• Migration Time

    From jmcquown@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 20 10:33:28 2020
    Even here in the fairly deep south on a sea island, I start to see
    different birds more frequently this time of year. It's almost fall,
    after all. :)

    They were enjoying the bird bath and I had to refill it pretty quickly. Noticeable other than the bluebirds were birds with bright yellow
    feathers. A "common" yellow-throat warbler; they have an astonishingly
    bright throat and beautiful windowpane markings. Unfortunately I didn't
    snag a pic of him.

    There was another bird that displayed yellow. Much smaller and mostly
    grey. It kept flaring out its tail feathers to display bright yellow
    feathers underneath.

    https://i.postimg.cc/fTQNGt5v/yellow.jpg

    It shared the bath with a titmouse:

    https://i.postimg.cc/Pf2WcYdg/yellowwithtitimouse.jpg

    I don't know what this bird with the yellow tail feathers is but it sure
    is pretty. :)

    The titmice still won't leave the hummingbird feeder alone. I know
    they're not only eating bugs out of the ant moat but also trying to sip
    the sugar water. I never saw them do that until this year.

    The hummingbirds themselves are very active and very combative about the feeder. It's almost time for them to head further south. I've been
    having to refill it every week and it's about time do it again.

    For a long time I thought hummingbird feeders should be put out in May
    and taken down in October. Funny thing, birds can't read migration
    maps. They don't have access to the internet. Oh, I shouldn't stay?

    You never know when one of those stubborn little birds will decide not
    to leave. :) I had one who came looking for the feeder during Hurricane
    Irma. I actually went outside in the middle of gale force winds and
    driving rain because this bird hovered in front of my face on the other
    side of the window. As if to say HEY! Where the heck is the feeder?

    That same bird refused to migrate for a few years in a row. She was
    always grateful I decided not to take down the hummingbird feeder. I
    didn't see her last year so I suspect she died. I'll still leave the
    feeder up, freshly filled, year round. Just in case one little bird
    decides not to fly away. :)

    Jill in Southern South Carolina

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  • From Laine@21:1/5 to jmcquown on Sun Sep 20 21:19:52 2020
    jmcquown wrote:

    There was another bird that displayed yellow. Much smaller and mostly
    grey. It kept flaring out its tail feathers to display bright yellow feathers underneath.

    https://i.postimg.cc/fTQNGt5v/yellow.jpg

    It shared the bath with a titmouse:

    https://i.postimg.cc/Pf2WcYdg/yellowwithtitimouse.jpg

    I don't know what this bird with the yellow tail feathers is but it sure
    is pretty. :)

    Redstart, I think. Female, or a juvenile. Cute!

    Thanks for posting :)

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  • From jmcquown@21:1/5 to Laine on Wed Sep 23 18:09:49 2020
    On 9/20/2020 9:19 PM, Laine wrote:
    jmcquown wrote:

    There was another bird that displayed yellow. Much smaller and mostly
    grey. It kept flaring out its tail feathers to display bright yellow
    feathers underneath.

    https://i.postimg.cc/fTQNGt5v/yellow.jpg

    It shared the bath with a titmouse:

    https://i.postimg.cc/Pf2WcYdg/yellowwithtitimouse.jpg

    I don't know what this bird with the yellow tail feathers is but it sure
    is pretty. :)

    Redstart, I think. Female, or a juvenile. Cute!

    Thanks for posting :)

    Thank you very much! I have never seen a bird splay out the bright
    yellow under tail feathers like that. Interesting name, a 'redstart'. I
    saw a little bit of orange at the top of the wings which I suppose could
    be called "red" like a robin. I like seeing new birds when the seasons
    change.

    Jill in Southernmost SC

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