You can click on to enlarge each image if you would like a clearer view.
The word animal is derived from the Ancient Greek
word Anima. It simply means soul.
I found these at Pinterest and enjoyed learning about the birds.
Did you know: the Chipping Sparrow’s song is one of the longest sustained trills
in North American birdsong - a rapid, mechanical chip-chip-chip that can last 4 to 8
seconds without pause. It sounds almost like an insect. But here’s the remarkable
part: researchers have found that neighboring male Chipping Sparrows match each
other’s trill rates over time. They learn to sound like their neighbors. The local dialect
is real and it shifts with each generation.
My apologies to our international friends. I completely forgot to write down what was in the image so that you could translate it. My mind and my eyes were extra tired tonight and I rushed through to get this published. Racing brain-tired body, not a good combination, lol! I will add the words as I have the time.
Hello. I am the Dark-eyed Junco. Order: Passeriformes, Family: Passerellidae,
Genus: Junco, Species: hyemalis. You called me a ‘snowbird’ all winter. You were
charmed by my slate-gray back and white outer tail feathers. You kept the feeder full.
I appreciate this. But now it is late April. I am heading north to breed in boreal forests
and mountain slopes. I did not come to say goodbye. I just…left one morning. That is
how I do things. See you in October (around the bird little arrows from left down point
to slate hood, pink bill, white tail feathers. On the other side white belly. In the box on
the right: Common name: Dark-eyed Junco. Scientific name: Junco hyemalis.
Length: 5.5 - 6.7 inches (14 - 17 cm), Wingspan: 7.5 - 9.8 inches (19 - 25 cm),
Diet: seeds, insects, berries. Habitat: forests, woodlands, fields and backyard feeders.
On the right: sunflower seed, millet, corn, white proso millet.
What nesting costs her body. 8 species the bill nobody sees.The bird is an American Robin.
The arrows on the right say, Immunity - suppressed during nesting. More vulnerable to
disease. Flight Speed - slower when carrying forming egg. Hawk vulnerability.
Lifespan - breeders live shorter lived than non-breeders. Reproduction costs. The arrows
on the left say Skeleton - calcium extracted for eggshells. Bones weaker by egg 3-4.
Feathers - brood patch: bare skin, pulled out for heat transfer. Flight Speed - slower when
carrying forming egg. Hawk vulnerability. What helps: Eggshell station = less calcium from her
bones. Nesting material station = less energy searching. Food near nests = fewer trips, less
predator exposure. Other species mentioned top left: Goose - body weight -25%. Raccoon:
weight loss while nursing. Top right: Cottontail: fur for nest lining. Fox: chest fur pulled for nest.
This is a replacement to the one that I had here before, and more accurate.
Can you tell the males from the females at your feeder. Most people can’t and
You might be surprised which is which. The left side of the panel: Male Ruby-throated
Hummingbird. Iridescent green crown. Brilliant iridescent red throat (gorget). White
breast. Right-side panel: side now. Female Ruby-throated Hummingbird. Green
crown (less iridescent). White throat (no red gorget). Green back (softer).
Square tail. Underneath the branch, in the first box - both sexes have: long,
slender bill. Rapid wings (blur when in flight). Tiny feet for perching. The
next box: Ruby-throated Hummingbird - Archilochus colubris - arrives in
Spring. Loves flower nectar and small insects. The diagram of the Hummingbird
feeder on the left shows what we should give them - clear sugar water, never red.
In Native American culture, Hummingbirds are seen as healers and bringers of love, good luck and joy.
A Duck can…eliminate 200 slugs per day on 100 square feet, walk between vegetables
without scratching the soil, lay 200 to 300 eggs per year - larger and richer, control up to
500 mosquito larvae per day, fertilize 65 to 75 square feet of ground per month, produce
13 to 18 lbs. of manure per month, handle cold, rain and wet better than chickens.
THE BACKYARD SECRET EVERY BIRD WISHES YOU KNEW.
Your kitchen can save an entire nesting season. An eggshell is 95 percent calcium. Most
females can’t find enough. A simple natural homemade shallow dish. Why birds need your help:
calcium in forest soils down to 70 percent since the 1970s. Fewer snails, fewer natural calcium
sources. Modern yards = lower mineral availability. The eggshell station steps: save shells.
Bake at 250 degrees F. for 20 minutes. Crush to rice or pea size. Add to shallow dish. Refill weekly
February to July. Zero cost, huge environmental impact. Who benefits: Robin, Chickadee, Bluebird,
Finch. Mothers seek calcium 2 to 3 weeks before laying. Impact: 12 eggshells a week can mean five chicks instead of none. Human relatables: this goes to waste in most homes. This becomes strong
eggshells and healthy hatchlings. A tiny dish on your feeder can save a family of birds.
This is a Brown Thrasher
‘The mockingbird gets all the credit. But I know 1,100 different songs. MORE than
any other North American bird. I sing each one twice, and then move on. I never
Repeat a sequence. My concert lasts hours. And I wrote every song myself - I don’t
copy anyone. But no one writes articles about me. Because I am brown. The most
talented bird in America.’
