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January 2025

My Column: A New Birdy 30 Contest

CHICKADEE  Dilger SNOWDSC_0195cc hi res (1)A black-capped chickadee dines at a local suet feeder. Photo credit: Barbara Dilger.

My latest column for The Record presents your chance to do a little competitive birding (sort of), in a little event that Stiles Thomas and I concocted.

You can read it here:

By Jim Wright

Special to The Record | USA TODAY NETWORK - NEW JERSEY

    One snowy January afternoon 11 years ago, when the roads were icy and bird feeders were busy, a friend and I invented a little competition. Whoever saw the most species of birds in a half-hour won a Hershey Bar. I lost.

   Soon after, when a snowstorm closed schools and JWright Column 013925businesses early, we decided to invite acquaintances to join in. I dubbed the event “the Birdy 30.”

   To our surprise, a dozen birders took the challenge on short notice. Despite a steady snowfall, folks reported seeing cool birds from their windows. 

  The following day, another snow day for many, we expanded the contest, with folks choosing a half-hour window of their liking. This time 21 people entered, and again we saw some nice birds in addition to the usual feeder suspects.

    Since then, a few friends and I have done hundreds of Birdy 30s, including one every Sunday morning at 8 a.m. for the past few years. I’ve held several of these contests for readers of this column, and I figure it’s time for another.

   The rules are simple. The person who counts the most species of birds from their window in a continuous 30-minute period between today (Jan. 30) and Sunday evening (Feb. 2) wins. You can try more than once.

   The Birdy 30 is a practical alternative to the usual birding events and competitions, which typically run for 365 days (a big year), 24 hours (a big day), or an hour (the Celery Farm Nature Preserve in Allendale hosts an “Hour on the Tower” every Sunday morning).

    The trouble with these fine events is they can be tedious for casual birders. After 20 minutes, you glance at your watch and cringe at how much time is left. And if the weather is hot, sub-freezing or wet, ugh! -- a good time is not had by all.

   With the Birdy 30, you can relax, have a coffee, and chill. You can even listen to music or (gasp) talk on the phone without fear of disturbing fellow participants. 

   If a youngster asks why you’re looking intently out the window. you may have a future birder on your hands -- the best dividend of all.

The Birdy 30 is also good practice for the annual Great Backyard Bird Count in two weeks. I'll write about that next time.

    Two suggestions: The more types of feeders and food (suet, seed, raw unsalted peanuts) you offer, the more birds you’re likely to get.  Fill your feeders for a few hours before you start, so birds have plenty of time to check out your feeders. 

   Email me your list and total, with your name and hometown, to [email protected] are on the honor system, and please don’t strain credulity. And if you see something extraordinary, share a photo.

   Nothing can compare with experiencing nature outside, but the Birdy 30 is a nice Plan B.

   The Bird Watcher column appears every other Thursday. 

 
 
 
 
 

 


Monday Morning Mystery


FDR mystery 1
On a recent visit to Hyde Park, I toured FDR's childhood home and discovered he was quite the young birder. As was the custom back in those days, he shot and stuffed the birds himself, using arsenic and other nasty stuff. The American Museum of Natural History has several of his Pine Grosbeaks and a mystery mammal skull.

When you enter the house, the taxidermy cabinet is on the left. (Below.) Yep, those are a Northern Flicker and two Eastern Screech Owls.

Above is the only bird displayed outside the cabinet. What is it? (Hint: In New Jersey, it is considered an endangered species when nesting.)

FDR taxidermy case IMG_3970


FDR's HOUSE IN HYDE PARK

    IMG_3967
  Went to FDR's house and museum in Hyde Park recently and did some unexpected birding. FDR, like Teddy R., was quite a birder. Next three Monday Mysteries are courtesy of Frankie D.
   Saw FDR and Elaeanor. They were chillin'... They had a great view of the Hudson, and one of the first TV sets (but apparently no stations yet).
   Stay tuned for the mysteries in the coming weeks. Two are fairly easy. One, probably not so much...

