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Showing posts with label wild birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wild birds. Show all posts

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Finding Your Passion

Cedar Crest Retirement Community
 Janesville, WI 2015
As a young girl in middle school, I remember the terror that was speech class.  I wasn't overly shy by any means, but the prospect of standing in front of the class and talking always put me in a panic. Never in a million years could I have pictured myself decades later as a wild bird speaker/presenter.

I guess I have to give some credit to my 10-year stint in a tv newsroom for easing my fears of public speaking.  I was often tapped as an "extra" for news promos, and being around extroverted personalities certainly helped me gain confidence.  I eventually realized that something was missing and left the newsroom to pursue my love of art and nature.  I picked up a paint brush after many years and became an accomplished watercolor artist, specializing in bird and botanical paintings.  I even had some of my bird illustrations published alongside those of John James Audubon in the book "Wings of Mercy".  That was a personal highlight for me!

Unfortunately, we all know the plight of the "starving artist". Eventually financial constraints forced me to seek additional employment, which I happily found working in the lawn and garden industry.  I worked for another decade as a sales representative, specializing in wild bird feeders and garden products.

"Birdscaping" Presentation at Waterford, WI Library 2014
Having enjoyed feeding the birds all the way back to my newsroom days, I eventually became quite knowlegeable in backyard birding...even offering to do presentations for some of my garden center customers.  The first couple of times I stood before a group of people, I had butterflies in my stomach.  Before long, my passion for birds overwhelmed my fears, and I was ready to fly!

I began to realize that I had knowledge that could help others become more successful in attracting birds, but more importantly, I had found my passion.  Each time I finished a presentation, I felt a rush of energy and accomplishment that I got no where else, and a self-proclaimed "bird nerd" was born.  I have done presentations at local home and garden shows, garden centers, garden clubs and recently led a garden walk at the The Boerner Botanical Gardens in Hales Corners, WI.

Garden Walk - Boerner Botanical Gardens
Hales Corners, WI  2015

I am available to do presentations on backyard birding and "Birdscaping".
I have experience with all of the following:

- Garden Centers
- Garden Clubs
- Youth Groups
- Senior Living Centers
- Women's Clubs
- Botanical Gardens
- Public Library Education
- Consumer Lawn & Garden Shows

I also have programs available on  attracting orioles and hummingbirds  and I can customize a Power Point  presentation for your particular club,  business organization.  Click the link below for more information:

 Public Speaking Info.



Monday, January 25, 2016

In Pursuit of the Pileated

Female Pileated Woodpecker
I have been actively feeding wild birds for most of my adult life.  Living adjacent to the Tichigan Wildlife Area in Southeastern Wisconsin, I have enjoyed regular visits from all the resident woodpeckers, including several seasons with nesting Red-Headed Woodpeckers in my yard. Despite my successes, it is the largest of the woodpeckers, the Pileated, that continued to elude me.

Note:  The Ivory-billed Woodpecker and the Imperial Woodpecker are/were larger than the Pileated.  Both species were believed to have gone extinct in the 20th century.  However, recent sightings of the Ivory-billed Woodpecker in Arkansas and other remote swamp regions in the southern US indicate that a small breeding population may still exist of this magnificent species.

While my yard boasts plenty of mature oaks and other hardwood trees, the surrounding area simply does not include the 150-200 acres of forest territory that the Pileated requires.  However, my 5-acre camp in Florence County, Wisconsin does have a large forest area adjacent to 75 acres of State-owned land and in close proximity to the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest.  The perfect habitat for Pileated Woodpeckers, our property hosts many dead trees displaying their woodcarving handiwork.  Their raucous call/laugh is often heard while we are up there, and we often catch a glimpse of them flying from tree to tree. Unfortunately, keeping bird feeders both full and out of the hands of hungry bears when you are only up for a long weekend is next to impossible.
Pileated Tree Excavation

This year, I found myself with the entire month of January off.  While not my first choice for making an extended visit, I knew that it would afford me the opportunity to place feeders (while the bears are sleeping) and make some observations of the hardy year-round bird population, including the Pileated Woodpecker.

Armed with two suet feeders and cakes, I was able to attract both Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers the first few days, as well as both White-Breasted and Red-Breasted Nuthatches.  It was comical watching a particularly feisty female Downy take on a much larger male Hairy Woodpecker on a regular basis.

Hairy (left), Downy (right) Woodpeckers
By the second week, I still had not seen or heard the Pileated, despite the fact that a tree right outside my bedroom window looked to have been freshly excavated.

I was enjoying my quiet time in the woods, and became accustomed to the daily routine of the Black-capped Chickadees, woodpeckers, Blue Jays and occasional visits from an American Goldfinch and a small flock of Common Redpolls.

I had planned for different scenarios I might encounter while alone in a cabin with no running water.  I had gas in the snowmobile, plenty of firewood and mace in case I encountered wolves while walking my dogs.  I did not, however, prepare for serious illness.  What started as a sore throat, soon developed into an abscess on the tonsil, and I found myself hospitalized in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.  My winter retreat was to be cut short by about a week, and I was disappointed that I had not accomplished what I had set out to do.

While resting in my hospital bed the morning before I was to head home, my husband called from the cabin to say that a Pileated Woodpecker had been hanging around the property.  Great!  I couldn't believe that after almost two weeks, the cruel irony of my being in the hospital, with my camera back at the cabin was too much.  But I got lucky!

Sometimes in life the good things are just worth waiting for, and this beautiful female Pileated Woodpecker did make a magnificent appearance the next morning, as we packed up my things to head back home.  The video below is a compilation of still shots and video that I captured that beautiful winter morning!


Happy Birding!

I am available for birding presentations to your business, group or organization. For more info:  Belinda's Website