Your Birdbath Has Different Rules. Here’s Who Bathes How - and Who Just Wades
Tier 1 - Robin: The bath bully. Full immersion 20 - 30 seconds. Splashes everything off the
rim, even juveniles. Tier 2 - Mourning Dove: Doesn’t bathe. Wades belly-deep for 10+
minutes. Holds bath by occupation, not aggression. Tier 3 - Blue Jay/Grackle/Starling:
Progressive bathers. Step in, sink lower, splash retreat, repeat. Tier 4 - House Sparrow
Flock: Pile in 6-10 at a time. Dominate by mass for 2-3 minutes. Tier 5 - Chickadee/Wren/
Warbler: Darters. One-second full submersion. Repeat 4-5 times from a nearby branch.
Did you know? The Baltimore Oriole can taste the difference between natural grape
jelly and artificially flavored substitutes - and will abandon a feeder that uses imitation
flavoring - it has taste receptors tuned to specific sugars found in ripe fruit - This is why
real grape jelly works and 'grape-flavored' products often don't - The bird is not being
picky. It is being correct.
Did you know? The tufted titmouse is one of the few backyard birds that caches foods -
carrying seeds one at a time from your feeder and hiding them in tree bark, crevices or
soil up to 130 feet away - it can remember hundreds of cache locations - and he's the
surprising part: it picks the best seeds first - Sunflower seeds before millet. Larger
kernels before small ones - It is running a quality-controlled pantry in your yard.
~Baeolophus bicolor~
I Am Not A Bully - Look Closer: Hawk Mimic: Copies Red-shouldered Hawk to warn
other Jays - Oak Planter: Caches up to 4,500 acorns per Autumn. Forgets enough to
grow forests - Structural Blue: Feathers scatter light. No blue pigment exists - Face
Memory: Recognizes individual humans. Remembers for years - I am loud. I am also
planting your woods.
He sings while sitting on his nest. The grosbeak ignores the rule. Most male songbirds
Never do this. The grosbeak ignores the rule. Male. Female - often mistaken for a large
sparrow. Bill - heavy, pale, conical - built for cracking seeds. Shift Schedule - both
Parents incubate: female at night, male during the day. He sings the entire shift. The
song gives away his nest. He sings anyway.
WHO’S AT YOUR FEEDER - AND WHAT THEY ACTUALLY EAT
I will start on the left hand side of the page first, going down.
Cardinal: Black oil sunflower. Platform or hopper feeder. Blue Jay: Peanuts
in shell. Platform. Also eats acorns (plants 4,000 oaks/year). House Finches:
Nyjer (thistle) seed. Tube feeder. The red comes from diet. Downy Woodpecker:
Suet. Smallest woodpecker. Black and white. Mourning Dove: Cracked corn,
millet. Ground feeder. Won’t use a tube. (I am switching over to the top right now.)
Chickadee: Sunflower, suet, peanuts. Tube feeder. Caches food for later. Nuthatch:
Suet, sunflower, peanut butter (please check on that as I was once told peanut butter
could be a choking hazard for birds and needed to be carefully mixed with
seed). Walks DOWN the trunk headfirst. Tufted Titmouse: Sunflower, peanuts,
suet. Takes one seed, flies to branch, hammers it open. Goldfinch: Nyjer seed.
Tube feeder with small ports. Bright yellow in summer. Fightwreck (never heard of
that one before and wonder if it should be Wryneck, a unique group of Old World
birds in the woodpecker family known for their ability to twist their heads almost
180 degrees when threatened: Nych (do they mean Nyjer?) primarily reside in
Europe, Asia and Africa. However, they are considered rare vagrants and have been
spotted on very rare occasions in Western Alaska and sporadically elsewhere in North
America (such as in the Aleutian Islands on the Bering Sea) as lost migrants.) won’t
use a tube. Hummingbird: sugar 4 to 1 ratio. Red feeder. NO Red dye. Change every
2 to 3 days. Quick tips: summer switch suet to mealworms. Winter add peanut butter +
Suet (please research this as heard it had to be carefully mixed with seed as though
nutritious, it could be a choking hazard as mentioned earlier). I noticed a few
discrepancies in this one so have tried to correct where I can.
6 Babies on the Ground - All of them are probably fine. 1. Robin - spotted breast,
Short tail. “Most common. Most rescued. Doesn’t need it.” 2. Cardinal - brown, streaky.
“Looks nothing like dad. That’s her.” 3. Bluebird - dull blue-gray, spotted. “Leaves
The box as a group.” 4. Wren - tiny, brown, active. “Already knows what she’s doing.”
5. Sparrow - streaky, ground level. “She blends in. Check before you step.”
6. Starling - gray-brown. “The most obnoxious fledgeling. Parents look exhausted.”
Feathered and alert = leave it.
I slipped in a jigsaw puzzle from my iPad to finished off with.

















Awesome! Always great to learn something new!
