Saturday, April 10th
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Mangrove Cuckoo
was very reluctant to pose for the camera
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With the beaches, parks and preserved closed to enhance social distancing, birding during Spring Migration has become very frustrating. Locally the wildlife drive at Ding Darling NWR on Sanibel Island remains open and one can bird by car.
I recently did bird from the Ding darling Wildlife Drive and was rewarded with a with a few interesting birds. Not much in the way of any neo-tropical migrating birds though on that day. Did spot and heard a
Mangrove Cuckoo, plus a soaring
Broad-winged Hawk and several
Red-breasted Mergansers were still present.
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Lots of Cedar Waxwings dining on figs |
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House Sparrow |
At home I have a couple of feeders set up under a huge, old and fruiting
Laurel Fig tree.
Cedar Waxwings are a constant these days, feeding on figs and several
Gray Catbirds have been hanging around, plus numerous
European Starlings are preparing nesting sites in that big, old tree. But, again not much in the way of interesting migrants yet. The feeders are very popular with the expected resident birds.
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Northern Cardinal |
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Gray Catbird |
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Brown-headed Cowbird.
Only a single cowbird visits these days, but in earlier days flocks of 30 or 40 were common visitors
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Starlings |
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Common Ground Dove |
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Common Ground Dove |
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Blue Jay |
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Starling |
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Eurasian Collared-dove |
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Boat-tailed Grackles don't visit the feeders very much |
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Gray Catbird |
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