Showing posts with label Bird Songs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bird Songs. Show all posts

Monday, March 6, 2017

A big song bird and camellia blooms. . . . . . . . .


A relatively secret bird, the Brown thrasher can be uncooperative in offering
 up its song or the songs of other birds it often mimics. However, when the male does
 let loose, it can display the largest repertoire of any North American bird. . . . .an
 amazing 1,200 songs have been documented!
It usually sings from a perch high in the treetops when hoping to claim a mate, 
and territory. Personally I've only been privy to that amazing concert once, and
 that was several years ago. 
At this time of year, this quite large bird at 11.5 inches in length, stays closer to the
 ground foraging through leaf litter, thrashing its bill from side to side to expose
 spiders and insects - this movement gives it the name 'thrasher'.
Only during winter will it come to feeders, but you can attract it to your garden
with berry-producing plants such as hollies, elderberry, mulberry. . . . . . . . and
of course a water source. A couple of years back a pair nested at eye level in my
 large variegated privet shrub, I loved seeing them closeup.
 Here, my recent visitor tried out two of my back garden baths, and I was able
 to get a few good photos from the window.


Camellia japonica - the Rose of Winter - blooms are profuse this year - I have two
 now quite large bushes in the garden, both this color. Neighbors have beautiful
 pale pink ones - I should get one of those planted too!



Such beautiful markings on the Brown thrasher's chest and wings, plus the gleaming
 yellow eyes. Male and female are similar so not sure which this one is.

If you are within the range of this bird I hope you have them in your garden -
they are fun to watch and perhaps, some day if you're lucky, you'll hear one
 serenading non-stop from a treetop.