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An Ex-Expatriate

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An Ex-Expatriate

Category Archives: Birds in the U.S.

Things That Fly

21 Thursday Mar 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Animals in the U.S., Birds in the U.S., Golf, Photographs, Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Birds on golf courses, Painted Mountain Golf Course, SNJ Trainer

egrets around pond-001

First hole at Painted Mountain Golf Course

When I was growing up we didn’t think much about golf in our family – it was a rich man’s sport and we weren’t rich.  We knew some people who played golf, and some of the boys in my circle of friends caddied on weekends (which made me very envious, because they got $5.00 a round, much better than baby-sitting paid in those days) (girls couldn’t caddy).  There was a lovely golf course in our town, the property of the small liberal arts college there, but we were not members.

Later, when I was a young adult and well into adulthood, I thought golf was the stupidest game in the world.  For starters, you didn’t hit a moving ball – what fun could that be?  Then there was the enormous waste of space – think of all the people who could live on those lovely greenswards.  Criminal!  Later still I reviled the game for the waste of water and energy to maintain the courses, and for the chemicals that are liberally applied to keep the grass so thick and green.  On a much more superficial level I found the clothing worn by golfers hilarious.  White shoes and belts, men in pink trousers (Sheriff Joe would love it) – definitely all fashion ‘don’ts.’

Now I’m an old fart and a seasoned golfer of some three years and I’ve changed my tune.  Speedy, the cause of my descent into the world of golf, and I usually walk when we play; after all, it is meant to be exercise, and a round of golf gives us a good four mile hike.  The game is much more challenging than I ever imagined, and much more fun (on the days when it’s not infuriating). Here in Arizona all the golf courses are watered with ‘reclaimed’ water – not stuff you want to drink.

But best of all, for me, is being outdoors for a four-hour stretch, looking at the flowers, the trees, the water (as long as I’m not looking for my ball in the water) and most of all, the things that fly over and around our golf course.  I won’t even bore you with the jets landing at Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport – they are a near constant, though still high enough that their noise is not intrusive; or with the numerous helicopters that fly around – MD Helicopters and Boeing both manufacture whirly-birds, which are frequently given test runs above Mesa.  Of more interest are the historic planes that fly from nearby Falcon Field where there is a museum operated by the Commemorative Air Force.

B-17 Flying Fortress (Sentimental Journey)

Here she is on the ground at the Air Museum:

IMG_2353

bi-plane

MetLive blimp over golf course-001
This last is not housed at Falcon Field.  The Metlife blimps don’t have permanent homes, but rather stay near the events they are covering. (You can read all about them here.)

But I love the birds we see around the golf course even more than the flyers with engines.  As I began to prepare this post I realized that I’ve got far too many photos of golf course birds to put here, so I’ve made an album which you can see by clicking here (then click ‘slide show’).  I’m not even remotely confident about my bird ID’s, so feel free to correct me.

The two birds I love seeing the most are the peach-faced lovebirds which are native to arid regions of Africa and the Phoenix area.  They are popular pet birds, and some most have escaped around here; clearly they’ve been successful in adapting to Arizona life.  They are colorful and congregate in groups; they are tremendously chatty.  It’s not at all unusual to be lining up your golf shot and have a lovebird zoom in front of you about three feet away. Doesn’t this guy have an impish expression??

lovebirds on feeder-008

My other favorite to watch is the Great-tailed (or Boat-tailed) Grackle. The female is a rather dull brown-black in color, but the male is glossy black and proud of it.  They stalk around in a show-offy kind of way, and frequently stop and put their heads up in the air as if they were smelling something (if it’s Painted Mountain and 5 p.m. they’re smelling BBQ).

boat tailed grackles-001

This week I got to see what I take to be the mating display of the male. He sat on a tree branch as normal as could be.  Then he ruffled out all his breast feathers, as if he were taking a deep breath, which he then held for a moment as he opened his beak.  At last he spoke – or rather sqawked, because that is the sound they make.  He alternated between the usual squawk and a sort of whistle.  The Cornell Ornithology Lab has a terrific web site where you can hear a lot of different birds, including the grackle – but I have to say, I think the ones on our golf course have a lot more raucaus call than those the lab recorded.

Here are a couple of other bird pictures which I hope will encourage you to look at the rest in the web album.

coots graze-002

The coots are very entertaining as well, mostly because they are called coots, and when they get in your way you can say, “Watch out, you coots!”

ducklings-10

Is there any place in the world where mallards are not at home?

Things that fly – the sky is full of them, and so are the golf-course ponds.  There is always something wonderful to look at to distract you from actually playing the game.

