Column: Got some sugar, water, oranges or grape jelly lying around? Residents are encouraged to share their images and videos of oriole visitors on social media using the hashtags #birdfromhome #weloveorioles and #sdorioles. (Ernie Cowan) Ernie Cowan’s Outdoors column By ERNIE COWAN COLUMNIST FEB. 20, 2021 5 AM PT The kids are coming home and I’m excited. OK, they’re not really my kids, but I feed them and provide a place for them to stay, so they might as well be. In the next few days, the brightly colored hooded oriole males will begin straggling into San Diego County from their winter homes in Mexico. They have made a long, challenging journey and will welcome the energy provided by orange slices, grape jelly or nectar feeders filled with fresh sugar water. By mid-March, local gardens will be buzzing with both males and females as they delight birders with their comical antics, bickering and nest building activities. Over the summer they will construct delicate...
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Showing posts from February, 2021
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Spirits fly high with comforting appearance of red-tailed hawk The red-tailed hawk is the most common hawk in the region. (ERNIE COWAN) ERNIE COWAN Outdoors For a few brief moments I could fly. My mind and heart were soaring on the spread wings of a red-tailed hawk as it floated by at eye level. Without a single wingbeat, the hawk’s tail feathers flared as he banked to the right and the crisp morning sunlight ignited the brilliant red plumage. With awe and childlike imagination I was right there, at one with the hawk, floating on gently rising air currents. A leftover raindrop dripped from my patio roof into the fountain and snapped me back to reality. As is often the case, the sunny morning following a rainstorm is a special time. Nature seems to go on as usual, but there is a sense of rejuvenation in the air. The morning sunlight was warm and refreshing, a relief from the previous cold, damp days. My hawk sighting was comforting. Nature’s clock is still ticking. This beautiful m...