Tag Archives: rock dove (Columba livia)

One need not leave the patio…

…to enjoy a bit of the natural world.

This weekend I have spent my time doing the on-call thing for work.  Right now I feel drunk, although not from alcohol.  From lack of sleep, yes.

I’ve had perhaps two hours of rest since five in the morning on Friday.

Needless to say, it’s been a hell of a weekend.  And not in a good way.

Still, my want to take walks and snap photos suffers no lasting damage from such times, for it is with a great sense of gift that I can stand outside on my own patio and get a fix for my need.

Nature comes to me, you see.

Clance standing outside the patio fence (20081005_13300)

Clance[1].  For some time I thought I would never see his cross-eyed face again.  He disappeared for more than a year with but one or two minor visits in early 2007.  I hoped for the best and feared the worse: that he had been adopted and that he had died, respectively.

Then he suddenly reappeared maybe two months ago.  Now he comes running when he sees me on the patio and he purrs and meows as he speaks to me with trust and affection.  I’m thrilled to see he’s alright.

A male house sparrow (Passer domesticus) perched on the patio fence (20081005_13353)

A male house sparrow (Passer domesticus).  Whilst kneeling on the patio floor trying to snap photos of a lizard, I heard the tiniest bit of noise beside me, something much like a dry leaf rustling against an old log.

Slowly I turned and looked over my shoulder.  There hardly an arm’s length from me perched this little bird.  He clung to the fence and glanced about as though he’d lost something.

In truth, I put birdseed out every day.  The sparrows join the cardinals, the blue jays, the mourning doves, the rock doves, the Carolina wrens and a litany of other species as they each vie for their bit of the bounty.  My little sparrow friend probably wanted to make sure no threats lurked about before he dove to the ground for a bite to eat.

A friendly fly (a.k.a. government fly or large flesh fly; Sarcophaga aldrichi) standing atop the patio fence (20080516_05296)

A friendly fly (a.k.a. government fly or large flesh fly; Sarcophaga aldrichi)[2].  It sat atop the patio fence soaking up sunshine.  If I approached too closely, it scooted off in one direction or another, but it never flew away—at least not until it was ready to do so.

I enjoyed watching it, appreciating its behemoth size and dazzling contrast of colors.  And the fact that it was so tolerant of me made it even better.

A male green anole (Anolis carolinensis) challenging me from the tree with this throat fan fully displayed (20080613_06520)

A male green anole (Anolis carolinensis).  He spent a great deal of time challenging me as I stood and watched him climb down the tree rooted just outside the patio fence.  Having been confronted by my share of anoles, I thought nothing of this contest save that it made for a good photo opportunity.

What I didn’t know would be discovered later.  He defied me only because he meant to woo a lady of his kind who hid in the branches above him.  Minutes later I returned to the patio and discovered his display had so impressed her that she had succumbed to his ways.

Yes, the two of them stood on the side of the tree and consummated their meeting in a public display of affection that would so offend James Dobson and his bigoted ilk that they—the lizards—likely would have found a new constitutional amendment being passed to stop reptile procreation altogether due to its immorality.  But I found the exhibition mesmerizing and educating.

A rock dove (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia) looking away (20080202_01690)

A rock dove (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia).  Ancestor of all pigeons, this species, despite the unwarranted disgust by many humans, brings a profound beauty to its surroundings.  The iridescent feathers, the amber eyes, the tolerance for our ways and our places…  Well, I find them intriguing and beguiling.

A Virginia opossum (a.k.a. possum; Didelphis virginiana) eating cat food outside the patio fence (20081102_14542)

A Virginia opossum (a.k.a. possum; Didelphis virginiana).  Part of the cleaning crew, in fact, as you can see this one readily went to work on the cat food I had just put out for Clance.  After the cat had his fill, he walked away.  That’s when, much to my surprise, this opossum scampered around the corner, ambled up to the table so to speak, and began munching away.

Oh, and the marsupial knew I was there.  I knelt next to the fence only a yard/meter away, so every sound and movement I made set off alarm bells for this small juvenile (not as small as the baby, though).  But I know something about them: their eyesight is relatively poor, although they can hear and smell like a top predator.  Staying downwind of the little cutie and not making a lot of noise meant it only looked at me with suspicion if I moved too much or accidentally sounded my presence with some clumsy racket.

A male cicada-killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus) perched atop a leaf (20080620_07043)

A male cicada-killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus).  My favorite insect in all the world, and a most gentle and placid leviathan if ever there was one.  The huge colony of these beasts that surrounds my home thrives only for a brief period before falling under the heels of time’s onward march.  But during that short life they captivate me to no end, and they give of their calm nature the companionship made possible only by two disparate lives sharing a clear understanding: we can be friends.

