Tuesday, October 6, 2015

The Gray Catbird on the boardwalk...

...this is probably one of the most recognized (and ignored) Gray Catbirds on the planet. I saw him in May when I was at Magee Marsh (near Toledo, Ohio) at the Biggest Week in American Birding warbler festival. Every time I was there, so was he...literally on the boardwalk, walking around trying to get everyone's attention. When you're a Gray Catbird surrounded by thousands of brightly colored rare warblers, you have to work a little harder to get any respect...

I saw this sweet catbird during the Biggest Week in American Birding warbler festival.
A beautiful Gray Catbird at Magee Marsh

Hey! Look at me...I'm a neotropical migrant too (just a little larger and grayer). 

This Catbird was not afraid of anyone. He would walk the planks while people looked on and walked past him. Apparently Gray Catbirds are forced to take drastic measures to compete with the glittery, colorful, tiny, fleeting warblers...

When he wasn't on the boardwalk, he dropped down beside it to forage on the ground and in shrubs for insects. He really is quite beautiful, and when he's not mewing, he has a lovely and varied song (mimicking other birds as well). 

Catbirds are great subjects to study to learn wing feathers. Since the birds are large, the feathers are easy to see. On the top of the "stack" are the three tertials, followed by the secondaries, then the primaries (the longest flight feathers) on bottom. 

The spring songbird in the winter gray flannel suit... 

Is it neophilia, or is it gray flannel?
If I heard, "Oh, it's just a catbird," once, I heard it a million times. These poor birds with their sweet mews and songs got no respect along the boardwalk. It's easy to understand, though. In the grips of WARBLERMANIA, the more common songbirds often fall by the wayside. Neophilia is the love of or enthusiasm for what is new or novel, and humans often fall prey to its lure. Many of the spring warblers are fleeting and rare and are definitely novel in our parts. Some of the visitors stay, but others are just stopping off on their long flight north adding to their mystique, but our sweet berry-loving catbirds are brave enough to live among us, becoming commonplace in the process. In the wild, catbirds like swampy, boggy, and soggy areas. You can always find them streamside along the Little Miami River, but they are neotropical migrants that can adapt, and they have taken to suburban and urban backyards packed with berries. We have resident catbirds in our backyard all spring and summer. They come readily to the mulberries and then stick around for the pokeweed berries, so maybe that's why throngs of people move quickly past them to look for the cute and colorful rare warblers...

...or maybe it's just the gray flannel! 

10 comments:

  1. Really, Kelly, he is a lovely bird; and yes, I see them in my backyard and am always happy to watch them! Not everyone can be as flashy as the Warbler!

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  2. Poor catbird gets no respect! He is a cutie. I've heard and seen them in our neighborbhood and now I like them even more :).

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  3. What a cutie. How nice that he was so friendly and willing to be a part of your photo shoot. :)

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  4. It may be grey but still a little beauty in its own right.

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  5. @Diane - So true! ...even though gray is not a spring color, I've always liked gray flannel! :-)

    @Kathy - :-) I love them. I especially like watching them eat the mulberries. I've seen them with the juice dripping down under their bills.

    @Lois - Yes...he was amazing, and that he was on the boardwalk every time, even more so.

    @John - Yes...I think they are very beautiful. You should hear their "meow." It truly sounds like a cat mewing!

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  6. Great series of images .. Congratulations and greetings

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  7. Kelly, nicely written and photographed blog post! I love catbirds myself and can remember them from my childhood in Connecticut. They are, of course, here in Maine as well, but they would be a rare bird in AZ and get all the attention they want! Love your photos with all the fine details.

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  8. oddly enough i just saw an article on the catbird elsewhere. Nice pics!

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  9. ...Thanks, Kathie! Haha...I guess they would get the attention they want there! :-)

    ...Thanks, Sandy! I don't remember where, but I saw an article on one recently as well! :-)

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