Sunday, April 4, 2010
Eagles in The Woodlands 2010!
Sunday, February 28, 2010
An Irrepressible Bird - the Carolina Wren!

Monday, February 8, 2010
The Waxwings have arrived!!

Friday, August 14, 2009
When it rains, it pours .... Yellow-crowned Night Herons!!

Friday, July 24, 2009
The Summer Tanager summers in The Woodlands!!



These birds have a pretty whistle with short pauses. Usually one set has something that sounds like "peanut-butter." And their call is a clicking "pit-i-tuck." Personally, it's a lot easier to identify these birds by their appearance on a birdbath than by listening for "peanut-butter" in the treetops, but often that's the only way you would know that they're around!
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
What's that bird with the SUNGLASSES?!

Egyptian Geese are abundant in the Nile Valley and south of the Sahara. They have also been introduced to other areas. Great Britain, the Netherlands and Germany have self-sustaining feral populations. They arrived in the United States from Great Britain as exotics, to beautify estates of wealthy landowners. They promptly escaped, and by golly, here they are thriving in The Woodlands, Texas!!
This is a largely land-loving bird, happy to perch in trees or on buildings. It swims well, but when it flies, it looks more like a goose than a duck (hence the name). Egyptian geese typically eat seeds, leaves, grasses, and plant stems.
These handsome large geese have patches of chestnut-colored feathers around each eye, which give them a spectacled appearance. Some of them have gray-brown upper parts; others are red-brown. They have black tails and yellow eyes; their bills, legs and feet are pink. Sexes are alike, but the females are somewhat smaller. Though Egyptian geese are not very vocal, during times of stress or aggressive behavior it's easy to distinguish males and females by their sound. The males have a raspy hiss, while females produce a loud cackling sound. Although very quarrelsome and bad-tempered by nature, they form strong pair bonds and are excellent parents.
They're not only gorgeous, but they have an ancient and noble history!!
Monday, June 15, 2009
Welcome those Mosquito-loving SWALLOWS!


Now head to the northern end of the lake and look under Lake Woodlands Drive Bridge (from Northshore Park). Those birds have a tail that is NOT forked! Its tip is square across. These are the Cliff Swallows that Gary Clark mentioned. The bridge provides a protective overhang and a nearby mud source. If you look at the photo at the top, each mud nest is made up of about a thousand small, mud pellets. Each mating pair in the colony shapes its home piece by piece into a bottle-necked nest which they then line it with grasses and feathers.
* Gary Clark writes the weekly nature column for the Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express News. Be sure to look for his article every Saturday in those newspapers!!
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Red-cockaded Woodpecker

It's no wonder that they are endangered -- how fussy can you be?! The Red-cockaded Woodpecker makes its home in mature pine forests, preferably longleaf pines. While other woodpeckers bore out cavities in dead trees where the wood is rotten and soft, the Red-cockaded Woodpecker is the only one which excavates cavities exclusively in living pine trees. The older pines often suffer from a red heart rot which attacks the center of the trunk, causing the inner wood, the heartwood, to become soft. Cavities generally take from 1 to 3 years to excavate! The woodpecker drills a number of small holes around the nest, allowing sap to run as a protection against snakes. (The tree can look like a dripping candle! - a great way to spot their nest). These cavities provide homes later for a number of other birds and wildlife.