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The
Chat Buchanan Club Newsletter Editors Roger & Lynda
Mayhorn The Buchanan Volume 6
Issue 2 February 2007 |
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Editor’s Note: It has been
suggested that the newsletter would seem more personal if, when we, Lynda and
I, were speaking of ourselves, we referred to ourselves in 1st
person. Well, we will do that in this edition. Let us know if it helps or
not.
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February 1 Ed Talbott III
showed video of the 2006 Burkes Garden outing. I (Roger Mayhorn) showed video
of the Cooper’s Hawk that has been hanging around our house on |
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March 12th Club Meeting I presented a Power Point program on the February 24th 2007 outing to Burkes Garden. Plans
were made to have a birding outing in the |
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Participation in GBBC Johnnie & Betty Ratliff, David Raines, Ed & Mary Talbott,
Cheryl Thompson and Lynda and myself took part in
the annual Great Backyard Bird Count February 16-19 sponsored by the National
Audubon Society. 45 species were recorded over the 4 day period with a total
of 1460 birds in our area. Many thanks to those who participated. Here is the list of species logged: |
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American Crow American Goldfinch American Kestrel American Robin Blue Jay Brown Thrasher Carolina Chickadee Carolina Wren Cedar Waxwing Common Grackle Cooper’s Hawk Dark-eyed Junco |
Downy Woodpecker Eastern Bluebird Eastern Phoebe Eastern Towhee European Starling Field Sparrow Great Blue Heron Hairy Woodpecker Hermit Thrush House Finch House Sparrow Killdeer |
Mourning Dove Northern Cardinal Northern Flicker Northern Mockingbird Pileated Woodpecker Purple Finch Red-bellied Woodpecker Red-shouldered Hawk Red-tailed Hawk Red-winged Blackbird Rock Pigeon Sharp-shinned Hawk |
Song Sparrow Tufted Titmouse Turkey Vulture Wild Turkey Winter Wren White-breasted Nuthatch White-throated Sparrow Yellow-rumped Warbler Yellow-bellied Sapsucker |
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Spring Birds Returning
During late January and early February the migrants began
showing up in our area. The first Common Grackle (in photo) showed up at Ed
& Mary Talbott’s feeders at Big Rock the last of January. Recently Ed has
counted more than 80 Grackles at his place. Grackles like being near water,
and Ed & Mary live near the Don Carrier found 2 Canvasbacks (ducks) at Lynda and I had two Brown Thrashers at our feeders here on Compton Mt on February 19th, and a Chipping Sparrow at the feeder on February 21st. Club members Jerry and Jane Thornhill, who live near Don and Dawn Carrier had their first Common Grackle of the season at their home on February 26th. Johnnie Ratliff saw both a Tree Swallow and a Northern Rough-winged Swallow near his home at the mouth of Little Prater on March 1st. Ed Talbott II saw 4 Ring-necked Ducks on David Raines saw a lone Purple Martin passing through at Riverview Elementary on March 6th. Also on March 6th., new club member Faye Metzl saw a Hermit Thrush in the Guest River Gorge near Coeburn. We had a male Brown-headed Cowbird at our feeder on Compton Mt on March 7th. Don and Dawn Carrier also had a male cowbird at their
feeders in David Raines found a Brown Thrasher at his daughter’s house on Slate Creek on March 7th. He also had 2 Tree Swallows at his home in the Breaks on March 10th. |
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Members’ Photo GalleryIf you take bird photos send them in to have them displayed here |
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| Cheryl Thompson took this photo of a Song Sparrow at her house at Big Rock during the Great Backyard Bird Count. | Betty Ratliff took this photo of a Brown Thrasher at her home on Little Prater on 2/17/07. | ||||
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Larry Pinson in |
Richard Kretz of |
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Don Carrier of |
Betty Ratliff took this picture of a female Cardinal at her home. Notice how brightly colored this bird is for a female. | ||||
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Bird Behavior
David Raines saw an American Kestrel being mobbed by a flock of Blue Jays on February 10th. Later he saw, what was probably the same Kestrel with no tail feathers. Also on February 10th David saw an adult Red-shouldered Hawk at his neighbor’s. On February 18th David and his son, Holden watched a juvenile Red-shouldered Hawk come to the ground near their house and tear at a clump of grass. This went on for a few minutes. The hawk finally flew away, and David went to examine the grass clump. There was nothing there that he could see. On February 25th. Lynda and I watched a Red-shouldered Hawk (in photo) that flew in to light on one of our bluebird boxes. The bird sat there for a few minutes then flew down to the ground and tried to get to a chipmunk by sticking its foot down into the chipmunk’s hole. It was unsuccessful. There are more photos of the attempt at http://www.pbase.com/mayhorn/red_shld_hk
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Early Rose-breasted Grosbeak in KY
Apologies to Larry
Pinson for not having included this info in the last newsletter. Larry
lives in
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Looking Forward to Purple Martin Season
This photo (taken by Johnnie Ratliff) shows what Johnnie & Betty Ratliff’s Purple Martin houses looked like at the end of the nesting season in 2006.Johnnie & Betty have been hosts to nesting Purple Martins since 1964. This past year they had a great year with 48 nesting martin pairs. The birds layed 242 eggs and 234 of them hatched. 221 young birds fledged from their martin houses. The information about their nesting martins appeared in an issue of Nature Society News, a monthly publication mostly written about Purple Martins for people interested in martins. Johnnie & Betty are expecting their first martins of the season to return to their houses any day now. |
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Red-tails Get Lunch
Don Carrier recently recounted this story to me over the
phone. It seems he was outside his work place in The next day Don was in the same area talking with his boss, when he saw the hawk approaching once again. He pointed it out to his boss, and they watched as the hawk flew in coming in from behind an unsuspecting pigeon, and once again got its lunch. Ed Talbott II was playing golf on February 26th
in A short time later on the same golf course Ed saw another hawk that he thought might be a Rough-legged Hawk. |
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Warbler Rediscovered in ThailandCheryl Thomson, who keeps up to date on bird news, sent us an email about the Large-billed Reed Warbler, a bird that has been rediscovered after 130 years. You can read the story and see a photo at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17490571/ |
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Visit to Assateague Island
Club member Mollie McCutchen got to visit Virginia’s and Maryland’s Assateague Island last summer. While there she was fortunate to watch a bird bander trap and band birds. She watched as the bander set up his mist nets. These are very fine nets designed to trap small birds without injuring them. It was there she took this photo of a Prairie Warbler being held by the bander. The bander was a retiree from Cornell University. |
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Tracking Golden Eagles on the InternetTwo Golden Eagles were fitted with transmitters in Pennsylvania in November, and have since come down into WV and KY. You can track them by going to http://www.aviary.org/csrv/trackPA.php At the moment one is in WV, south of Charleston, and the other is in KY. |
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Watching Bald Eagles on the Nest through WebcamsClub member Dave Worley posted this address to a webcam at Norfolk Botanical Gardens where a pair of Bald Eagles are feeding at least two chicks. You can watch the eagles at their nest at http://www.wvec.com/cams/eagle.html If you are on dial-up it may take a minute or so for the picture to come up. Remember also that you can’t see the birds after dark. |
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Ring-necked Pheasant in KYI received an email from Bob Sweaney of Pike County KY. He and his wife had been working in their yard on March 13th when a male Ring-necked Pheasant came walking up the road. The bird continued up the road for about a quarter of a mile. Since there are no known wild pheasants in KY, this bird was probably an escapee or had been brought into the area by resident sportsmen. |
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Long Eared Owls in KY
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