Thursday, July 7, 2016
Tree Swallows
A pair of Tree swallows were nesting under a boat cover at Glengary Bay, on Lake Pend Oreille in North Idaho near where I moor my sailboat. Hopefully the babies will fledge before the boat owners decide to uncover their boat. You'll see the nest as indicated by the feathers clinging to the canvas cover, just under the notch that accommodates the aft bar of the forward pulpit.
Catching rays!
I noticed this robin at a rest stop along Highway 395 in Washington (Sprague Lake). At first I thought it was dead, as it was completely motionless, even catatonic. But it wasn't! It was either sunbathing or anting. Anting is when a bird sits prostrate over an ant hill to allow ants to cover its body. It is thought that this helps the bird to rid itself of external parasites.
Cedar Waxwings
I like both species of waxwings that visit our area, the Cedar (pictured here) and the Bohemian. They don't overlap very much in range, especially in the summer. For identification purposes one of the biggest differences in field marks is the color of the undertail coverts: on the Cedar they're yellow, on the Bohemian they are rusty red.
These images were taken at Windy Point Campground along the Tieton River in the Mt. Rainer wilderness and at Twin Harbors Campground near Westport, Washington on the central Washington coast. No, not the best images I've ever taken...
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