Here's a thread where you can talk about your favorite birds, any rare or interesting species that you've recently seen, and just birds in general. 
Today in my backyard I saw a Brown Creeper (Certhia Americana)
Here's a thread where you can talk about your favorite birds, any rare or interesting species that you've recently seen, and just birds in general. 
I tried setting out orange slices for the baltimore orioles i heard singing up in the trees this summer, but they werent interested and the oranges just got mouldy...We like to feed hummingbirds, at our feeder one day I saw a pair of Bullock's Orioles (male and female) who flew in, looked and me and flew away.
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Male
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Female
Orioles like drinking nectar and will either try and sip from a hummingbird feeder or tip it and then drink nectar that falls out
Hummingbirds are a common sight in the garden because we always have a feeder out for them.
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Sometimes they'll perch on the Japanese Maple and start peeping at you if the feeder is empty
The juncos are here in MA and im hoping that the pine siskins show up again this winter, but they have erratic migration patterns. Im dissapointed that no purple finches have visited my feeders yet, as they did last fall and spring.I went to Florida recently and saw a shitton of cool birds like moorhens and wood storks, unfortunately I didn't see my target bird-- a frigatebird. I went too late in the year for them to be around. They're my favorite birds.
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YES HALLO I AM HERE FOR THE SEKS
I also live about an hour away from a sanctuary which has a breeding colony of whooping cranes, though I've never been lucky enough to see one. I've seen lots of other cool birds there though, like a juvenile sandhill that walked right up to the car. It's one of the top birding spots in the world, every time I have the chance to go I see something new.
I also can't forget to mention all the cuties we get at the bird feeder. Goldfinches, sparrows, junkos, nuthatches, and occasionally a beautiful red-bellied woodpecker female. She's been coming here for a few years, I think she has a nesting site somewhere.
I'd get an actual oriole feeder and fill it with nectar (I think the recipe is 4 parts water to 1 part white sugar but I'll have to double check. You bring it to a boil and fill the feeder when it's cooled, this stops the growth of dangerous bacteria)I tried setting out orange slices for the baltimore orioles i heard singing up in the trees this summer, but they werent interested and the oranges just got mouldy...
The juncos are here in MA and im hoping that the pine siskins show up again this winter, but they have erratic migration patterns. Im dissapointed that no purple finches have visited my feeders yet, as they did last fall and spring.The males are beautiful.![]()
I put out mealworms mixed with peanuts in a droll yankee x-1 seed saver feeder on a shepherds hook hanger.I bought a suet cake and a suet cage and hung it on a chain from the gazebo frame.
It's got peanuts in it so I hope blue jays will come because I see them around the neighborhood sometimes.
I also want to offer dried mealworms but I'll need a platform thing with a roof to keep them dry so they don't get moldy and make the birds sick![]()
I think that suet (fat and peanuts? yum!) on a climbable surface would be more of a raccoon magnet than dead mealworms. Also, the birds are unlikly to drop them on the ground for raccoons to find. They would rather eat them instead of dropping them and puting out only a small handful of worms a day would let the birds eat them all before nightfall. Unfortunately, theres no way to prevent birdshit around birdfeeders.Edit: ok nevermind my mother will not let me feeds the birds because she thinks it's going to make a mess and attract raccoons and shit