Thursday, February 24, 2022

Rush Hour

It is just past 7:00 in the morning and the sun is starting to peek over the horizon through the woods in the East.  Temperature is a challenging 39F and will hit 40F by this afternoon. It was almost 70F yesterday and that has been the state of things. Winter followed by summer followed by fall all in one week! 

I saw a flock of robins flying in and turning the leaves in my backyard as I sipped my morning coffee.  This means to me there may be the rarer flock of Cedar Waxwings nearby.  They tend to move together. It is that time of year.

I go to the front window, near the holly, and as expected, I see the silhouettes of Cedar Waxwings against the bright morning sky in the tall tulip tree. I go outside very quietly and stop just at the second porch step. I sit slowly on the cold flagstone in my flannel pajamas and lean against my cold stone wall and slowly lift my camera to the tops of the nearby tulip tree. There are dozens and dozens of the Waxwings!  My photo is backlit, and therefore, a harder challenge for this amateur photographer.

There are 40 or 50 silhouettes of Cedar Waxwings surveying the front yard!  I sit for several minutes taking photos.

The Waxwings remain quiet.
Because my angle is so low, the close-ups do not show the beauty of these bandits.



14 comments:

  1. Beautiful!
    The cedar wax wings are difficult to photograph. The feeling of seeing a flock of them is one of those in person best experiences. (For a second I was expecting to read a visitor on your deck.)

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  2. I noticed when taking out the trash this morning, not just the two or three insistent bird calls, but a cacophony of conversations...certainly not a symphony, but somehow they must have known which ones were speaking to them specifically. It was wonderful.

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  3. Oh, I am envious of your wax wings. They are so beautiful.

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  4. Some many beautiful creatures outside your door. Heaven!

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  5. How terrific is that!

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  6. Not sure my comment took. Good job.

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  7. Here the bohemian waxwings have formed large flocks getting ready to fly north. they stay here all winter but are in smaller flocks. We don't see cedar waxwings until June.

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  8. What an amazing chance to see them in such a large number and so close.

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  9. I couldn't begin to count the number of times I have seen Cedar Waxwings in my life, but it never becomes any less special.

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  10. Absolutely stunning the Cedar Waxwings, sitting in the tree. Beauty

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  11. When I lived in the city we had robins year round. Moved out here and I never saw any until last year when a big flock moved through staying for a couple of weeks. Waxwings move through every year but I don't always see them as they don't come to the feeders and only stay a couple of days. Right now I have goldfinches that will move on.

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  12. ThAT,S lovely new header. Just beautiful. You are going to have to build yourself a heated bird blind. LOL

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  13. Haven't seen cedar waxwings for a long time. I used to catch them maybe once a year, great excitement.

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  14. Now that you are thawed out, don't forgeet your coat next time. Yes, look at all of them. Glorious.

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Glad to hear from you once again. I really like these visits. Come sit on this log and tell me what you are thinking.