exactly in my "backyard" but while driving back to Jtown from our family camp in the Town of Persia in northern Cattaraugus County, I spotted a bald eagle in the Town of Conewango. He flew overhead and landed in a pasture. He was really impressive. While not exactly "common" like robins, cardinals or bluejays, bald eagles are numerous in Cattaraugus and Chautauqua Counties. There are numerous nests in these counties including some right around Jamestown. It wasn't always that way. Bald eagles in the lower 48 states were almost extinct (along with other top level raptors like ospreys and peregrine falcons) in the 1960s when the insecticide DDT was banned. In the 1990s, the first bald eagles were raised and fledged in NYS from eggs brought from Alaska, including a group that was raised and released in the Montezuma Wildlife Refuge between Rochester and Syracuse. Bringing the baby birds here from Alaska in the late 70's and early 80's was a process called "hacking" and my best friend lived directly across the road from one of the major sites they had set up for this process at the Oak Orchard Wildlife Preserve on Albion Rd in Oakfield (just north of Batavia). Myself and my wife along with my buddy and his fiance spent a LOT of time over there watching the youngins growing up and we were there when they released all of them except for two while we were out of town. It was quite a process and I remember the first one that flew out of the cage landed on one of the posts supporting the cages while a red tail hawk was perched on the post right next to it... I was amazed at how much bigger that baby eagle was than the full grown hawk standing about 8 feet away from him! It's been an awful long time but if I remember correctly they released 14 of them from that particular site. Over the years I've seen a few flying around in that area while traveling through there and I have another friend that lives a couple miles from Oak Orchard that sees one sitting in the trees on the edge of his woods regularly. Quote
Augie Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Our old Veterinarian retired and started a photo shoot by boat deal on the waters around Hilton Head Island, SC. He’ll even provide the camera and do the touch up work before sending you your file. Cool experience. This is one of several pics I got of this majestic creature. Quote
Ridgewaycynic2013 Posted 59 minutes ago Posted 59 minutes ago I live in a house that has been in the family for over 58 years, and I have fed the birds when I have lived here. Finally after all this time of seeing many other woodpeckers and flickers, I saw a pileated. Had no interest in the suet and seeds I offer at the feeder. Paused high up in a maple, examined the bark for snacks, and flew off. Lord, they're large birds! Quote
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