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Ok, enough blathering about flowers for now. We're getting ready to have a vacation weekend in the Methow Valley. I'll look forward to writing some posts from the other side of the mountains-- we leave on Thursday morning.
I know I shouldn't do it, but sometimes I'll throw stale bread or cake crumbs on the grass for the birds. Of course this just attracts the lower classes. Crows hang out on the wires and trees year-round looking for a handout. And this week there are suddenly flocks of starlings in the yard with many immatures. I suppose they are out with their parents, learning how to freeload in the city!
My Dad built us a nest box many years ago, and we hung it on the shed hoping for a wren or something nice. The sparrows immediately moved in, and that was it. They court and spark and raise at least 3 noisy broods each summer, and have produced hundreds of baby house sparrows over the years. But they are fun to watch and since no nice, self-respecting bird would nest in such a fetid box (I've never cleaned it out) it's no big deal having them around. Not that we could get rid of them anyway.
And it isn't hard to see why sparrows are so successful. The starlings like to torture the sparrow parents by hanging on the box and trying to spear a baby or egg with their sharp beaks. Starlings have beaks like needles, but not quite long enough to reach the bottom of the box. The sparrows attack back ferociously, clawing and pecking them on the head. A finch-like beak is no match for a starling beak, and the starlings are 10 times their size so you have to admire their bravery in defending the nestlings.
For more on the English sparrow:
http://www.sialis.org/hosphistory.htm
And the Starling:
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/european_starling/id
If you live in Seattle, or have ever visited here, you know that a top tourist attraction in the city is the salmon throwing stall at Pike Place Market. For the locals (on the rare occasions we even shop there) the gaggle of tourists crowding around the stall with their cameras brings sighs and eye rolls as we squeeze past the crowd and go about our business. Although we are way too cool to admit it, we love the stall and all the attention these guys generate year after year.
The same organization (PETA) that made itself look ridiculous criticizing President Obama's fly swat last week recently called the Pike Place Market fish throw a "corpse toss." According to PETA it was morally no different than "tossing dead kittens." Thanks Dave for reminding me of this Steve Martin line from The Jerk:
"...I've heard of this, CAT juggling!"
Anyway. PETA raised concerns about the "ethics" of using dead fish as props in a team-building program at a veterinary event. Heading down this slippery path could lead to kittens on the barbecue! As you can imagine, having a cherished Seattle institution irrationally criticized caused quite a fervor in the local press and sure lit up the blogs. I just wanted to make sure those of you who don't live here didn't miss out on the fun.
To make a long story short, sanity eventually returned to the Emerald City:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2009319216_apwapetathrowingfish.html
After John heads for work, I usually turn on the TV and watch about 10 minutes of local news. About all I can take. The big excitement and lead story for several days last month was about a black bear sighting in residential Seattle neighborhoods. The theory is he wandered down from the Cascade foothills, then managed to cross our murderous freeways and hundreds of city streets. Every morning there were new "sightings" (some dubious, from clubbers and assorted night owls.) The news crews were out in full force trying to find and film him, without luck. He covered quite a bit of ground, and probably scrounged enough to eat. In Seattle, we're now expected (make that required) to recycle our kitchen garbage in what used to be the "clean and green" bin, so I expect he found plenty of greasy pizza boxes and chicken bones. The wildlife officers eventually shot him with a tranquilizer gun, and took him back to a "safe" place in the mountains.
http://www.seattlepi.com/local/406320_bear18.html
Another bear was recently captured in the wide, wild median between the lanes of I-5, just north of Seattle. This one got tired of eating grass, and I heard they trapped him in a cage baited with Krispy Kreme donuts, smoked salmon, bacon grease and peanut butter.
My very favorite garden writer is Henry Mitchell. For years he wrote "The Earthman" column for The Washington Post, and his essays have been collected in a several books. They make wonderful winter reading.
http://books.google.com/books?id=O5fRmqDualkC
He wrote a funny column once about how envious gardeners are of each other, how we like to brag that certain plants are "practically invasive" in our gardens, when friends struggle to grow them at all.
For example, for years I've been trying to grow Eryngium (Sea Holly.) It looks like a soft grey thistle, and in my opinion not all that attractive, although John likes it for some reason. This spring I bought a $12!!! bag of Eryngium starts at Costco, and tried again. As usual, most died, except for one puny plant that I'll probably rip out accidentally because it looks like a weed. Some of our friends are wonderful gardeners-- Candi, Roger, Nils, Tim and Sam for example. If I dropped by, it wouldn't surprise me to see whole beds of Sea Holly in their gardens. But then I could brag about how "I just can't seem to get RID of all the crocosima in MY garden!"
We have wonderful backyard birds this summer, including a pair of American goldfinches and the black-headed grosbeak. These birds might be common in other parts of the county, but right in the city they are rare as jewels. Maybe has something to do with our wildly overgrown hedge and the free food and water?
But the white-crowned sparrows are our favorites for their lovely song, and we seem to have more than usual this year.
Yesterday morning, the little NPR program "Birdnote" ran a short segment on regional variations in white-crowned sparrow song.
http://www.birdnote.org