Lakeside stroll

12 Tuesday Feb 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Arizona, Birds in the U.S., Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Great blue heron, Lake Tempe, Tempe Lake

When one thinks of Arizona, lakes are not the first things that pop into one’s head. In fact, though, there are quite a few lakes in the State – from the large Roosevelt Lake created by the Theodore Roosevelt Dam in 1911 to the hundreds of teeny lakes that dot the many golf courses in the region.  It’s a disorienting but not unusual sight to see a large pick-up hauling a big motor boat along a desert highway.

Recently Speedy and I took ourselves and a picnic lunch to Tempe Town Lake, formed by a dam on the same Salt River that creates Roosevelt Lake, but some 80 miles closer to Phoenix.  In fact Tempe is just a stone’s throw from downtown Phoenix, and is the home of Arizona State University.

Tempe Art Center and bridge

It is also home to the beautiful Tempe Center for the Arts, completed in 2007, just in time for Speedy’s and my arrival in Arizona.  It was a concert by the Ridge Trio that took us to the Art Center with our sack of food, and a very civilized time of it we had, sitting in metal park seats and watching the passing scene on the broad sidewalk between us and the lake.  Over two million people use the park each year, and we saw a fine cross-section of them: Dads with cameras and babies; boyfriends with cameras and beautiful girl friends; fitness enthusiasts speed-walking; young men practicing complex moves with a plastic sword; roller-bladers; co-eds jogging together; couples jogging together; solitary people jogging; and of course my favorite: dog walkers.  The largest dog we saw was Sally, a seven-year old Great Dane with one blue eye and one brown eye:

Great Dane Sally

She was a very friendly girl, and I must say, it’s always a pleasure to meet someone who outweighs me by a good thirty pounds.

The Tempe Town Lake lies smack between the approaches to Sky Harbor Airport’s two runways; Speedy recalls many landings using the Salt River as his visual guide.  Here’s a Southwest Air flight bringing happy visitors to a place presumably warmer than the place they left:

SW arriving

Between our picnic and the concert we took a little walk along the lake side and over the beautiful pedestrian suspension bridge that spans the western edge of the lake.

Tempe bridge

I realized that with a little ingenuity one could probably make a similar bridge with tools and supplies found right in one’s garage.  For starters you’d need some heavy duty wire to use for suspending your walkway (note the pretty pattern in the pavement).  Then you’d need some big bolts and some bit cotter pins.

Tempe bridge bolts

Tempe bridge cotter pin

What could be difficult about that?

The stroll along the far bank of the lake was a veritable nature walk.  While it may not be as festive as a partridge in a pear tree, it’s a treat to see a Gambel’s quail in any kind of tree:

quail in tree-002

An adjoining tree was chock-a-block full of nests – but whose?

nests in treeSpeedy’s sharp eye caught the best treat of all.  He saw what looked like a large water bird fly in and land on a dock.

great blue heron eating a fishSure enough, there it was! A fine, healthy great blue heron  But it looked so peculiar – why?  On closer inspection we discovered that it had caught one of the many talapia stocked in the lake and was trying to swallow it.  We could watch for only five or ten minutes as our concert hour was fast approaching; we don’t know if there was a happy ending for the heron; there certainly wasn’t for the fish.

great blue heron eating a fish-011

great blue heron eating a fish-017It seems impossible that such a big fish could fit down that narrow neck, but we’ll never know for sure.

If nothing else our walk showed us how adept the birds are at adapting to whatever development we throw at them.  What treats we had on our short walk!

All’s Well That Ends Well… We Hope (Guest Post by Speedy)

15 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by farfalle1 in Birds in the U.S., Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Arizona Covey Project, Bird Rehabilitation, Bird Rescue, East Valley Wildlife Center, Gambel's quail, Wildlife Rescue

 

An apprehension had been growing in us since last weekend.  We went north, close to Sedona,  for a very pleasant visit with old Connecticut friends.  We had left eleven Gambel’s Quail eggs behind in the flower pot on our deck, four more than what we had initially discovered.  But!  We returned to discover that a twelfth egg had arrived. 

Our relief was short-lived.  Not only did no more eggs arrive in the following days, but we didn’t see anyone who might qualify as Mother Quail anywhere near the nest.  We would check each day; that was about the only activity we had on the deck.  Both of us seemed naturally to avoid that area, leaving it as a quiet spot that might induce the start of the incubation process.  But, alas!, nary a favorable sign appeared. 