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Notes:

[1] Many would argue that domestic cats are not natural.  I beg to differ.  The wildcat who gave life to this species has been pushed to near extinction by humans.  What can fill that ecological niche if not the very children of the parents put to death by the march of our intelligent advancement.

That said, I don’t like the idea of outside cats, I don’t like seeing them outside fending for themselves and being exposed to all manner of illness and danger, yet the humane side of me—the part of me that knows what it means to be human—likes even less the idea of seeing them go hungry and without compassion.  I put lots of money into no-kill shelters each month in hopes that some of these lost souls will find a home; meanwhile, I have no intention of turning my back on them when I can afford to offer a meal, a bit of attention and friendship, and a kind soul to whom they can speak.

[2] Amazingly, this is not a macro shot.  I stood some distance from the fly and zoomed in to take the picture.

[3] The photo is bad, I know, but I took it in very poor lighting and with the camera on the wrong settings.  I was more intrigued and enthralled with the opossum than I was with making a piece of art.  So sue me.

Exotic isn’t necessary

I don’t always know what I will see, let alone photograph, when I go for walks.  Although the rare occasion pops up when I set out on a quest to find a particular something or other, mostly I let my body and eyes wander aimlessly so I don’t miss the artwork of the mundane.  Well, that’s assuming any of nature’s handiwork can be called mundane.

Something in the ordinary, the usual, too often goes unnoticed.  “Oh, it’s just a duck.”  “Sparrows?  How boring.”  “We don’t see autumn foliage in Texas like you see up north, you know.  Down here it just goes from green to dead in a few days.”  The list goes on.

Truth be told, so much beauty rests unappreciated in what too many call pedestrian.  If only they’d look closer.

Domerstic swan geese (Anser cygnoides) and domestic greylag geese (Anser anser) paddling about a local creek (20081025_14134)

I myself sometimes fail to notice what should be seen yet passes right before my eyes with nary a glance.  And shame on me for that!

Even a gaggle of our local domestic geese deserves more than apathy.  They bring verve and vigor to the lake, their loud voices ringing across the water’s surface and echoing in defiance of the woodlands.  Would that I could gift them for the splendor they bring to my life.

A pekin duck (a.k.a. domestic duck, white pekin duck, or Long Island duck; Anas domesticus) taking a bath (20081101_14213)

Of all the ducks in all the world, White Rock Lake boasts a year-round population of many species, not the least of which can be found bathing in early morning light in the shallows of Sunset Bay.  I stand upon the pier which beckons to me all too often, and there I see a familiar vision which even to me seems nothing short of routine.

But then I look closer, look with eyes intent on devouring the majestic hidden within the unexciting.  Even as I look on, snap photos, appreciate, others glance here and there, perhaps mentioning the water thrown this way and that by a simple white duck, and finally seek more exciting fare.

And I wonder what might be more exciting than this…

Rock doves (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia) perched on the juts of a pier (20081101_14249)

The common pigeon.  They draw their beauty from their forefathers, the rock doves, the progenitors of all pigeons, and they carry to this day an iridescent beauty and unmistakable aura that rarely is as admired as it should be.

I sat upon my favorite pier and let these birds join me, along with dozens of their friends.  Some allowed me to touch them, others allowed me to serve as a perch, and yet more scampered about me as though I didn’t exist, ducking beneath my legs, walking over my hands, standing next to my arms.  Almost an hour burned away in the autumn sun as we enjoyed the morning together.

A male house sparrow (Passer domesticus) clinging to the branch of a shrub (20081020_13882)

Rested upon a branch within a shrub so near that I might reach out and touch him, this male house sparrow accepted my presence, my invasive spirit as I poked my camera in his face, and he never budged for all my commotion.

What a ubiquitous marvel he is.  What a common artwork he proffers to those willing to notice.

American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) and American coots (Fulica americana) preening on a sandbar (20081101_14233)

Pelicans and coots preen upon the desolate sandbar jutting across the bay.  Busy with their grooming, they fail to notice the autumnal canvas nature paints behind them upon what was just a few weeks ago a lush, verdant, green landscape.

I bear witness to the changing of the seasons, to the changing of the guard.  Like these birds, I feel the warmth of a cool day whilst enjoying a potent magic offered up for our enjoyment.  I notice the magnificent display, however, much unlike my avian counterparts.

