digitS'
Garden Master
Mary, you have the water close by so there must be lots of waterfowl and shore birds. I don't really know the Bay Area . . .
Look up, violet-green swallows and others up there, diving & darting?! Red-tail hawk circling . . ? Sharp-shinned hawk cruising thru the trees & streets looking for a pigeon dinner or a sparrow snack? Easy to mistake him for a pigeon - I'm sure he benefits from that!
Look for song sparrows - they will work their way under bushes on the ground and the English sparrows better leave 'em alone or the male song sparrow will assert his native rights! They don't look a lot different but see that dark "thumb-print" on his throat and listen for his song!
House finches? They like us, too! They lived in the mountains of northern Mexico and on into New Mexico but couldn't get across the treeless plains and deserts until . . . we carried them! Yeah, the story is that they were taken as cage birds to the East Coast, escaped and have moved right across the country with us in our communities. The English sparrows bully them so they are likely to be up on the telephone lines, singing! Listen for the songs - English sparrows do nothing but chatter.
Put out thistle seeds - not millet - see if the finches show up. There may be more finch species than the house finch at your feeder.
Steve
Look up, violet-green swallows and others up there, diving & darting?! Red-tail hawk circling . . ? Sharp-shinned hawk cruising thru the trees & streets looking for a pigeon dinner or a sparrow snack? Easy to mistake him for a pigeon - I'm sure he benefits from that!
Look for song sparrows - they will work their way under bushes on the ground and the English sparrows better leave 'em alone or the male song sparrow will assert his native rights! They don't look a lot different but see that dark "thumb-print" on his throat and listen for his song!
House finches? They like us, too! They lived in the mountains of northern Mexico and on into New Mexico but couldn't get across the treeless plains and deserts until . . . we carried them! Yeah, the story is that they were taken as cage birds to the East Coast, escaped and have moved right across the country with us in our communities. The English sparrows bully them so they are likely to be up on the telephone lines, singing! Listen for the songs - English sparrows do nothing but chatter.
Put out thistle seeds - not millet - see if the finches show up. There may be more finch species than the house finch at your feeder.
Steve