Western toad painting by Carl Dennis Buell

Birding and other pleasures and aggravations, in Berkeley and beyond, by Ron Sullivan.

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Friday Fun Science

This combines art and science, since I skipped last week. Blame it on the holiday.

On the other hand, it’s kinda last-year. The college radio DJs have been playing it since at least last September. Hey, one of the blessings of old age is not having to keep up with the latest in pop culture.

Broken Hearted Dragonflies purports to be jungle recordings of the death throes of Southeast Asian dragonflies. The mp3 sample at the link sounds like yer basic jungle tweets and stridulations moving into a teeny jet takeoff. Charming, in its own way. I’ll probably even buy the CD someday, if I’m feeling flush. The subtitle’s a bit odd… I mean, is it insects or is it electronica?

BROKEN HEARTED DRAGONFLIES
Insect Electronica from Southeast Asia
Recorded by Alan Bishop forthe Sublime Frequencies label. Liner notes by Hakim Bey.

This catalog page has more samples.

I’ll have to admit it’s in the Buy This queue well behind the two (so far) boxed CD sets of Cab Calloway that Down Home Music has. Still, it would go nicely in the clockradioCDplayer in the bedroom.  or on the answering machine. Yo, Valerie, maybe it would make good ringtones!

dingbatPosted by Ron Sullivan | Comments are closed

Restoration, Beer, Small World

Last weekend we joined a little tour of a spot that’s on the list for salt marsh restoration in the South Bay, just to get some information on all that and to have a look. It turned out to be entirely a public spot, so we needn’t have gone on the official day, but the retired vector control guy who gave the tour had some good stuff to tell us anyway.

What we saw was landfill with a small, noisy powerplant using the methane from the garbage. The garbage was entirely out of sight and smell, under the grassy knolls and assorted exotics growing there. Fairly presentable, though of course we looked askance at the eucs and gaillardia and such. There were blackbirds, a neat row of five male cowbirds on a fence (oy), a redtail, a male and a female harrier. The male flew off over the hill carrying some rodent—probably an endangered salt-marsh harvest mouse. A few stilts in the distance, mallards and gadwall, song sparrows, a couple of hummers, one a probable Allen’s; a butterfly or two, brine shrimp and brine flies and water striders in the salt pond channel. Sunny and quite breezy, basically a nioce stroll.

A couple of friends from the foodie group, Alison and Wolfgang, had told us about the tour and met us there. That gave us people to talk about the birds we were seeing between info stops, and tims to talk with them about their own bird adventures. They seem to have a lot of wild birds in hand: when we saw them last summer they were hand-raising a black phoebe that had survived a nest disaster in their backyard, and had it in a carrier at the picnic with them since it needed frequent feeding. It was almost fledged when we met it, and fledged successfully a day or two later. Wolfgang told us about plucking a slightly stunned chickadee off his window at 3AM a few nights before, making sure it could eat and fly well, and turning it loose again before going back to bed.

We all repaired to Tied House in Palo Alto (or is it Mountain View?) for a beer and fried stuff. In the course of conversation, Alison mentioned that she’s the granddaughter of Ernest Choate, who wrote The Dictionary of American Bird Names that we have on the shelf, an old classic standby. She had a story or two about him, too.

The other day, Joe was looking up the origin of “grackle” and happened to notice an epigraph on the flyleaf of the book, over an engraving of a European robin and as the text declared, “adapted” from Punch, January 17, 1906; from Ernest Weekly, An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English:

Alison, “What’s that, Granddaddy?”
Grandfather, “A robin.”
Alison, “Why?”

Oh. Oh sure.
What an odd place that must be to find your verbal baby-on-bearskin picture.

dingbatPosted by Ron Sullivan | Comments are closed

True Grit

In the the center divider on San Pablo Avenue, just a few feet north of the traffic light at Central Avenue, growing between the curb and the concrete pad, there’s an artichoke.

dingbatPosted by Ron Sullivan | Comments are closed

There Goes the Neighborhood

Late-morning low-tide trip down to Hayward Regional Shoreline to not see the black terns that are reputed to be hanging out with the Forster’seses there.

