Blue Jay Fledgling Update

Blue Jays June 9

The blue jay fledglings continue to visit on a daily basis, always together. They rarely venture more than a few yards from each other.

Blue Jays June 9

They are beginning to forage on their own, sampling insects they find in the grass and on the fence, but they haven’t started eating from the feeder.

Blue Jays June 11

Blue Jays June 9

Blue Jays June 9

Blue Jays June 11

Blue Jays June 11

I suspect most of their foraging behavior is driven by curiosity, rather than hunger. Their parents keep them well fed.

Blue Jays June 11

Blue Jays June 11

Blue Jays June 9

Both of them.

Blue Jays June 9

A few days ago, they discovered the water. They drank and bathed, copying their parents.

Blue Jays June 11

But they also spent a great deal of time dropping things in the dish. Leaves, worms, small twigs–almost anything they could pick up went straight into the water.

Blue Jays June 11

They seem to have solved the water’s mystery, since that first day, and I haven’t seen them testing it again.

Blue Jays June 11

I wonder if their parents watch them, like I do, and feel a twinge of pride as the fledglings explore and grow.

Blue Jays June 11

Storm Interlude

Rabbit May 21

Tropical Storm Andrea’s rain passed over our area this morning, and now the wind has arrived. Reason enough to stay indoors and organize the archive. Here are a few photos that I’ve been saving for a rainy day.

Blue Jays June 3

Dragonfly May 28

Chickadee May 31

Unknown Bird May 17

The bird in the above photo moved through the yard too fast for me to get a good look at it. I would love some help with identification, if there is enough information in the photo.

Also with the next bird, which I believe is a brown thrasher?

New Bird June 6

I hope Andrea’s rain and wind prove to be nothing more than an inconvenience to everyone in its path…

Surfeit

Squirrel May 31

Squirrel May 31

Squirrel May 31

Squirrel May 31

Squirrel May 31

Squirrel May 31

I tried to write something, to go with these pictures, but some stories don’t need words…

Squirrel May 31

Blue Jay Fledglings

Blue Jays May 28

A pair of sleepy blue jay fledglings visited the yard this morning. When I approached they stirred a bit, mirroring my curiosity.

Blue Jays May 28

Then they settled back to their naps as I entertained myself imagining their morning adventures. How exciting it must be, to discover that you have wings! And to explore a world that multiplies and expands with every new tree and every new yard.

Blue Jays May 28

Exciting, but also exhausting.

Blue Jays May 28

Broad-headed Skink

Skink May 22

I first saw this little skink while I was mowing today. I stopped long enough to take a picture, then continued on with the mower. Slowly, because I didn’t want to hit my pretty blue-tailed visitor if it decided to hide in the grass.

Later, I spotted the skink again as it basked on our driveway. I took several more photos, then lost track of my subject when it squeezed itself into a seam under the house’s siding. A few minutes passed before it scrambled across our porch and into the iris bed, carrying something in its mouth. I couldn’t tell what it had caught, but I was able to follow with my lens and snap a few photos as it ate.

Skink May 22

Skink May 22

Skink May 22

After gulping down its meal, the skink paused in a patch of sunlight before moving deeper into the irises.

Skink May 22

When I was young, Mother called these lizards “blue-tailed skinks.” I can’t remember exactly when we discovered that our blue-tailed lizards were actually juvenile skinks of three distinct species, and that their bright tails would fade as they matured, but I remember being shocked that Mother had been wrong about something. (Which means it must have been before the worst of my teenage arrogance set in, when I would have been shocked to discover that Mother had ever been right about anything.)

In trying to identify today’s photos, I decided this was a Broad-headed Skink based on the following close-ups, which show five scales on the upper lip between nostril and eye. (Click on the thumbnail at the bottom of this page on the Virginia Herpetological Society website for further explanation, and please comment if you can correct or confirm my identification!)

Skink May 22

Skink May 22

If there had been four scales on the upper lip margin, the skink could have been either a Common Five-lined Skink or a Southeastern Five-lined Skink