Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Joe Neal's newest book a compilation of wonderful outdoor essays he has shared with birding friends by email in recent years

While reading a few of Joe Neal's birding essays about dawn today while wondering how many species of migrating and year-round resident birds were creating the euphony in the trees and thickets in our yard and the surrounding World Peace Wetland Prairie, I stopped to share a link for those who may want to read Joe's work, and also to mention that you too can attract more wildlife to your yard by encouraging native plants to grow to provide berries, seeds and insects.

New from Half Acre Press!

A Little Lazarus
poems by Mendy Knott

Join us for a booksigning and reception
Thursday, October 14 at 7 pm
at Nightbird Books on Dickson in Fayetteville

Mendy Knott’s poetry is full of imagery and metaphor, thick with the juicy stuff of the senses. Part narrative,part song, these are poems about the physical body, the blood of sacrifice, an unforgettable communion of spirits—human and otherwise.

Coming Soon!

The Birdside Baptist
And Other Ornithological Mysteries
by Joseph C. Neal
In The Birdside Baptist, Joe Neal sees the world through a birder’s binoculars, but also through the eyes of an Arkansan who was brought up wearing shiny black shoes to five church services every week. These collected essays, originally written for fellow subscribers of a birders’ listserve, are reports from the field spanning eight years, from 2002 to 2010. Illustrated with Neal’s crisp photographs, he paints a rich landscape of plants, animals, and human history, including the struggle of a community to balance booming development and environmental stewardship.

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Monday, October 25, 2010

Guest column from Dave's Garden newsletter

Happy Wildlife Habitat (Small birds in a small garden)

By Deb Magnes
October 19, 2010
Other than pictures, words will have to do. The main thing was this; In creating a place in the garden for them, even in this small place, a peaceful and safe habitat has grown into existence. Once you are marked on their migration map, they do not forget you.

Gardening picture
(Editor's Note: This article was originally published on October 22, 2007. Your comments are welcome, but please be aware that authors of previously published articles may not be able to promptly respond to new questions or comments.)
   From east to west small birds descend southward for the cooler months. Some make it all the way to South America, some to Mexico, and some say Texas is just right by staying for the entire winter! This has been a real joy in my most recent years of bird watching. There are four of these I will attempt to spotlight in separate articles. I have chosen certain small and very wild birds because they represent a cross section of small insect eating birds, and if you live in the US, you are bound to see at least one of these every year. The chances increase highly when some part of the garden is geared toward the lower end of the food chain. Here I have accomplished this by planting larval host plants in my back yard. All summer the benefits abound with various resident birds and native butterflies. Yet when fall and winter come there are a few new characters here in the wings that bear more distinction as you will see.
   They are mainly small non-gregarious birds, which is all the more intriguing for the fortitude and navigational skill they must have to survive flying back and forth solo over so many miles. To hear of them is a delight, to read about them is fascinating! To see them in my own back yard, priceless! This came as a surprise after many years of raising butterflies in conjunction with bird watching. By enlarging their territory it has become a reality that I look forward to every winter. When most folks are putting up their gardening tools and bundling up plants, so am I. However all the while looking over my shoulder for the return of these little garden sweethearts.
Image
   Late last summer (September 2006), I caught a glimpse of a little yellow bird in one of the front yard trees. Managing to snap a blurry picture (left), I was able to make a positive identification of him as Wilson's Warbler. He was diligently on his way to Central America, and had stopped to find food and water. Even the short visit had a very endearing effect on my memory. Possibly even capturing a bit of the excitement Alexander Wilson must have had upon seeing one of them for the first time.
   Which brings us to September 3 of this year, looking out over the small garden in back resting from the day's work. Out of my periphery I was struck by the movement of something bright and yellow in the back corner Privet shrub. I sat very still as the small yellow bird spiraled up to a tree closer to me. Right over my shoulder in fact. Here it was, a whole year later and another Wilson's!! Definitely a different one, it was a young male this time. I was able to take a series of about 10 photographs, during which he flit off the branch to capture a damselfly landing right back on the same branch. Looking for more, he was not so much worried about me there snapping the pictures.Image
   This warbler can be seen all throughout the contiguous states during spring and fall migration times. They cover inhabitable land in Canada from east to west during the summer while breeding, and spend our winter in Central America. I'm happy to add that there is no concern of them becoming extinct at this time, plus these little guys produce up to 6 eggs in a clutch. So your chances of seeing one where you live and garden are getting better all the time. Although they are more abundant in the western states. Just keep a good lookout at their migratory times at the zone you live in. You will likely learn when that time is by a significant sign of summer's, or winter's, last leg. Knowing when the last leg of those 2 seasons is up to you in your own zone. They must set out on their journey in plenty of time to cross the whole USA well before winter begins going south, and likewise way before summer begins going north.
   The secret to drawing them, if there be one, lies in the lower organisms of the garden. Planting larval host plants has been a major part of that here, and many native plants are among those. Birds can see the trails of their best habitats from the air and from far Imageaway. They will visit gardens using large trees and shrubbery for exclamation landmarks. They know that when they get to where those plants are they will find a non-toxic edible smorgasbord of protein. A few species of the smaller birds will eat meal worms from a feeder, however most of the wilder small birds enjoy a good fight before eating. This is actually quite critical to the wild birds for knowing their catch is safe to eat by how lively it is. This is also because they fancy themselves as big wild game hunters.
   It is an incredible joy to have evolved this small back yard over time, and see the free creatures where they live. Their coming here is a higher compliment to my garden than all the Jones's accolades. It is difficult to explain. Other than pictures, words will have to do. The main thing was this; In creating a place in the garden for them, even in this small place, a peaceful and safe habitat has grown into existence. Once you are marked on their migration map, they do not forget you. Better yet, keep it wild enough there in your own garden, and see for yourself!


