Aren't you afraid those Mt. Bluebirds are gonna fly up your nose or somethingkennychaffin wrote:A few years ago I had blackbirds that would attack me every day on my morning run. I didn't understand why then, but do now that I'm really into bird photography.
mockingbirds
- Flyingcursor
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This isn't true for a lot of snakes. I find snakes all the time who want to eat me alive but don't have any babies (they generally don't even offer parental care at all anyway).Flyingcursor wrote:I have a standing rule about wildlife. If it doesn't run away instantly and shows any sign of aggression, I assume there are little ones nearby somewhere.
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That's why I don't run any more.dwest wrote:Aren't you afraid those Mt. Bluebirds are gonna fly up your nose or somethingkennychaffin wrote:A few years ago I had blackbirds that would attack me every day on my morning run. I didn't understand why then, but do now that I'm really into bird photography.
Kenny A. Chaffin
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"Strive on with Awareness" - Siddhartha Gautama
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"Strive on with Awareness" - Siddhartha Gautama
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But remember - It's a sin to kill a Mockingbird.djm wrote:I have trapped hundreds of them.
And now there was no doubt that the trees were really moving - moving in and out through one another as if in a complicated country dance. ('And I suppose,' thought Lucy, 'when trees dance, it must be a very, very country dance indeed.')
C.S. Lewis
C.S. Lewis
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Our squirrels are black, of course. But the grays are slowly infiltrating.dwest wrote:but what species, red, grey, fox
djm
Last edited by djm on Thu Jun 19, 2008 5:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I'd rather be atop the foothills than beneath them.
Sorta like this?Jack wrote:I went through and I saw a big, grey, flapping, loud monster descending toward me....began flying around me making horrendous noises.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQ5F87v5 ... re=related
I'm sorry you had the bad experience with a mockingbird. I hope you get a chance to meet one in better circumstances some time!
When I was an undergrad I was earnestly in search of the Perfect Tan and used to sunbathe daily. There was a mockingbird that had a territory near my favorite basking spot and so I developed an appreciation for mockingbird music.... Each mockingbird has about a dozen songs that they've picked up from other bird species, and they scroll through them randomly, repeating each song 3 or 4 times or more.
You get something like
tweet-tweet, tweet-tweet, tweet-tweet,
cheerily, cheerily,
tweet-tweet, tweet-tweet,
peter peter peter peter peter,
perchickory, perchickory,
heeeeyaughhhhh!
heeeeyaughhhhh! heeeeyaughhhhh!
purple people eater, purple people eater, purple people eater,
nerd alert, nerd alert
Here's some mockingbird song--
http://www.learnbirdsongs.com/birdsong.php?id=4
The Brown Thrasher is a related species; their song differs in that they usually repeat things twice.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2wJG4uQ ... re=related
Catbirds are also in the same group. They mimic other birds' songs but usually sing each phrase once. I think they're hilarious. By the time you've figured out what song they're imitating they're already on to the next one.
catbird
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mewlAty ... re=related
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It's probably protecting its young ones in the nest. Once the babies are flying, that behavior settles down a little bit. They are too busy trying to keep them in line and feed them. Sort of like taking care of college kids
Mockingbirds, as well as all other songbirds in the US are protected by law. You can get in far worse trouble if you get caught messing with them than if they harass you a little bit. Wear a cap when you walk through their turf. Makes you feel slightly protected. Unless you are a small critter, you are not likely to get physically attacked.
Mockingbirds, as well as all other songbirds in the US are protected by law. You can get in far worse trouble if you get caught messing with them than if they harass you a little bit. Wear a cap when you walk through their turf. Makes you feel slightly protected. Unless you are a small critter, you are not likely to get physically attacked.
I'd toss ya in jail fer ever, darn prosecutors say "Oh! no! we have to follow the law" I say your fer burning at the stake or on a rotisserie. Maybe that's why I don't do that anymore...officially So you said the field next to the hospital, Huh? I could send in a mob of crows, gaggle of geese, a flock of robins who had just finished eating mulberries and a kettle of vutures to finish the remains. So when do you have to walk that way again?Jack wrote:Do people really go to jail for walking under a Mockingbird nest?dwest wrote:It use to be that my rule about wildlife was, if I caught you brothering it, I'd give you an invitation to federal court, at least for some species. And that would have included Mockingbirds.
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I don't know, maybe in two weeks if I need a followup visit.dwest wrote:I'd toss ya in jail fer ever, darn prosecutors say "Oh! no! we have to follow the law" I say your fer burning at the stake or on a rotisserie. Maybe that's why I don't do that anymore...officially So you said the field next to the hospital, Huh? I could send in a mob of crows, gaggle of geese, a flock of robins who had just finished eating mulberries and a kettle of vutures to finish the remains. So when do you have to walk that way again?Jack wrote:Do people really go to jail for walking under a Mockingbird nest?dwest wrote:It use to be that my rule about wildlife was, if I caught you brothering it, I'd give you an invitation to federal court, at least for some species. And that would have included Mockingbirds.
I wonder, though...why is it illegal to disturb the birds? Is it because they're endangered or something?
Try looking up the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918. That should lead you to all the legislation and why and wherefores regarding protection of birds in the US. The Europeans are so far behind it ain't funny.
My old "company" http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/intrn ... atlaw.html
My old "company" http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/intrn ... atlaw.html