Wednesday, February 11, 2015

For the birds...


Northern cardinal, American goldfinch, junco, blue jay, titmice, Carolina chickadee, red-belling woodpecker, downy woodpecker, Carolina wren. They were the visitors at my winter feeders this morning. Crows flew overhead but didn’t deign to investigate. Two deer, a large doe and a still-small summer fawn, watched from about 20 feet away as I fed the chickens.
Ice hides under the latest coating of snow, making the morning chores treacherous. I inch along, careful with every step. It is not a pretty sight.

It’s a typical winter morning at my cabin. The mornings are still rather dark, partly because the hours of daylight are still short and partly because even when the sun is up elsewhere, the mountain hides the disc until nearly 9 a.m. Officially sunrise is still a bit after 7 a.m. The evenings are longer, and I do get the benefit of those longer minutes. Twilight hangs on later, now. It is still not fully dark even at 6:30 p.m., though the sun sets nearly an hour earlier.

The chickens still haven’t started laying again; they are still on winter egg break. They are done molting, though, and all their new feathers are grown in. I am spoiling them with mealworms and fresh sprouts, hoping to encourage them to start laying again soon. I miss those fresh eggs. I’ve heard that 14 hours of daylight is the optimum time for a chicken to lay eggs, and I’m a long way from that. I’m sure the overcast skies aren’t helping either. I guess I’ll just have to be patient a little while longer.

4 comments:

Scott said...

Carolyn: I noticed that today (Wednesday) was the first time the sun rose before 7 a.m. this year! Yeah! The sky was clear here east of you this morning, and I actually noticed the earlier sunrise for the first time--probably because we weren't huddled under a thick blanket of clouds for once.

I had a Brown Creeper scuttling along the tree near my feeder this last weekend, but it never came to the feeder itself even though there was plenty of suet there for it. I see creepers occasionally in the winter (usually on the trees visible from my office window); this is the first creeper I can recall near my feeder.

Carolyn H said...

Scott: If you have a clear view to the east, I could see how you would have the sun before 7 a.m. I've never had a brown creeper at my feeders, but I often see them nearby when I'm watching the birds that are in the feeders. Maybe if I had a feeder that looked like a tree trunk...

Sharkbytes said...

Have you seen the silly chicken sweaters for molting birds. You'd think chicken haven't gotten along for millennia without our help.

Carolyn H said...

joan: I haven't seen a silly chicken sweater yet, but today I saw a silly penguin sweater. does that count?