Sunday, September 15, 2024

Sunday's Hummers


I think all the Rufous Hummingbirds have left - heading south for the winter.

My count Saturday morning was four Anna's.

Two groups of two chasing after each other at the same time.

Air Traffic Control where are you!?  


This is one of the birds.


And this is another...




And here's a third.

Saturday, September 14, 2024

Saturday's Critter

Barry has been AWOL for several days.

Hope he is okay.

Friday, September 13, 2024

2015 Flashback - A Great Bird

Design - "Curious Carrot"
Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends
Fabric - 40 count Sandstone linen
Fibers - Anchor
Started - 9 August 1998
Completed - 12 August 1998 

 Friday afternoon September 11th, 2015 while sitting on the Front Porch with Padma and Parvati Hufflepuff, a bird caught my eye, and as luck would have it, it was a New Bird! 

It was a Lewis's Woodpecker!  You know how I love native plants named for the explorers William Clark, and Meriwether Lewis.  Well, I'm also gaga for birds named for those two men.  


All About Birds notes,"On the expedition’s return journey across the Bitteroot Mountains (in 1805), the team was forced by winter weather to camp on the Kooskooskie River, near present-day Kamiah, Idaho. Here, Meriwether Lewis secured a new avian species he would name the “black woodpecker.” In 1811, famed bird artist Alexander Wilson used Lewis’s specimens at Charles Peale’s Philadelphia Museum to sketch and describe the holotype for the Lewis’s Woodpecker—which he dubbed Picus torquatus, the “woodpecker with a necklace.”

According to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, "This medium-sized ... woodpecker relies on flycatching during the spring and summer and store mast (like acorns) in the fall and winter. Formerly widespread in Oregon, it is currently common year-round only in the white oak-ponderosa pine belt east
of Mt. Hood. It also breeds in low numbers in open habitat along east Oregon river and stream valleys."

I even got to watch and document it catching and eating flying insects.

Yum!

The Lewis's Woodpecker stayed in the area for 30 minutes or more.  It is probably the only time I will see it close to my house as it prefers the more open forests of Central Oregon. I was just so pleased that I happened to be outside when this lovely glossy green/black woodpecker with the dark red head and rosy breast stopped by for dinner.

Thursday, September 12, 2024

September Activity From 2017

 

Design - "Wild White Onion"

Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends

Fabric - 40 count Sandstone linen
Fibers - GAST & DMC
Started - 27 August 2010

Completed - 1 September 2010 


Activity from back in 2017

The Juncos approve of my recent stitch.

The consensus seems to be that the stitched birds are reasonably life-like. 

Besides Juncos, I have Steller's Jays...

California Scrub Jays

American Robins

Ravens

Cedar Waxwings
Three young birds and one mature bird.  Can you spot the mature bird?

Pine Siskins!

This is the second time a small group of Pine Siskins has come by.

Stay for the winter guys!  I'll take good care of you.

Red-breasted Nuthatch

American Goldfinch and Red-breasted Nuthatch.

These guys are such characters.  Fun to watch.

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Wednesday's Walk

A Walk Around the House

What's in bloom now?


A couple of different roses are still setting blooms

Penstemon

Another penstemon

Zinnia

Rudbeckia Henry Eilers

Elderberry

Fuchsia

Hummingbird Trumpet - Zuaschnaria

Agapanthus 

Rudbeckia triloba

Not sure what this is any longer

Black and Blue Salvia


And a lovely moon shot!

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Flash Back

Design - "Corn"
Designer - Ewe & Eye & Friends
Fabric - 32 count Desert Sand Wichelt linen
Floss - GAST & Anchor
Started - 24 July 2010
Completed - 1 August 2010 

I think the satin stitch really makes this piece "pop". 
A great, seasonal stitch.  

I've had next to no activity at the feeders or in the yard for a week or longer.
So here's a flash back from  September 10th 2019:


A small flock of Cedar Waxwings.

The breast is a mix of white and yellow like the onion.

I am still seeing flycatchers.

Though the back light makes it hard to be sure, I think this is an Olive-sided Flycatcher.

That's what I'm going for anyway. 

Better light for this guy, but still hard to ID.

Maybe a Willow Flycatcher.