Llandover Woods
Llandover Woods News
Lovers of Llandover Woods have united to provide volunteer stewardship of the woods in cooperation with Seattle City Parks www.seattle.gov/parks, Washington State Native Plant Society http://www.wnps.org/ and Carkeek groundskeepers under the direction of Nancie Jaramillo nancie.jaramillo@ci.seattle.wa.us. Special thanks to Penny Rose penny.rose@seattle.gov, the education naturalist from Discovery Park, for starting the Llandover Steward program last year and stimulating us with her wonderful birding by ear walks.
This experimental blog (my first) is an effort to provide extended dialog and information about the woods. Contact me: gaustin@path.org, or 206-364-9252 home phone. See the pictures for recent sightings in the Woods.
WORK PARTIES
Happen 9 am to 12 noon the 2nd Sunday of each month (except holiday weekends). Each work party will start with a walk in the woods to share that month's surprises, blooms, birds, and special spots. Volunteers meet at the 145th Street parking area at 9AM. Wear sturdy grungies. Tools and gloves are provided.
The woods are filling with bird song, nesting, and territorial "neogtiations". Pileated and Hairy (or Downy) Woodpeckers and Red Shafted Flickers are working on their new homes throughout the woods. A Winter Wren couple are building a nest in the split tree about 50 feet west of the 2nd left hand branch of the trail just a few feet from the big snag with the massive woodpecker damage.
Chipmunks have come out of hibernation and there is a lot of new sign of Mountain Beaver activity. Extra hawk and eagle sightings and nightime coyote song fests may have something to do with this.
Our lone Barred Owl continues to hoot for hours nightly - possibly for the mate that may never come.
MARCH NEWS
For the past 4 or 5 days I’ve heard a very different flight sound from the hummingbird feeders and wondered if it was the Rufous or an Anna’s with a damaged wing. The wing sound has a more mechanical tone with some clackity undertones compared to the smoother low hum of the Anna’s in flight. Is that a characteristic?
No Ravens again today- that’s 4 days in a row of silence after over 3 weeks of daily song and Crow attacks…guess they’ve moved on.
The Towhees are really jumping each other and chasing each other more vigorously than a few weeks ago- territory and nesting I presume.
I saw a Flicker working on a big hole in a tall snag this morning (perhaps from a Pileated Woodpecker?) Also saw a coyote cub last week and LOTS of new Mountain Beaver activity. Still no sign of chipmunks…are they still hibernating?
FEBRUARY NEWS
I heard that there was some news on a Cougar sighting in Highlands. Do you know anything about it?
I noticed this morning on my walk that there is already some new bird song happening...spring is just around the corner.
1 Comments:
It is important to note that the main role of Llandover Stewards is to return Llandover to it's ecological heritage by eliminating invasive plants and encouraging natives. Invasives we are working on include: English Ivy, Blackberry, Stinky Bob (Cranesbill). Stewardship is a multi-year, year round process and Nancy and Penny have shared a good 1 - 5 year plan for us to follow.
Post a Comment
<< Home