By last Friday, our edginess was growing.  Again, seeking the counsel of the East Valley Wildlife Center, I learned of the Arizona Covey Project.  I left a message with them and they called back in the afternoon.  Ms Jeannie’s advice was to wait another day and see if mom appeared.  She didn’t . . . . 

But, this weekend, the eighth of this winter’s Pacific cold fronts came through, making for a very chilly (for here) and windy Saturday.  Ms. Jeannie opined that if the mother were going to appear, she would do so under these harsh conditions.  In the alternative, should she not arrive and if it got hot enough for some consecutive days (we’ve already had temperatures in the low 90’s), the eggs could self-incubate, leaving the tiny chicks with no parental guidance.  Bad thought, disturbing thought. 

So, yesterday afternoon we delicately placed the lovely eggs in a small plastic tissue-filled flower pot and took ourselves to the Arizona Covey Project in North Phoenix. 

Quite the place!  There were caged birds of many kinds everywhere.  There was also a wall of incubators that looked disturbingly like small ovens to me.  

But, having trust in someone who clearly devotes her life to the rescue of birds (while we were there a call came in concerning a possible pelican rescue!  Someone see a sea around here?), we left our eggs to her care. 

Now when I say there were many kinds of birds there I ain’t whistling Dixie–they ran the gamut from  sparrows to ducklings.

Finches and others

Curve Billed Thrasher

An albino quail!

To give an idea of the scope of what goes on, their brochure states that they receive between 500 and 1,000 Gambel’s Quail chicks a year! 

This is the educator quail. He goes to schools with Ms. Jeannie to teach the children about his species.

That is only one of the species that reside there.  I was particularly gratified to examine a cage that contained 4 mature Peach-faced Love Birds, the same colorful, exotic creatures that flit around our Painted Mountain golf course in East Mesa. 

What’s next?  We asked Ms Jeannie if we could check in via email from Italy, to which spot we are now free to return, for progress reports.  That was fine with her.

Bird rehabilitator Ms. Jeannie

We Bought a Basil Plant, We Got Birds – Guest Post by Speedy

05 Thursday Apr 2012

Posted by farfalle1 in Animals in the U.S., Birds in the U.S., Uncategorized

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Gambel's quail, Quail egg incubation, Quail eggs

Along about mid-December, during a relatively warm spell, we got optimistic and bought a basil plant to keep outdoors.  It was all downhill from there.  The weather not only slowly changed but this winter, most unusually, we had  six Pacific cold fronts come through.  We’ve had weather, including temperatures below freezing, thunderstorms with hail, and high winds.  There were very warm spells in between but it was all too much for our little basil plant.

We planted it  in a large, deep terra cotta pot, along with some mixed flowers–which did very well indeed.  This pot is about three feet from the sliding glass door that gives entry to the kitchen from our deck.  The basil withered and slowly disappeared.  But, lo!, it disappeared not only from the dwindles but because in its spot arose a number of huge Swiss Chard leaves which took over the whole back half of the pot.  Well, cool, we love Swiss Chard.  In fact, your regular author bought a nice bundle of same yesterday and then went out to harvest the enormous leaves (that had clearly come from seeds in the basil cup) to make up a nice mess of greens to go with our fried cod.

She found she could not bring herself to do so.  Under the shade of the chard, in an ingeniously arranged bowl in the earth, she found seven Gambel’s quail eggs.  Now, why in the world would a quail select a flower pot, just a few feet from our kitchen, as her nesting spot?  Hummmmmmm. It might make sense.  The coyotes use the field next to us as their primary market of delicacies, among which have to be the scores of quail that live there.  We hear their howls during the middle of the night. Smart mother Quail!  Her nest is in a fenced courtyard!

From that moment until now, there has been no sighting of mother quail, even at 3 AM when I got up to check.  But, wait!   Fern told me that there were seven eggs.  I found nine this morning.  There were ten at midday and a check just now showed eleven eggs.  Something very fishy is in the works.

Seeking knowledge, that I did not readily find on the Internet, I telephoned the East Valley Wildlife Center, to which I was referred by the Arizona Humane Society.

All OK!  The rig is that a Gambel’s hen does not sit and incubate her eggs until they are all laid–usually about fifteen of them.  Only then is it time to get to the sedentary part–with help yet.  Dad does his duty and sits as well.  The incubation period is 21-23 days.  And when they hatch, the chicks, after drying off for a short while, are ready to march off, under the watchful eyes of the proud parents.

We may have to delay our return to Italy.  The suspense of not knowing the results of this extraordinary act of creation would be more than we could handle.


Yes, you counted correctly.  We’re up to twelve.  Stay tuned…

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