Monday, September 16, 2013

First Painted Bunting Of 2013-14 Season





Painted Bunting Molting

This rough looking Painted Bunting arrived yesterday in central Florida about 5 to 6 weeks early. I have never seen one before about October 17th-24th. This appears to be a young male in the middle of molting. Typically we never see a molting bird as they do not depart their northern haunts until done molting. Believe it or not - this rough looking Bunting will become the most spectacular looking songbird in all of North America this fall. See:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8-TUzAV4A4 for an example.

More HD videos every week. Please Subscribe at: 
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=MyBackyardBirding


Hummingbird Versus BumbleBee


                                                    Video: Ruby Throated Hummingbird Competes With BumbleBee


Ruby Throated Hummingbird and Bumble Bee
Ruby Throated Hummingbird Competes With BumbleBee

Ruby Throated Hummingbirds continue their battle with insects over the sweet nectar in the feeder. After getting chased off by a Swallowtail Butterfly in:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXx0v7lMG40
These Hummers now have a rather gluttonous BumbleBee to deal with. The Bee has quite poor table manners, where the Hummers could grab a quick drink while the ants, small bees and butterflies were also drinking - the stout BumbleBee simply sticks it's entire bulbous head into the entrance - blocking others from sharing. The Hummer is clearly aggrivated and snaps and scolds at the Bee - but does not dispatch it.

More HD videos every week. Please Subscribe at:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=MyBackyardBirding

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Crested Caracara Feasting on Wild Pig Carcass in Florida




Crested Caracara Feasting on Wild Pig Carcass in Florida

Crested Caracara Feasting on Wild Pig Carcass in Florida

The magnificent Crested Caracara are rarely seen members of the falcon family in Florida. There is a stable population in central Florida, however, they typically live in very remote open rangeland/ranch areas. They have adapted to live primarily off (unfortunately abundant) roadkill of wildlife - in this case a rather large wild pig. They themselves (and other raptors) are occasionally killed by cars as they eat carrion. If this had been winter time they would have had to fight hard with abundant vultures that move into the same area.

More HD videos every week. Please Subscribe at:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=MyBackyardBirding

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Cute Alert! Mother Donkey Gives Child a Nudge...



Mother Donkey and child or foal

Mother Donkey (or jenny) and child (foal) by the roadside. OK this is not truly wildlife and a bit gratuitous, but I simply could not resist capturing this roadside scene and uploading it once the mother subtly tells the little one to get up with a nudge - which of course is ignored. Donkeys are very intelligent and cautious animals and the mother sensed my presence was of concern and wanted to get the foal up and moving - it was having no part of that idea.

More HD videos every week. Please Subscribe at: 

Mother Elk and Calf



Video: Mother Elk and Calf - Great Smoky Mountains
Video: Mother Elk and Calf - Great Smoky Mountains

Gentle and relaxing scenes of an Elk Calf with its Mother in the Great Smoky Mountains of North Carolina.

More HD videos every week. Please Subscribe at:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=MyBackyardBirding

Backyard Birding...and Beyond! Channel Trailer Now Online



Backyard Birding Bird and Wildlife Videos
Backyard Birding...and Beyond! Channel Trailer. Some of the Greatest Hits!
I finally created a channel trailer for the companion YouTube channel for this blog - Backyard Birding...and Beyond! It's sort of a greatest hits sampler to give people an idea of what the channel is all about and hopefully entice them to watch and subscribe. It is made up of short clips from 23 different videos. If nothing else I hope it is an entertaining three minutes of nature enjoyment.

This is the text that accompanies the video on YouTube -
The home of wild Eastern Screech Owls...this is Backyard Birding ....and Beyond!  Sharing original HD videos of birds and Nature in general observed in our backyard and in our travels. Our goal is to capture the unique moments when creatures interact naturally or reveal something unusual. Sometimes funny and cute, beautiful, or surprising and shocking, but always real, wild, and original. New HD videos are uploaded each week and Eastern Screech Owls are live each spring. Also free bird-call ringtones!  A companion blog - Screech Owls...and Nature is at: http://screech-owls.blogspot.com . Thanks for visiting - Adventure is as near as the Backyard! If you like what you see please subscribe, comment and share to help support our work.

Subscribe at: 

Original  source videos from this channel used in this trailer video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VTmQ1mnjAJc  Funniest and Cutest Baby Owls
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wr70t9Gu5zA   Transformer Owl and Squirrel
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyw82AiDuWY Screech Owlet Leaves the Nest
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYLYZ36uhNQ Screech Owl Outside the Nest Box
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=glGpBragTs8  Amazing Pileated Woodpecker Calls
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7bhQwjUSq0 Female Downy Woodpecker Calls
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZzfqmht2mc  Baby Hummingbird Heartbeat
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KN_iwxUAcbM Face-Off Dove Versus Woodpecker
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXx0v7lMG40 Hummingbird Dominated by Butterfly
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CA1c6J6mwYc  Flying Squirrel Ghost of the Forest
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMkhnE7uqbo Waterfalls of Letchworth State Park

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Woodland Jumping Mouse In the Wild - First Time on Video!


Woodland Jumping Mouse
Woodland Jumping Mouse
Lucky break while staking out Flying Squirrels I apparently captured the only known video on the "Web" or at least in the Google World of a Woodland Jumping Mouse in the wild. Of course the individual mice are very small in this night-vision video captured using a Bushnell HD Trail Cam, but what one can see - are the amazing jumps and that of course, is what is the key attribute of this species. Able to jump well over several meters in a single bound, the Woodland Jumping Mouse is an amazing member of the rodent family, rarely, if ever, filmed at night in its natural environment.