Golden autumnal foliage sheltering an uphill path at White Rock Lake. (20081101_14476)

Golden canopies stretch endlessly as they mix with reds and browns and greens and hues untold.  Simple yellows, some claim, although they fail to see the truth of the moment.

The trail leading up the hill toward my home snakes its way beneath a sky contrasted by trees intent on showing their autumnal best.  I scarcely knew a moment of peace as I walked this path.  Sunlight falling against and through the gorgeous arms of life succumbing to seasonal sleep brushed upon the bones of the world a gorgeous shelter of color, a shelter beneath which I lost myself.

I’m left feeling satisfied and bewildered all at once.  The everyday can be so exquisite, so delightful.  It can also be terribly ignored.

I wonder why…

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Photos:

[1] Domestic swan geese (Anser cygnoides) and domestic greylag geese (Anser anser) paddling about a local creek.

[2] A pekin duck (a.k.a. domestic duck, white pekin duck, or Long Island duck; Anas domesticus) taking a bath.

[3] Rock doves (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia) perched on the juts of a pier.

[4] A male house sparrow (Passer domesticus) clinging to the branch of a shrub.

[5] American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) and American coots (Fulica americana) preening on a sandbar.

[6] Golden autumnal foliage sheltering an uphill path at White Rock Lake.

February feathers

Before all hell broke loose at work and I lost the majority of my time to the demands of employment, I enjoyed a leisurely walk at White Rock Lake early on the morning of February 2.  While this by no means encompasses the totality of the photographs taken that day, it does present a nice avian menagerie representative of that glorious experience.  You can expect more later.

Ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) preening and sunbathing on a pier (20080202_01679)

The most ubiquitous species of its kind here at the lake, ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) enjoyed a casual sunrise on the pier in Sunset Bay, my favorite spot to sit and meditate in the company of this urban oasis and all the nature it has to offer.

I especially like the juvenile on the right caught with its leg outstretched while grooming (I believe that’s second-winter plumage).

Three female house sparrows (Passer domesticus) perched on one of the pier's support columns (20080202_01693)

Three female house sparrows (Passer domesticus) perched atop one of the pier’s supports as they undoubtedly gossiped and spoke of the ungrateful men in their lives.  You can almost hear the cackling and goings on, the talk of no shopping money left in the nest when “those men” disappeared all too early, the discussion about who really has to raise the young’uns while others gallivant around the countryside as if they haven’t a care in the world.

A male downy woodpecker (Picoides pubescens) hanging upside-down as he searches for a meal (20080202_01715)

A male downy woodpecker (Picoides pubescens) spent a great deal of time hunting the outer branches of this tree in search of food.  His female counterpart, also in the same tree, never left the dense shadows of its thick trunk.

Only later did I realize this is normal behavior, the male commandeering thinner branches while he forces the female to stay lower in the tree.  Apparently he knows where the better insects hide.

A female European starling (Sturnus vulgaris) high in a tree facing into the morning sun (20080202_01741)

A female European starling (Sturnus vulgaris) sat high in a tree facing the sun, making photography rather difficult lest I stand facing her.  Such is the result.

She made a great deal of noise as I approached her nest (hidden in a hollow limb).  When I didn’t pass by uncaring of her presence, she bellowed out a series of demands that I move along immediately.  Too bad she remained in the tree’s upper branches and in a position that forced me into a singular view of her (from in front and below).

A male pekin duck (Anas domesticus) swimming near the bank of a creek (20080202_01768)

A male pekin duck (a.k.a. domestic duck, white pekin duck, or Long Island duck; Anas domesticus) swam by me as I walked along the banks of Dixon Branch (one of the many creeks that feed into White Rock Lake).  He paused briefly to look at me, perhaps a question as to my intent or a quick pondering of my obvious inability to swim.

In either case, he made a rather nice portrait with his deep blue eyes and illustrious whiteness.

A close-up of a rock dove (Columba livia) looking at me as I pass by (20080202_01759)

A rock dove (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia), one among many, paused momentarily as it glanced at me while I trundled along pretending I hadn’t noticed all of them feasting on breakfast.

Ancestor of pigeons

Domestic and wild pigeons descend from a single predecessor.  Rock doves (a.k.a. common pigeons; Columba livia) first inhabited Europe and Asia as native species, but as with many creatures inadvertently or intentionally introduced around the globe, this avian toughie found its way to the New World and learned to survive in urban and rural settings.  In fact, it thrived.

Named for its proclivity for nesting on cliff faces and steep rock structures where predators found it difficult to locate and invade the nests, this bird represents the living ancestor of pigeons.