Links of interest:
Bird Watching Forum (right here on Dave's Garden Web)
Field Guides:

  About Deb Magnes  
Deb MagnesDebnes has been retired since her youngest of 4 was born. Now she has spent any spare moments researching every sort of life in the garden. Furthermore writing for about 10 years, on subjects of faith, plants, and wildlife, and it all revolves around the garden. In the process of pursuing several of her life's passions, she found some real treasures in practical every day life. It's where she confirmed that everything on earth, be it thought or matter, sows a seed.

Printed at http://davesgarden.com/guides/articles/printstory.php?rid=201

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Joe Neal's report from Saturday

Lynn Sciumbato of Morning Star Wildlife Rehabilitation Center near Gravette brought her big birds to Shiloh Museum in Springdale yesterday. The occasion was Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society’s annual program of nature photography plus conversations with bird guys and gals. She shared an hour of fact and humor concerning birds and people. A mesmerizing story teller, Lynn has a real tale to tell about northwest Arkansas and big birds to tell it with. 
 
The core of these stories revolves around individual personalities of birds. With her favorite bird, a Turkey Vulture name Igor literally in hand, she shares Igor’s story, which began 11 years ago, when Igor was one day out of the egg. With the successful humorist’s pregnant pauses, voice inflection rising and laughing, facial features varying from remarkable to quizzical and natural timing—that chuckle or sudden silence— we learn Igor is not a buzzard and how calm Igor is compared to many other big birds. 
 
As Lynn puts it, some want raptors want to tear you up, but Igor and his kind just sort of look at you and say “duh…” Then she moves on to hawks and owls. 
 
Of yes, did I mention she is an expert, with decades of experience working with all kinds of raptors, song birds, small mammals, and the odd reptile that has come her way? And a retired school teacher?
 
She brought Ginny, a 7 year old Red-tailed Hawk. Lynn calls her the “diva bird…nothing makes her happy” and we soon have Ginny’s story. She was hand-reared for falconry and treated then like a queen. But she lost her exalted status in life in a hunting accident. No longer able to fly, the usual outcome is to be “put down.” Instead, Ginny came to Morning Star. Today Diva Bird shares the limelight with Igor. Lynn explains Igor and Ginny also share a cage. Maybe the vulture “duh” will wear off on the dethroned diva. 
 
Nancy Harris from Fayetteville asks Lynn how she protects herself pecked in the face and really hurt? Lynn responds, “Well, do you want to see the scars [much laughter]. As a matter of fact…I don’t really scar…Owls and hawks don’t think to bite. That’s not their first response…this beak is like their knife and fork. It’s for ripping food apart…” Now she segues to difficulty handling really BIG birds, like Bald Eagles, that can get you. 
 
