Showing posts with label firetree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label firetree. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21

A backyard kind of April

With the shift in the school year calendar, it was only the sizzling hot temperatures which reminded me that it was actually summer already! Not having the time to break for the beach or head out of town to bird, I was happy to spend before- and after-school mornings and afternoons in the garden happily observing my feathered neighbors.

The Coppersmith Barbets are so-far-so-good with their nest which we first spotted in January. We hear them pok-pok-pok-ing all day, often perched just outside my window. 






Early in April, they were busy feeding their little one, flying back and forth to their nest hole.


Do you see the baby barbet?

Remember their multi-level, multi-hole nest?  It seems that the Eurasian Tree Sparrows are trying to take over one of the holes!


Land-grabber!

The barbets of course would have none of that! They tirelessly defend their territory and constantly chase away the little marauders.



Barbet versus Tree Sparrow!


The other birds are not a problem though, they are happy to share a perch with the Golden-bellied Gerygones for instance.




It's not only the barbets who have a family to raise.  Some Colasisis have been moving about the garden, a female with 2 young ones in tow.





They're in the backyard, in the front yard, across the street, at the side yard... everywhere! 
I've seen them nibbling at the fire tree flowers in front and the tamarind fruit out back.  



Sampaloc snack

They are constantly squabbling, feeding and preening.


Can you do this?

That's why the call us hanging parrots!

Young Black-naped Orioles are also quite vocal.  Here's one I caught having it's fill of duhat (jambulan) fruit. 

It's great that the young birds seem not to mind our presence so much.

One afternoon, I saw a pair of immature Asian Glossy Starlings also perched on the duhat tree!  This is a new one to the yard list.  I wouldn't have noticed them if it weren't for their metallic calls reverberating in the backyard.


My what blood red eyes you have!



Of course the kings of the backyard still remain to be the Pied Fantails.  With the BBS (backyard Brown Shrike) a no-show, they confidently patrol the entire garden plus the empty lot next door! 




The only birds they seem to ignore are the Olive-backed Sunbirds who regularly come to feed on the ornamental banana plant nectar...




... and the Zebra Doves who always seem quite docile and reticent.




The other bullies of the garden of course are the Yellow-vented Bulbuls.  They take over the bird baths and enjoy cool dips throughout the day.  A pair in the front yard have already successfully fledged a single offspring.  They're so busy looking through every nook and under leaf and corner of the garden for food to feed the young one.


FEED MEEEEEEH!

A pair of Pied Trillers has also been visiting quite regularly.  I suspect they have a nest nearby too.  In the golden afternoon light, their black and white (and grey in the case of the female) is uber-elegant.



We've also begun to notice an obviously growing population of Crested Mynas in the neighborhood.  You can't miss them, white wing spots obvious in flight, and loud, musical calls when they are perched.



Front yard Brown Shrike is still here, although I expect him to leave any day now. He is not as territorial as before and is now bullied by the Bulbuls as well (probably defending their nest).




Another migrant which we were pleasantly surprised to see is a Peregrine Falcon.  Faaaaaar from our yard, we have seen him perched several times on a communications tower almost a kilometer away from our house!  Adri first spotted him while he was observing the barbets at their nest.  Bored waiting, he scanned the communications tower and Voila! A Peregrine Falcon!  (We even got Maia to spot it from her house... although now we realise she was looking at a DIFFERENT tower. Was it the SAME falcon? She writes about it here


Digiscoped from a kilometer away!

So the backyard birds have been good in keeping me entertained as I am stuck in the city for the summer.  I expect more activity as the migrants begin to leave and the residents are busy more nests and young birds.

In fact, it's not just the birds who have been keeping me entertained.  Look who else has been procreating!


Tree frogs Polypedates leucomystax in loving embrace.


Saturday, April 28

from heard to seen

after several years of just hearing this bird occasionally pok-pok-pok-pok-ing in the neighborhood, i finally spotted it this afternoon!


it was uncharacteristically quiet, perched on the fire (aka flamboyant) tree, hopping from branch to branch in the hot afternoon sun.

the coppersmith barbet is supposed to be a forest to forest edge bird, but several years ago, the bird club discovered that they were quite common in the up campus and even in ateneo!  perhaps they have been pushed to the greener parts of the metro by habitat loss, but at least they seem to be adapting well, nests have been regularly reported in up.

with a green back, a yellow breast striped with green and red on its crown and on the skin around its eyes and across its breast, the coppersmith barbet (or as we fondly call it: the pok-pok bird) is one of the more colorful backyard birds. its loud pok-pok-pok-pok call can be heard any time of the day, but it's so subtle (despite its volume) you might not even realize you're hearing it.



it was pretty high up in the tree and the lighting was harsh, but i managed a few photos.

yay to the new backyard (well, strictly speaking front yard) bird!

speaking of front yard, the fire tree and the golden shower are on their way to coloring the summer yard with orange and yellow... hot colors for a hot summer!




and the ylang-ylang, with its less showy flowers, is making the air heavy with its fragrance.



(i'm learning quickly from the native plant people: which of the 3 trees i mentioned above do you think is native to the philippines?)

i've been spending weekends at home so expect more garden stories coming up as the summer temperatures peak...



Sunday, May 27

falling flowers

I have been enjoying this view of the fire tree in full bloom outside my bedroom window for several weeks now.

I love the sight of fire trees are in bloom!  They always, always remind me of an Amorsolo painting. Also, when the trees are in bloom, I am assured by visits from olive-backed sunbirds, hovering and hopping from flower to flower.  The almost leafless branches also make it easy for me to see the woodpeckers creeping along the trunks, pecking and trilling away.


Another sight I can see from my window is the golden shower, also in bloom at the same time as the fire tree.  In the mornings, the dripping yellow flowers are a-buzz with bees sipping nectar. 


Amorsolo didn't paint golden showers in his paintings, I suppose they are quite new introductions?  Anyway, when I was younger, it would be golden shower flowers I would offer to Mary during the month long novena.


Sometimes I wish we also had space for a banaba tree, or had planted one across the street.  And I always remember the palawan cherry tree at Albert Hall or those lining the driveway of the Manila Seedling Bank.  The former lavender, the latter pink.  Wouldn't that be a beautiful sight?!?!? Orange and yellow and lavender and pink all at the same time!

(Palawan cherry trees take ten million years to grow though I think, and there's no more space in my mother's garden for 2 more trees.  I'd better think of a place to plant them all now, wait twenty or so years... and enjoy them in my old age!)

It has started to rain in the afternoons, a sure sign that summer will soon be over.  Winds before the rain would send flowers falling to the ground, much to the delight of my niece.

The rains will soon strip my bedroom view of yellow and orange, and the colors will carpet our garden and driveway instead. 

Until next May...