In the video they can be seen making easy jumps of 5 to 6 feet. They do very little "walking". Nocturnal, this wild and crazy group of jumping mice live at nearly 4000 feet elevation in an Eastern Hemlock grove on the banks of a small stream in the Great Smoky Mountains - a choice habitat for them. There is leftover seed on the ground from daytime feeding of birds that they are after.  A Flying Squirrel is also in the mix - you will note how the jump of the squirrel is not even comparable. The tails of the Woodland Jumping Mice are much longer than their bodies and their rear feet are large. They are more often found in eastern Canada, but populations remain at the higher elevations of the southern Appalachians. They apparently relish the colder winters as they are hibernators and only active during the warmer months. Here are some links to more information:
http://www.dnr.sc.gov/cwcs/pdf/woodlandjumpingmousem.pdf
http://www.mnh.si.edu/mna/image_info.cfm?species_id=207

More HD videos every week. Please Subscribe at:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=MyBackyardBirding

Flying Squirrel - Little Ghost of the Forest



Southern Flying Squirrel
Southern Flying Squirrel 


Southern Flying Squirrel
Southern Flying Squirrel 

Southern Flying Squirrel
Southern Flying Squirrel 
I finally caught a Southern Flying Squirrel on camera and video! I noticed a squirrel at the feeder after dark and upon shining a flashlight on it made the happy discovery! Over the next few nights i set up cameras by LED lantern light and night-vision cameras to document them.  Flying Squirrels glide through the forest night like a little ghost in the trees. The woods behind the house are incredibly dense and this is the fourth species of squirrel I've documented living there - Red, Gray, Brown and Southern Flying. The Gray's are the largest.

This little squirrel is even smaller than a Red Squirrel with a very flat tail to aide its gliding and large eyes, big ears and extremely long whiskers to fit its nocturnal lifestyle. It would be difficult to capture this squirrel in flight as it tends to move through the forest at high levels in the trees and then quickly run down the trunk to get to the feeder, but I'll try in the future. This squirrel lives in a Hemlock and mixed hardwood forest at 4000 feet in the Great Smoky Mountains - the much rarer and larger Northern Flying Squirrel also lives in these mountains at a little higher elevation. I would love to film one of those. The squirrel feeder box would eventually be discovered by Eastern Screech and Barred Owls so you'll note the extreme caution this little squirrel uses when exposing itself in the open. It spends most of its time lying flat against the tree trunk.

More HD videos every week. Please Subscribe at:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=MyBackyardBirding








Wednesday, September 4, 2013

The Spiny Orb Weaver Spider - A Natural Work of Art!




Spiny Orb Weaver Spider Florida
Spiny Orb Weaver Spider - A Work of Art!
I've seen these little spiders off and on over the years, but never one in such an accesible location for filming. This little Orb Weaver was in our backyard maybe 20 feet from where I found it's huge relative The Golden Web Orb Weaver https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7RXyYzjzZvs earlier in the summer.
But this Orb Weaver spider is only about half an inch across. It is sometimes called a "crab spider", but crab isn't what comes to mind when I see this little jewel of a spider. I don't know if it's just me and the macro lens, but the top of the spider looks a lot like a porcelain Foo Dog or Bowser from Super Mario Brothers.It appears to me to have an eastern art look to it.

The purpose of this amazing colorful deception is to repel potential predators and avoid being eaten. Far from being scary to my eye it looks a bit like a happy face with rays of sunshine. But then I don't eat spiders! Nevertheless, it is a very attractive, beneficial and entertaining little spider. In the video  it eats a caught mosquito and also shows a serious aversion to vegetables, as lacking insects, I threw a small flower and piece of green leaf into its web to get it to move around - after which it quickly threw them out of the nest with an expression of obvious disdain! It seemed to be all business and fastidiously keeping a tidy web lest it miss out on a meal, it certainly had no intentions of humoring me. These spiders are small and their bite reportedly causes a very mild reaction and it is extremely unlikely that anyone would be bitten. If you see this colorful little spider let it be and enjoy!

More HD videos every week. Please Subscribe at:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=MyBackyardBirding


Sunday, September 1, 2013

Blind Baby Screech Owl Undergoes Eye Surgery

Here is an interesting story out of Southfield, Michigan from Amy Akers of WLNS TV 6 Lansing - Jackson.
A baby Eastern Screech Owl that was born blind and unable to care for itself was living at the Howell Nature Center in Michigan and underwent cataract surgery by a veterinary ophthalmologist in the hopes of returning the creature to normal. It is probably unlikely that this owl could ever be returned to the wild, but hopefully I'll hear of an update on its progress and pass it on. What is fascinating about this story is how far veterinary medicine/science has evolved and the dedication of people and organizations to help injured animals. Check out the Howell Nature Center website!


Screech Owl Undergoes Eye Surgery
Surgery completed - the little Screech Owl  is coming out of Anesthesia. 

Screech Owl Undergoes Eye Surgery
Screech Owl before surgery

Screech Owl Undergoes Eye Surgery
Doctor Gwen Sila performing eye survery on Screech Owl.   

Source of all photos : Baby Screech Owl Undergoes Eye Surgery