"Spark Bird" being - The bird that helped spark your interest in birding. It helped open your eyes to the incredible beauty
The expert they interviewed, Noah Strycker, was amazing. He and Ira Glass were out in the field and Strycker identified a Steller's Jay imitating a red-tailed hawk. I knew that blue jays imitate them, as I've heard them. I didn't know why. His theory is that they like to terrorize the chickadees!
Blue jay |
It's an interesting podcast for amateur birders, like me. He spotted a crow, focused the parabolic listening device on it, and found it was humming to itself. It was a fascinating story, explaining that turkey vultures were his spark bird. He brought home a deer carcass to put in his backyard and watch them. (Sound familiar? Life includes death in the rural cycle of life: deer carcass & The circle of life. )
We had 13 mourning doves under or near the feeder. Dec. 18th is our Christmas Count, here. JB asked the collective noun for doves.
"There are a number of collective nouns for any group of doves. They include cote, dole, dule, bevy, flight, and piteousness. For the Mourning Dove specifically, I would offer lament as a collective noun because of its sad song, sung over and over and over again."
7 comments:
...we have a jay at our feeder that is sparking my attention.
Lament sounds appropriate. I don't know about spark birds. Maybe chickadees.
My spark was probably a Blue Jay but I must admit that even the House Sparrows at the bird bath give me a lift.
Hari OM
My interest in ornithology was 'sparked' not by a specific bird, by the teacher in high school who hailed from Australia and started up a Young Ornithologists Club as a branch of the RSPB. That meant he could take a bunch of us on field trips. I don't recall clearly which would have been the very first bird seen through binoculars, but as we are a reserve by the coast, it would have been a wader or seabird of some description. I do know that I have never stopped watching ever since!!! YAM xx
I don't know. Just that I find them fascinating.
My spark bird was a male mallard. My spark person is my Mom as she showed me the mallard.
Steller's Jays are really intelligent birds. I once saw one pick up a short stick from the ground and use it to probe a hole in a branch, I assumed to dislodge an insect of some kind. - Margy
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