ReplyDeleteThanks Angie, I agree :)
DeleteAn interesting post about all the birds—and your puzzle is so beautiful! Thanks, Denise. Have a wonderful day! hugs Elke
ReplyDeleteYou are very welcome and thank you Elke. You have a wonderful day also :) hugs, Denise
DeleteBirds are amazing Denise. Crows are my favourites. I like the duck facts. I am a big fan of ducks too, they are so goofy and always look happy to me! :-D
ReplyDeleteI enjoy feeding the birds and getting photos. Before I started taking photos, I never really gave them much time and thought and now I just love seeing them all. I am a huge fan of seagulls but sadly they are much hated birds. I have never had an trouble or issues with them in my whole life. I feed them all the time and love the way they do that little head tilt when they are trying to suss me out! :-D
That they are Ananka. You mentioned birds I love and never had a problem either. They have personalities all of their own, don't they?
DeleteHello, Denise
ReplyDeleteI love all the bird facts, the puzzle is pretty. Take care, have a great day!
Glad you enjoyed them all Eileen. Thank you and you take care and have a great day also :)
DeleteLots of interesting information, Denise. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteYou are very welcome Janice, happy to pass these on :)
DeleteCheep, cheep! Well done, Denise.
ReplyDeleteThank you David, much appreciated :)
DeleteNope, I did not know most of that. Interesting facts on all of them.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ann, happy you found it all interesting :)
DeleteImportant! Yes, we must more take care for nature, especially for the animals. A wonderful Post. Greetings by Heidrun ❤️
ReplyDeleteI agree with you 100 percent. Thank you so much and I also send my greetings :)
DeleteThese are so good Denise, birds are beautiful, wonderful creature.
ReplyDeleteCouldn't agree more Margaret and thank you :)
DeleteThis is amazing my friend. Hugs. xoxo.
ReplyDeleteHappy you enjoyed Regine, thank you with hugs xoxo
DeleteInteresting post about birds.
ReplyDeleteThank you Linda, glad you found it interesting :)
DeleteYou know my favorite is the puzzle, although they are mallards not mottled ducks, they really look like MY ducks... because of Missy and Mister, I just read every word of all the bird information and before would have skipped most of it.. very interesting. I guess this is why they sell so many different types of bird food. this year we have a lot of mourning doves and their sounds are the beloved memories of my grandmothers house here in Florida....now I hear it each morning. right now, I have Jay's, ducks, doves, starlings, red wing black birds, grackles, Downey wood pecker and fish crows that visit our weed patch yard and use the 4 bowls of water.
ReplyDeleteWonderful and I thought that might be the case Sandra. Wonderful memories from your grandmother's house. I enjoy hearing the doves in the mornings. Nature's best alarm clock! You have a lovely collection of birds and take care of them so beautifully :)
DeleteInteresting post! Thank you very much.
ReplyDeleteThank you Ann, much appreciated :)
DeleteYou found some very good Did you knows.
ReplyDeleteIt was fun finding them Red, thank you :)
DeleteSo much to learn about our feathered friends! We had a baby robin sitting on our acreage. I'm glad we just let it be.
ReplyDeleteIsn't that the truth? That's wonderful about the robin. I learned a lot of things while finding all these :)
DeleteWOW DENISE WHAT WONDERFUL RESEARCH AND THANK YOU FOR SHARING
ReplyDeleteFOR THE FIRST TIME IN AT LEAST 6 YEARS WE HAD ROSE BREASTED GROSBEAKS AT THE FEEDER. THEY PASS THRU HERE ON THE WAY TO THE COOL NC MOUNTAINS. MY HUMMERS ARE DELIGHTFUL TOO
HUGS CECILIA
You are very welcome Cecilia :) That's great about the Rose Breasted Grosbeaks. I have only had one female at our feeder and that was ages ago. I guess they moved on. I would love to see a hummer. Hugs, Denise
DeleteAll pretty good info in one nice place!
ReplyDeleteThank you Val, there were a ton more to share but I'll leave that for another day :)
DeleteVery interesting
ReplyDeleteHappy you thought it so Christine, thank you :)
DeleteThe info is amazing! A lot I did not know, and I am a birdwatcher! the Brown Thrasher is awesome. Your jigsaw is so pretty.
ReplyDeleteThank you for all the kinds words Ginny. They give us a lot of pleasure don't they?
DeleteLots of interesting information here Denise ... thank you.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
Happy you enjoyed Jan, thank you and all the best to you too :) Denise
DeleteLindas aves. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDeleteMuchas gracias :) Me alegra que te hayan gustado los pájaros. Te mando un beso.
DeleteI really enjoyed this post. I learned a lot too. :) Thanks fro sharing this!
ReplyDeleteThat's wonderful and you are very welcome. Thank you Erika :)
DeleteOkay girl - this was awesome. I love birds. So much information!
ReplyDeleteHi Sandie, thank you so much! I'm glad you enjoyed it all :)
DeleteVery cool on the feeding chart and the puzzel.
ReplyDeleteGlad you thought so, thanks Ivy!
Delete