What an incredible encounter! I was just past Panorama Point, searching for White-tailed Ptarmigan when I turned around and saw it running up the snow towards me. It stopped and stared at me for a minute, before bouncing up the snow and continuing up the ridge following before going up and over the ridge and out of view. I got some great photos and took a few videos as well. Quite a surreal experience.
The photo is of a Violet-green Swallow in a nest box with 5 Western Bluebird nestlings. The Violet-green Swallows have returned after migrating and are looking for cavities to nest in. The swallows won't harm the nestlings, and there are reports of swallows actually assisting in feeding the nestlings.
Violet-green Swallows and Ash-throated Flycatchers are the late nesters and often have to use whatever cavities are available. I've been finding both Tree and Violet-green Swallow nest starts in boxes from which other species have fledged and before I had a chance to clean the used nest out.
This is another example of the competition among birds that occurs for cavities to nest in. I added another nest box nearby in hopes that the swallows will use it.
Here's the swallow observation: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/79034267
📸: By Lee Pauser
This observation was part of a nest box trail done in conjunction with the California Bluebird Recovery Program (CBRP), which runs the Cavity Nesters Recovery Program (CNRP). CNRP involves many volunteers across California who establish and monitor nest box trails for cavity-nesting birds. During the breeding season, these boxes are checked weekly for parasitism, predation, number of eggs, nestlings, and number of young fledged. Then at the end of the nesting season, volunteers submit their results to CBRP. We compile these results and submit them to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s NestWatch program and other interested organizations.
Today I found the largest clutch of Tree Swallow eggs I have ever seen totaling 9 eggs (see the first photo). A normal clutch size for Tree Swallows ranges from 4 to 7 eggs so this is unusual and on the surface would appear for me to be a record.
However, a nearby nest box has the beginnings of an Ash-throated Flycatcher nest on top of a Tree Swallow nest (see second photo). What likely happened was the flycatcher usurped the swallow resulting in 2 female swallows laying eggs in the same nest box.
This is another example the competition among birds that occurs for cavities to nest in. I have added a third nest box between the 2 nest boxes hoping the usurped Tree Swallows will now use it.
Here's the Ash-throated Flycatcher observation: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/78401857
📸: By Lee Pauser
This observation was part of a nest box trail done in conjunction with the California Bluebird Recovery Program (CBRP), which runs the Cavity Nesters Recovery Program (CNRP). CNRP involves many volunteers across California who establish and monitor nest box trails for cavity-nesting birds. During the breeding season, these boxes are checked weekly for parasitism, predation, number of eggs, nestlings, and number of young fledged. Then at the end of the nesting season, volunteers submit their results to CBRP. We compile these results and submit them to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s NestWatch program and other interested organizations.
Here's the magpie observation: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/70785441
With my finger for size comparison.
captured feeding on chickens roosting in trees
Taken while on the ferry from Saint John to Digby Nova Scotia. Shark breeched twice, managed to get about 6 photos the second time it breeched. Not sure which species of Thresher Shark it is