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Posts Tagged ‘Bluebirds’

Last night, while making dinner, I heard Bob yelling from the living room, “You’ve got to see this, there’s a hawk…” and in the middle of my beans and rice he’s rushing into the kitchen to point out the commotion. Let it be said, I heard the commotion.  There is no TV in the kitchen so I can conjure up culinary delights quietly and without much fuss. One of the first questions the architect we unfortunately had to fire asked us was, “Do you want an open plan kitchen, or do you like this space separate?”  Since I actually cook in my kitchen, pots and pans everywhere, I thought it should be my haven of peaceful mess and creativity. “Private kitchen,” I said.

Turning off the burner, I spied a bunch of black birds buzzing around a tree, having a good old fashioned spring squak-fest. Following Bob’s finger’s line of sight I saw it. At this point my dear husband is proclaiming it to be an eagle. The American Bald Eagle is his favorite bird, really if he could be reincarnated he’d come back as an eagle and soar around on thermal winds. The hawk/eagle was just sitting very haughtily on a dead branch while these pesky black birds were telling him to move on. Bob quietly retreated to fetch his camera and here he is:    Osprey Web 20130508

When we were first married, we lived on the edge of a bird sanctuary in Pittsfield, MA. Wild Guinea Hens would visit our bird feeder and peck around on the ground to give us a show. Later, when we moved to the Jersey Shore, a Great Blue Heron would fly out over our garage most mornings for breakfast in the Shrewsbury tributary. When I discovered 2 old prints of these birds at an antique fair, the hens and the herons, I had them framed and hung in VA.photo copy 4 photo copy 5

Still not sure what bird should represent our Blue Ridge mountain home, I’ve been deciding between the Cardinal, the Blue Bird or the Woodpecker, all very abundant on our land. But truth be told, red-tailed Hawks are almost always flying in the valley.

After sending off the picture to a local birder, we were delighted to find out that this hawk/eagle was actuallyan Osprey!

The last time I saw an Osprey was in Martha’s Vineyard, nesting on top of a pole. But sure enough, this bird of prey likes to migrate through these parts in the spring and fall. Still we’re told, they are rarely seen in the Ivy Creek Natural Area which is a part of the  VA Birding and Wildlife Trail. http://ivycreekfoundation.org/ivycreek.html

Well we missed the annual meeting of the VA Society of Ornithologists, but I’m going to tell Bob to send his picture in to the eBird site http://ebird.org/content/va so they can document the Osprey’s fight path. Maybe he’s heading back to Menemsha pond, where the toddler Bride and I would dig for clams.

And a footnote: yesterday the Bride found a bird in her bathroom. It was a beautiful day so she had left her back door open; luckily she shooed it out the same door!

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This morning I woke to a line of deep slate grey-blue mountains. No wind, some sun and the feeling that Spring has definitely arrived. But on Friday, I should have known something was up. Sitting down at the computer in my third floor aviary office, my thoughts were interrupted by a beautifully indignant bluebird. First he flew at my window like a kamikaze pilot, then he sat down on the windowsill and proceeded to peck at his reflection, occasionally looking me right in the eyes. “What an orange breast you have Mr Bluebird,” I said. He just kept knocking.

Bob speculates that it’s mating season, and the bird saw his reflection as a territorial challenge. I’m not so sure, because two things happened later that same day and they both had to do with nature and destiny. Killer tornadoes swept across the South and the Midwest, with one aiming straight for the Bride and her Husband in Nashville. This was the second storm in 48 hours, first taking 13 and now about to take 38 lives. A friend who grew up in tornado country says you just get a feeling when they’re coming – the sky changes color, rain comes sideways and the wind will switch directions. And then there’s the sound of a train. We were on the phone with our daughter, who was home alone and had heard the sirens.

Luckily, she has a basement. Gathering her dogs, laptop, cell and a book, she headed downstairs. It was late afternoon, the Groom was still at the hospital and she was scheduled for the graveyard shift. We watched the radar loop online, tracking the tornado which touched down just south of the city. I was the Madame Defarge of knitting while Bob tracked the eye of the storm and sent text after text. It’s almost impossible to imagine or describe my feelings for that hour, until she instagramed a picture of her hand, outside, holding a golf ball sized piece of hail. The “all clear” siren had sounded.

But I did say two things happened on Friday. I learned that our state Attorney General, Ken Cuccinelli was thwarted by the VA Supreme Court in his race against science and reason, vs UVA and Michael Mann. If you recall, I wrote about the Climate Change scientist here:
https://mountainmornings.wordpress.com/2012/01/14/baby-its-cold-outside/

This is Mann’s response to winning his battle over politically fueled religious nutcase deniers: “I’m pleased that this particular episode is over. Its sad, though, that so much money and resources had to be wasted on Cuccinelli’s witch hunt against me and the University of Virginia, when it could have been invested, for example, in measures to protect Virginia’s coast line from the damaging effects of sea level rise it is already seeing. One would have hoped that the fact alone that the Inspector General of the National Science Foundation last year looked into the allegations by Cuccinelli and other climate change deniers against me, and found that there was absolutely no basis to them, would have ended the attacks against me. But as I describe in my just published book “The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars”, they are part of something much larger—a coordinated assault against the scientific community by powerful vested interests who simply want to stick their heads in the sand and deny the problem of human-caused climate change, rather than engage in the good faith debate about what to do about it.”

Bluebirds, tornadoes, and hockey sticks, oh my. Can you hear them knocking?

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