She recalls released of a rehabbed eagle at Beaver Lake. “I was fixing to throw her up in the air and she ripped all the side of my face…I was fixing to fling the bird so I went ahead and flung her… [pause, then laughter] for SEVERAL reasons.” Then she mentions something more common: puncture wounds. “Ah, puncture wounds. You don’t get much sympathy for puncture wounds. They don’t bleed near as well as rips from eagles…” She remembers something else, too. “I have been hurt worse when bitten by a cardinal. Really and truly. I mean, that brings tears to your eyes. They always get you right there…” indicating the sensitive flap of skin between the thumb and forefinger.
 
Before you get the idea that Lynn is just a skilled talker – she’s certainly that – let me mention what a skilled observer she is as well. I noticed that Ginny didn’t have much a “belly band,” a dark band often seen on mature Red-tailed Hawks. I asked about this. They don’t all have it, she explained. In fact there is a huge amount of variation. She recalled a time in the early 1980s in Decatur, at the mega-center of Arkansas’s poultry industry.
 
“They had this huge hawk die-off at this one farm. They were finding hawks everywhere, you know, down or dead. Game and fish called and said, ‘Do you have room for about 25 hawks?’ I said, ‘LUTHER! WHAT!!!???’ There were all these hawks that had gone down on this one farm and we didn’t know what the deal was. We had no idea why they’d all gone down. Finally figured out it was ‘poor poultry husbandry.’ This one farmer had dumped three truck loads of dead chickens. As the predators had gone down towards the bottom, there was botulism…and everybody who was working this pile of dead chickens was dealing with this botulism…I think I got in all totaled 26 hawks…I think 24 of them survived…”
 
“I had all of them in my big flight pen. It was a little crowded. They would all be sitting on the back perch in the back of the flight pen and you would look at all those birds and every one of them was a different color. You know what I mean…the width of the belly band different, or it was a little tiny belly band, or a kind of peachy color…every one of them was different…” 
 
Every bird she gets is an individual. And Lynn is that rare “bird” herself: an unabashed raconteur finding interesting fact and humor at every turn. We’re just fortunate she long ago chose birds in trouble as her source of inspiration. 
 Lynn Sciumbato of Morning Star Wildlife Rehabilitation Center near Gravette brought her big birds to Shiloh Museum in Springdale yesterday. The occasion was Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society’s annual program of nature photography plus conversations with bird guys and gals. She shared an hour of fact and humor concerning birds and people. A mesmerizing story teller, Lynn has a real tale to tell about northwest Arkansas and big birds to tell it with. 
 
The core of these stories revolves around individual personalities of birds. With her favorite bird, a Turkey Vulture name Igor literally in hand, she shares Igor’s story, which began 11 years ago, when Igor was one day out of the egg. With the successful humorist’s pregnant pauses, voice inflection rising and laughing, facial features varying from remarkable to quizzical and natural timing—that chuckle or sudden silence— we learn Igor is not a buzzard and how calm Igor is compared to many other big birds. 
 
As Lynn puts it, some want raptors want to tear you up, but Igor and his kind just sort of look at you and say “duh…” Then she moves on to hawks and owls. 
 
Of yes, did I mention she is an expert, with decades of experience working with all kinds of raptors, song birds, small mammals, and the odd reptile that has come her way? And a retired school teacher?
 
She brought Ginny, a 7 year old Red-tailed Hawk. Lynn calls her the “diva bird…nothing makes her happy” and we soon have Ginny’s story. She was hand-reared for falconry and treated then like a queen. But she lost her exalted status in life in a hunting accident. No longer able to fly, the usual outcome is to be “put down.” Instead, Ginny came to Morning Star. Today Diva Bird shares the limelight with Igor. Lynn explains Igor and Ginny also share a cage. Maybe the vulture “duh” will wear off on the dethroned diva. 
 
Nancy Harris from Fayetteville asks Lynn how she protects herself pecked in the face and really hurt? Lynn responds, “Well, do you want to see the scars [much laughter]. As a matter of fact…I don’t really scar…Owls and hawks don’t think to bite. That’s not their first response…this beak is like their knife and fork. It’s for ripping food apart…” Now she segues to difficulty handling really BIG birds, like Bald Eagles, that can get you. 
 
