Did you know….?

I wanted to know more about my backyard buddies, so I looked up a few facts. I’m sharing them with you along with photos I took this week. I hope you enjoy them and they add a delight and smile to your day!

This male House Finch beauty has been hanging out on our cactus statue the last few days. They are common in Arizona and eat seeds and have a beautiful song.

I captured a White-Winged Dove and Mourning Doves at the Bird Buddy Feeder. Here are a few facts:

White-Winged Doves can fly 25 or more miles to find water. In the Sonoran Desert, they are able to obtain needed moisture from saguaro cactus fruit. When migrating they can travel in groups of up to 4000 birds to nesting sites.–Arizona Sonora Desert Museum

From Birds and Blooms about Mourning Doves:

They are gentle, quiet, and calming birds known for their soft cooing and for feeding on ground-scattered seeds, often helping clean up feeders. They are viewed as symbols of peace, love, and hope, often nesting on flat surfaces like planters, patio eaves, or windowsills.

Photos below of Red, the male, and Mrs., the female half of the Northern Cardinal couple, who live in the wash behind our home.

Northern Cardinals are iconic, non-migratory songbirds known for their brilliant red plumage, distinctive crests, and year-round presence in North America. Both males and females sing, with females often singing from the nest to communicate with their mates. They are monogamous, highly territorial, and are the state bird for seven US states. — Birds and Blooms

Happy Friday! What are your weekend plans?

Red and Mrs. Among Friends

Mother cardinals are dedicated caregivers, often seen feeding and guiding their fledglings, which are brown-grey with dark beaks and sparse feathers. Fledglings leave the nest within 10-12 days but rely on parents to feed them for several more weeks while learning to fly. Parents, including the mother, frequently feed young on the ground or in low shrubs. –Allaboutbirds.org

The papa quail and mourning dove were more sociable to Red than the stuffy flamingo.

Which is your favorite photo and why?

My Bird Buddies

This video shows the Curved-billed thrasher in action!

How is your week going so far?

A Few More Birds

Do you have a favorite photo today?

Are you in danger of the storm?

Birds and More Birds

What are your plans for the weekend? Can you believe we’re almost through the month of February?

We Got Pink Slipped — Again!

I wrote about our first offense and our bad, bad neighborhood along with coyotes HERE.

Here are a couple nature shots I took this week:

Have a great weekend! What are your plans for this second weekend of February?

Gilded Flickers, Gila Woodpeckers, Mourning Doves and Red

What are your plans for this weekend? Are you rooting for the Seahawks?