 


My Column: New Duck Box Design

Jerry Barrack CF Wood DuckA male wood duck takes flight at the Celery Farm
Nature Preserve in Allendale. Photo credit: Jerry Barrack 
 
My latest column is about a new Wood Duck nest-box design introduced at the Celery Farm last year. The results were encouraging.
 

By Jim Wright

Special to The Record | USA TODAY NETWORK - NEW JERSEY

   Last spring, I wrote about an innovative design for nest boxes for wood ducks, and I promised to write an update after the project's first phase was over.

  Although wood ducks love to nest in North Jersey Screenshot 2025-01-16 at 7.22.42 AM
each spring, they often face a housing shortage. As human populations have expanded, they’ve had fewer places to nest.

These ducks merit this special attention because they’re among the world’s most beautiful waterfowl. The males have incredibly colorful plumage, and the females’ distinctive oval eyes are worthy of Cleopatra.

   To ease the housing crunch in years past, naturalists built large wooden nest boxes and placed them on tree trunks in their traditional breeding areas near water. Alas, the boxes also proved popular with raccoons that liked to pilfer duck eggs and with squirrels that wanted to nest there.   

   Naturalists also placed the boxes on poles on nearby ponds and streams or on poles with baffles. The trouble was, you had to ram poles into the ground, and the boxes were often difficult to monitor and maintain,

A year ago, my book about screech owls came out, and one of its selling points has been an innovative nest box designed by my coauthor, Scott Weston. Scott’s nest box features a roof so steeply pitched that squirrels slide off before they reach the opening.

     Since then, Scott started using a new product called Acre board, made from recycled rice hulls. It’s an effective building material for nestboxes because the board’s durable surface is too slick for the critters to hold onto.

   I realized that slightly larger versions of these squirrel-resistant nest boxes might help solve the wood-duck housing shortage at my local nature preserve, the Celery Farm in Allendale. A volunteer built eight boxes, and last spring we placed them on trees there just in time for nesting season. Then we waited.

   Three months later, we inspected all eight boxes, using a selfie stick to take photos of the interior of each box. To our delight, we found that wood ducks appeared to have nested in four of them – a 50 percent success rate right off the bat.  

    Confirming the project’s overall success, birders counted an abundance of wood ducks on the nature preserve’s lake this past summer.

The only disappointment: In one box, an intruder had punctured several eggs. The likeliest suspects are starlings, known for commandeering other birds’ nest cavities. (If you've come up with a way to thwart starlings, I’m all ears.)

      Our plan is to keep the boxes in place for three breeding seasons so that the ducks have plenty of time to find all of them and move in. If any box goes unused, we can relocate it in hopes of increasing the odds of attracting a nesting pair.

   The Bird Watcher column appears every other Thursday.  Email Jim at [email protected]


Now for Something Completely Different

Michael Lechicky of Clifton writes:
 
I thought you might enjoy this song I recently recorded about redpolls. It's a parody of Frank Sinatra's "Luck Be a Lady," and is about a luckless birder whose deepest desire is to see a Common Redpoll. 
 
Note, I wrote the lyrics before the AOS lumped all the redpolls last fall, doing away with the "Common" in Redpoll. Some of the humor relies on the old name, but I think it still holds up.
 
On YouTube, he notes:

The Redpoll is an arctic songbird that lives in Canada and, in winter, the most northern reaches of the United States. For three years, I had the privilege of living in the northern Adirondacks of New York, the very southern extent of the redpoll’s range. Many birders travel to the Adirondacks to see special “boreal” birds, including the redpoll.

And like most birds with “common” in its name (or at least until the AOS lumped all the redpolls last September, doing away with the "common"), the redpoll is not in fact so common. This song is sung from the perspective of a birder whose deepest desire is to see a Redpoll. It is a parody of “Luck Be a Lady” as sung by Frank Sinatra in the musical “Guys and Dolls.” Vocals by me. Backing track by BellySings Karaoke.

Thanks, Michael!