She recalls released of a rehabbed eagle at Beaver Lake. “I was fixing to throw her up in the air and she ripped all the side of my face…I was fixing to fling the bird so I went ahead and flung her… [pause, then laughter] for SEVERAL reasons.” Then she mentions something more common: puncture wounds. “Ah, puncture wounds. You don’t get much sympathy for puncture wounds. They don’t bleed near as well as rips from eagles…” She remembers something else, too. “I have been hurt worse when bitten by a cardinal. Really and truly. I mean, that brings tears to your eyes. They always get you right there…” indicating the sensitive flap of skin between the thumb and forefinger.
 
Before you get the idea that Lynn is just a skilled talker – she’s certainly that – let me mention what a skilled observer she is as well. I noticed that Ginny didn’t have much a “belly band,” a dark band often seen on mature Red-tailed Hawks. I asked about this. They don’t all have it, she explained. In fact there is a huge amount of variation. She recalled a time in the early 1980s in Decatur, at the mega-center of Arkansas’s poultry industry.
 
“They had this huge hawk die-off at this one farm. They were finding hawks everywhere, you know, down or dead. Game and fish called and said, ‘Do you have room for about 25 hawks?’ I said, ‘LUTHER! WHAT!!!???’ There were all these hawks that had gone down on this one farm and we didn’t know what the deal was. We had no idea why they’d all gone down. Finally figured out it was ‘poor poultry husbandry.’ This one farmer had dumped three truck loads of dead chickens. As the predators had gone down towards the bottom, there was botulism…and everybody who was working this pile of dead chickens was dealing with this botulism…I think I got in all totaled 26 hawks…I think 24 of them survived…”
 
“I had all of them in my big flight pen. It was a little crowded. They would all be sitting on the back perch in the back of the flight pen and you would look at all those birds and every one of them was a different color. You know what I mean…the width of the belly band different, or it was a little tiny belly band, or a kind of peachy color…every one of them was different…” 
 
Every bird she gets is an individual. And Lynn is that rare “bird” herself: an unabashed raconteur finding interesting fact and humor at every turn. We’re just fortunate she long ago chose birds in trouble as her source of inspiration. 
 

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Audubon photo contest winners' works to be on display at Shiloh Museum on Saturday


I know this is not a field trip, exactly, but in case you hadn't heard about this already:

This Saturday, October 16, 2010, 1 to 4 pm, at the Shiloh Museum in Springdale, the Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society is displaying Annual Nature Photo Contest winners. In addition, Lynn Sciumbato will present a program featuring live hawks and owls. There will also be a question and answer session by Bird Guys, Dr. Doug James and Joe Neal, authors of Arkansas Birds. The event is free and open to the public. If you have any questions, call 479-575-6364.

Since the program doesn't start until 1 PM, there's PLENTY of time for some good early morning birding before Shiloh.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Field trip to Woolsey Wet Prairie


NWAAS Field Trip to Woolsey Wet Prairie
Share · Public Event


Time
Sunday, October 17 · 9:00am - 5:30pm

LocationBroyles Ave - Fayetteville

Created By

More InfoNorthwest Arkansas Audubon Society will host a field trip to Woolsey Wet Prairie in Fayetteville on Sunday October 17, 2010. Meet on site at 9 AM.

The trip will be lead by Dr Andrew Scaboo, who has studied birds there from the beginning. This is an open brushy and grassy area with shallow pools. All kinds of open country species can be expected. Expect easy walking on earthen levees; boots are a good idea, but not necessary.

The meeting place is in front of the main gate area of the westside wastewater treatment plant on Broyles Ave. There's lots more information and directions on the NWAAS website. Go to nwarkaudubon.org; when you get there, look on the left hand side for Places to bird in Northwest Arkansas. Go there and look for the Woolsey Wet Prairie guide. Lots more information on what birds to expect are in National Audubon's ebird site (look for WWP in the Arkansas hot spots).

