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| Song Sparrow & Red Elderberry, Golden Gate Heights Park |
I noticed the dark-eyed junco with bits of red berry flesh stuck to its beak and surmised it was eating the berries. I got my camera out and watched the junco disappear deeper into the elderberry thicket, although I figured he'd soon come back out to where the berries were, once he got used to my presence.
However, it might not have been me that he was worried about, since a sparrow soon dove into the bushes and chased out the junco, who landed on a branch right behind me. There's a lot more red elderberry (Sambucus racemosa) in that area than a song sparrow can eat though, and the junco likely figured it could bide its time.
Birds have evolved the ability to eat these berries, which are poisonous to humans (as well as pets and livestock). But if you remove the toxic seeds, the rest of the berry is edible even to us humans. The plant grows all over the country and was used as food and medicine by North American tribes. (The tastier blue elderberry, Sambucus nigra ssp. cerulea, which tends to grow in sunnier spots away from the coast, also provided wood for clapper sticks.)
On a different subject, do you ever associate certain foods with your mother? My mom passed away almost 25 years ago, but I still think of her when I buy cottage cheese. She used to serve it with applesauce, but when I started eating it again not too long ago I used pineapple. I usually finish the pineapple before the cottage cheese, so today, faced with cottage cheese and no pineapple, I was inspired to plop in a few chocolate chips and walnut pieces (which I ordinarily put in my oatmeal). Strange as it may sound, it was delicious.
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| A couple of band-tailed pigeons flew into view quite near the area where I saw a pair nesting last year. One landed in the top of a redwood, but this one landed out in the open, on a power line. |
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| It's pretty unusual for me to see them in the city at all. |
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| I watched a tiny yellow bullet streak toward me and come to rest among some nearby dandelion-like plants, where the lesser goldfinch feasted on the fluff-tipped seeds (one of which stuck to its head awhile before the wind finally blew it off). |
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| Note the passel of seeds near its left foot. |
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| Just up the road I noticed a large flock of cedar waxwings diving into some heavy coastal tea tree brush (Gaudium laevigatum), which I found perplexing until I noticed a huge pokeberry growing among its branches. Unfortunately, the waxies were going after the pokeberries that were out of view. The bird above stopped very briefly after emerging, then flew up into the safety of a nearby eucalyptus which was ringing with waxwing chatter. |
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| The snowy egret was hunting along the edge of South Lake when it apparently got too close to another large bird who created a bit of a fracas over it. |
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| The other large bird was a black-crowned night heron, here looking very subdued after its recent outburst. |
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| Farther along, a pair of snowy egrets was hunting along the edge of Metson Lake. |
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| I figured the two birds were together, but they barely even acknowledged each other's presence. |
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| I saw the Canada Geese with goslings at Blue Heron Lake yesterday, but I kept riding since they were surrounded by people with their camera-phones out. |
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