That fact is not lost on humans who often refer to rock doves as common pigeons, or even rock pigeons in uninformed circles.

White Rock Lake, as well as all of Dallas, boasts a flourishing society of these beasts.  They can be found everywhere.

And scarcely do they fear humans.

A dule of Rock doves (a.k.a. common pigeons; Columba livia) perched high in a tree

Standing where no one dares stand for too long, I realized the dule[1] of doves above my head cared little for my milling about beneath them.  Their perch high in the tree on a sunny day allowed them to tend to grooming in safety while perusing the landscape for breakfast.

But what a gregarious species they are, often sharing their personal space with other birds as well as humans.  On a bright winter morning as I stood upon my favorite pier in Sunset Bay, I learned this fact with personal experience.

Rock doves (a.k.a. common pigeons; Columba livia) and ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) milling about a pier in morning sunlight

Adult and juvenile ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) staked their claim to wooden planks where rock doves also demanded their share.  Neither seemed bothered by the other.

Yet as I stood quietly snapping photos, this so-called “common pigeon” demonstrated not only its lack of fear of other birds, but also its lack of fear of me.

Several walked right up the pier toward land, toward where I stood.

A rock dove (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia) walking toward me along the edge of a pier

With movements so small as to be imperceptible, I maintained my position while capturing image after image while these doves treated me as they would a tree trunk.  They came so close that I could have reached down and touched one.  Had I been so inclined that is.

Not once did they spook at my turning to and fro, snapping pictures almost constantly.

A close-up of a rock dove (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia) standing in bright morning sunlight

And the sunshine provided perfect lighting (I mean with the right lens filters).  No camera flash could ever come close to being this real, this colorful, this photogenic.

To share in complete honesty, I kept having to zoom out in order to get respectable scenes.  All the while they carried on with their business as though I didn’t exist.

How I loved the idea of that, of being there without being a threat, of standing amidst their activities without them caring either way about my presence.

Something delectable rests on the tip of the tongue when nature fails to see us as a threat—when we truly are not a threat.

Whether or not I am at risk from them lies somewhere in the realm of irrelevancy.  Only when they are who and what they should be can I reach that magical place where the cosmos unfolds life a carpet meant solely for my footsteps.

Such a place exists for so few people.  Too many rush through the landscape assuming their own superiority, their own dominion over that which they do not understand or appreciate.

A close-up of a rock dove (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia)

Animals sense this, methinks, and react accordingly.

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[1] “Dule” is the collective noun for a group of doves.

Great tail you have there!

Another in my series of reintroductions using the new camera. . .

Great-tailed grackles (Quiscalus mexicanus) are ubiquitous around these parts.  They represent year-round inhabitants of Texas, and usually in large numbers that explode in winter.

The largest of all grackle species, they get their name from one very important fact: they have very long tails, the length of which is greater than that of any other black-colored bird.

Raucous, unruly, loud, and generally considered a pest, I find this species both fascinating and noteworthy.  I’m just weird that way, I guess, though I’ve explained less flippantly before much of my fascination with these avian beauties.

A male great-tailed grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus) runs over the frozen ground bathed in morning light

A male great-tailed grackle runs over the frozen ground bathed in
morning light.  Notice how the early sunlight brings out the iridescent
color of its plumage.  Oh, and check out that tail!

A male great-tailed grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus) prances along the shore of White Rock Lake in search of food

A male great-tailed grackle prances along the shore of White Rock Lake
in search of food.  The yellow of its eyes differentiates it from its
closest cousin—along with its size.

A female great-tailed grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus) higher in the tree shows she has the same marvelous tail, albeit attached to a brown body

A female great-tailed grackle higher in the tree shows
she has the same marvelous tail, albeit attached to
a brown body.  Notice how much smaller she is than
her male counterparts further below.

A male great-tailed grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus) scours the frozen grass for breakfast

A male great-tailed grackle scours the frozen grass for
breakfast.  His frost-encrusted beak and yellow eye paint a
magic picture at sunsrise.  And did anyone else notice the
claw attached to that foot?

A male and a female great-tailed grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus) join several rock doves (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia) enjoying a breakfast handout

For a bit of scale on this avian behemoth: a male and a female great-
tailed grackle join several rock doves (a.k.a. common pigeon; Columba livia)
enjoying a breakfast handout.  He stands behind the whole scene while she
bends down on the right to sample the offering.  These are indeed large
birds, he much more so than she.

[the larger versions of these photos show even more detail, including the ice covering the dry grass in the fourth image]