*Photo: Nelson's Sparrow at Woolsey Wet Prairie by Joe Neal*

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Joe Neal's report for October 9, 2010


  • love in the wasteland (Vaughn 9 Oct 2010)‏

12:24 PM
To ARBIRD list discussion, Aubrey Shepherd, Beth Lowrey, BEVERLY MADDOX, Bill Beall, Burnetta Hinterthuer, Chris Kellner, Douglas A. James, geddessylvia@yahoo.com, Jacqueline Froelich, Joe Woolbright, Joel Funk, lisa riley, Louise Mann, Lynn Armstrong, Mary Bess Mulhollan, Nancy Harris, Paige Mulhollan, R and M Stauffacher, Shane Woolbright, Susan And Liz, Susan Young, TERRY STANFILL, VINEY, Michelle, Warren Fields
My ambition this morning was to get up to Centerton for sparrows, and maybe a Dunlin, but never made it, waylaid instead by reality. First, it was foggy. Around the time I reached Vaughn the sun was just barely up, and a kind of pink light suffused the fog. I passed an old chicken house, admiring the broad old artistically weathered boards exposed when the tin siding fell off. A big hole that used to be a window was filled with pink light, except for the space occupied by the head of a black and white milk cow. This seemed a promising start.

I still couldn’t see anything across the big fields, but I could hear the Eastern Meadowlark version of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They sang all around (“surround sound” is how they market this, I think), with support from KEE DEE KEE DEE – Killdeers from an invisible, but audible, farm pond. I pulled up right there and listened for a while, thinking I might hear a first of season Western Meadowlark, but didn’t. A few sparrows flushed up on the barbed wire, near enough that I could see them – Savannah Sparrow (2), Grasshopper Sparrow (1).

Still not to Centerton, BUT the day is young, and it’s not so far to “Weedy Estates,” a big flopped subdivision where in the get-rich-quick daze of three years ago, 80 acres were dozed to bare red dirt, streets pushed in, curbed but not paved, forlorn utility hook-ups marooned and deteriorating, plumbing scattered all over the place. So instead of Centerton, I’m headed for Weedy Estates.

The joys of trash dumping in Weedy Estates have been discovered (tires, car parts, yard waste). The unpaved streets are growing gullies. Spaces dozed and flattened for mansionettes are festively decked out in a variety of composities (daisy fleabane, for example), plus poke, persimmon sprouts, and the odd, isolated oak tree. The open country birds obviously love the place. I saw 15 Scissor-tailed Flycatchers carrying on in a fine racket in one tiny tree out in the middle. Enjoying them, I noticed one small bird tail-flipping, then a second, and soon had 2-3 more – Palm Warblers (4-5). Composites sheltered Common Yellowthroats, House Wrens, a Marsh Wren, several Indigo Buntings (including one with a lot of blue), Lincoln’s Sparrow, and other stuff I missed. 

Mentally I took note of the obvious beauties of a seemingly bankrupted subdivision. I summarize as follows: (1) lots of interesting weeds (butterflies and botany); (2) rocky bare dirt (Lark Sparrows); (3) very open (American kestrel); (4) relatively quiet – no lawn mowers, leaf blowers, weed eaters, or Harleys; (5) unfinished roads perfect for easy slow-walk sparrow birding; (6) isolated trees great for hawk perches; (7) a moonscape, a wilderness uninhabited as the moon itself; (8) big open weedy fields perfect for Savannah Sparrows – oops! – just saw 3 in one of those dried up composites! (9) scattered poke bushes (there are 2 Palm Warblers!); (10) no street signs, so I make ‘em up as I go: “Scissor-tailed Perch,” “Palm Warbler Poke,” “Kestrel Vista.” Long may they show the way.

It’s up to mid-morning and the illustrious pink fog is gone -- in fact all of the fog is gone. It’s another drop-dead-beautiful fall day. Then, in the warm light, monarchs stir in the low sheltering atmospheres of tall weeds not planned for these 80 acres, but which now belong almost exclusively to them.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

aubunique: Insect Festival coming up

aubunique: Insect Festival coming up: "Please use live links on site to navigate and read more detail. Bumpers College Home Entomology Home O..."

aubunique: Tree and Landscape Committee sets annual city tree...

aubunique: Tree and Landscape Committee sets annual city tree...: "12th Annual Celebration of TreesSaturday October 9, 2010 7:00 am Town Center entrance on the Fayetteville SquareEvery year the Tree and Lan..."