Sunday, June 28, 2015

The Red, Red Robins


I heard a robin this morning
I'm feeling happy today
Gonna pack my cares in a whistle
And blow them all away ....  
When the red, red robin
comes bob, bobbin'
along, along
They'll be no more sobbing'
when he starts throbbing'
his old sweet song 
Wake up, wake up you sleepy head!
Get up, get out o' bed!
Cheer up, cheer up the sun is red,
Live, love, laugh and be happy!
     -- Harry MacGregor Woods, 1926

It's time for my annual posting on the Robins. With abundant earthworms, insects and a large variety berries (especially the now-ripening prunus avium or "bird cherry"), we regularly have one or more pairs of robins nesting in our yard. And when they are here, that catchy tune inevitably plays repeatedly in my head. (For fun, listen to the original recording by Al Jolson in 1926 (below), or later versions by Bing CrosbyDoris Day, and Louis Armstrong).

 


And then there are the songs of the robins themselves. For a month now, we've been listening to the male sing his heart out in nearby trees, especially around dusk. A pair had already begun to build a nest on the rafter supporting the grape vines near the deck. We're not sure whether he lost his mate and was trying to attract another, or was singing to assert claim to his territory. In any event, the nest-building eventually resumed, and last week ago, I noticed the hungry chirr-chirr-chirr of hatchlings in the nest.

June 26, 2015

The dense foliage of the grape leaves was likely an asset to the robins seeking to shelter their young from predators. But it made it more challenging to take photographs than when they use one of the nest boxes. Still, two are quite visible, and if you look carefully there's a third beak in the lower left. The female has also decorated the nest with blue plastic strips from one of our more-tattered tarps. (She scrounged these from a left-over nest in one of the nest boxes.)

Three hatchlings, June 26, 2015
Yesterday, the first of brood fledged, on a wet, chilly day that left it shivering. It caught my attention when it grabbed onto the living room screen door on the way down, then landed safely on the deck. Its mom soon returned, with first a large cherry in her beak, and then a still-wriggling worm for its siblings.

The first to fledge, June 27, 2015
This morning, the other robins had fledged as well. Unfortunately, one of them wound up partially dismembered outside our front door, a gift left for us by one of the cats. But as my friend Beth says, the survival rate for robin fledglings is notoriously low -- the reason robin pairs have 2-3 broods each breeding season. According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, only 40% of robin nests successfully produce young, and only 25% of those that fledge survive through November.

A few other fun notes from the "Lab of O" site: Robins eat different kinds of food depending on the time of day -- more earthworms in the morning and more fruit in the afternoon. And when robins eat exclusively honeysuckle berries, they can be become intoxicated.

I wonder what an intoxicated robin looks like? But with the great diversity of Juneberry, cherry, chokecherry, dogwood and other berries in yard, I may never find out.


Sunday, June 21, 2015

Food, and Roses Too

These highly fragrant roses are transplants from Richard's mom's garden. 





The roses have come into bloom, and with them these thoughts ...

Humans need food and beauty too. All humans, not just those who can afford them. This sentiment was perhaps best captured by early in the 19th century in a speech by the Jewish feminist socialist labor activist, Rose Schneiderman (1882-1972).  She wrote:


"What the woman who labors wants is the right to live, not simply exist — the right to life as the rich woman has the right to life, and the sun and music and art. You have nothing that the humblest worker has not a right to have also. The worker must have bread, but she must have roses, too. Help, you women of privilege, give her the ballot to fight with."
It was subsequently published as a poem several times between 1911 and 1915 and set to music decades later:
.... Our lives shall not be sweated from birth until life closes;Hearts starve as well as bodies; give us bread, but give us roses! ...
.... No more the drudge and idler -- ten that toil where one reposes,But a sharing of life's glories: Bread and roses! Bread and roses! .... 

A passionate, talented labor organizer, Schneiderman ran for the U.S. Senate in 1920 as a candidate of the New York State Labor Party on a platform that called for state-funded health insurance, adequate food markets in poor neighborhoods, publicly-owned power utilities, high-quality neighborhood schools and nonprofit housing for workers. She was a founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union, the only woman to be appointed to then-President Roosevelt's Labor Advisory Board and later, the NYS Secretary of Labor. 



Over the past decade, we have converted much of the landscape around our home to growing food for humans and animals, along with a rich diversity of flowering plants that support the many pollinators and predators that sustain a healthy ecosystem. They are beautiful in their own right, and feed our hearts as well as our bodies. But I still provide space to roses and peonies, species that feed only our senses. 


The last peonies of the season



The urgency for organizing continues -- even just to reach the goals on Schneiderman's 1920 platform. But today, as the peonies fade and the roses bloom, I offer this tribute to the ongoing work of ensuring that all share life's glories: food and roses too! 


Monday, June 15, 2015

National Pollinator Week

According to an email from the Plantsmen, a wonderful native plants nursery around the corner from us, it's National Pollinator Week. I celebrate pollinators every day (including in my May 10 and June 3 posts), but it seemed appropriate to do so again, even briefly.

One of the seemingly indefatigable bumblebees on a columbine flower.
Butterflies are the "preferred" pollinators that so many homeowners seek, and nurseries cater to this bias by labeling plants as "butterfly attractors."  More accurately however, those nectar-filled flowers are "pollinator attractors," and it is the huge diversity of native bees, small predatory wasps, innumerable beetles and other insects that do the bulk of the work.

That said, I too enjoy watching the large, graceful swallowtails flutter-by, while summoning the patience to wait for them to alight long enough to snap a decent photo. And I realize that it will be easier to engage people in creating habitat for butterflies than for bees.

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail on Dame's Rocket

We'll continue to do our part in supporting the pollinators who support us. The more our yard resembles a meadow with a great diversity of native flowering plants throughout the spring, summer and fall, the more pollinators we see. After all, they (and we) can't eat grass!

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Chives Will Never Look the Same Again

Chives are an extremely useful and unfussy garden plant. They are among the earliest plants to emerge in spring; offer a ready supply of green onions through the first mild frosts with almost no tending; self-seed readily but not too aggressively; and put forth these lovely purple flowers in late May and early June. There is also some evidence that they may provide anti-fungal benefits to the surrounding plants.

In short, I like them and have several large plants scattered throughout the garden. And we're now experimenting with moving some of smaller "volunteers" near the apple tees in the orchard.

Still, they might not have gotten their own posting. But after work today, I took a cup of cold mint tea out to a chair in one of the only late afternoon sunny spots in the garden. It's right next to the chives. And my attention was immediately caught by all the movement and buzzing to my right. There were almost a dozen different kinds of bees, wasps, butterflies, beetles and other pollinators concentrated in just a few cubic feet. So I went back for the camera.