The Forsters’ were taking turns doing noisy, V-winged display flights and making casual rude remarks at us. There were a few ducks—gadwalls, mallards, and late-staying canvasbacks. Willets, godwits, curlews, avocets, stilts mucking around in the muck all around, but the peep and such seem to have moved on. Two marsh wrens hidden and singing in some unpromising veg near the pond where a lot of big shorebirds (and do I remember the black skimmers there a few years ago?) used to nest; I think it’s too overgrown for those now, but there were ducks sitting here and there.

A few egrets, including one snowy doing the stir-up mud shuffle and grabbing little things that surfaced, mostly invisible. I did see a half-inch fish-shaped fish in its bill, and some gloopy worm thing it grabbed from the bank. A couple of Canada goose families, with 11 goslings of different ages: all had their black heads and necks and white chinstraps, but were otherwise in various states of fuzziness. Barn and cliff swallows, song sparrows overhead and underfoot.

No hawks, come to think of it, or even vultures, which is odd. We did see a jackrabbit and a vole, a few ground squirrels.

The painted ladies have hatched, the generation planted here by that great migration we saw starting out in Death Valley in March. They were flying around us in ones, twos, threes, fours, the occasional half-dozen, mostly looking very fresh though there was one that looked seriously pale, battered and frayed. One that we got a fix on was a West Coast lady; the rest looked like painteds or like orange blurs. We also had a bunch of large marbles… OK, Large Marbles. Take a second look at those apparent cabbage whites and wow, different! They have very handsome greenish-yellow markings on the under hindwings, and subtle marblings dorsally. They obliged us by sitting down to nectar on straggly wild mustard flowers by the path.

Returning on that path, trying in vain to Walk Briskly for the exercise, I noticed an odd blackbird on a bit of cyclone fence. In fact, it was a great-tailed grackle, the first one either of us has seen in Alameda County or even near it. It got chased off the fence, disappeared over the bank near the visitor center. When we caught up to it, we saw there were three males and uh-oh, a female in the pickleweed.

The female flew up off the weed, and was immediately attacked and chased over the building and for some yards beyond by noisy, indignant barnswallows. Lots of them, and boy were they yelling. One of the male grackles went with her. She came back a few minutes later and was chased again, in a different direction.

Grackles are nest predators. Swallows chase crows, too, as we saw. Interesting generalization, or maybe bitter experience.

The remaining two males kept poking around in the pickleweed. As we walked toward the car, we noticed a stilt sitting on what looked like a nest near them, and adding bits of vegetation to it as she sat. She piped at us of course.Stilts are kind of high-strung.  A male stilt nearby piped too. (Ever been yelled at by multiple stilts? They’re pretty impressive en masse.) We moved along, so as not to make her more nervous, and the male walked over toward the two grackles and scolded them roundly.

Great-tailed grackles seem to be extending their range toward us. A few years ago we ran into one in the parking lot of the In ‘n’ Out by the Kettleman City exit on I-5, which is considerably south of here. I’m a bit apprehensive about this.

When I first met the species, in Texas in 1980, it gave me a turn. We were poking around in some wildlife refuge, along a long row of tall shrubs with a gravel road on the other side, and maybe some sort of water-regulating equipment in a cinderblock hut. This noise was emanating from the bushes. It sounded like something eating a large-model Xerox machine while the latter was running. I was sure we’d stumbled across the Real Machinery that ran the place, that the whole state of Texas was a sort of Disney animatronics ride. I’m still not sure I was wrong about that.

When we tracked it, it turned out to be a great-talied grackle doing some Texas-style display. (Add a sound like running your thumb over a deck of cards, to what you hear there in the soundfile. Besides hollering, he was riffing his feathers, to great effect.)

We saw a male cowbird at the shoreline too today, and there are lots of crows, ravens, jays, and other nest predators around already. Arguably at least the cowbirds don’t belong here—they followed our cattle herds and general disturbances, and many of the local birds are still defenseless against them. And now the Dread Texas Steam Grackle. Where did I put those earplugs?

dingbatPosted by Ron Sullivan | Comments are closed

Fresher Falcons

This Falconcam is on the Rachel Carson Office Building—the Dep’t of Enviro Resources—in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Wonder who they bribed for that. The camera refreshes only every two minutes, unlike the San Francisco one (every second) but it’s still a good view and the youngsters are still in the lint stage.

Gives us a chance to relive somebody’s youth.

On Eastern Daylight Saving Time, remember.

dingbatPosted by Ron Sullivan | Comments are closed

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