Carolina Wren

Labels: Carolina Wren, Winter Birds


Info & pictures of common New Jersey birds: the woodpecker, cardinal, king fisher, warbler, robin, tufted titmouse, finch, mallard, cormorant, baby ducks, grebe, goose, cat bird, sapsucker, northern flicker, chickadee, merganser, hawk, heron, hairy woodpecker & goldfinch plus muskrat, groundhog & beaver. Many photos were taken at Lake Nelson in Piscataway, NJ and others in NJ bird spots: Cape May, the Meadowlands, and Sandy Hook or vacations in Florida, California and the Caribbean.
Mike is still playing with his new camera.
It was nice of the wren to come by.Labels: Carolina Wren, Fall Birds, Northern Cardinal
Labels: Baltimore Oriole, Carolina Wren, Red Winged Blackbird, Song Sparrow, Spring Birds, Yellow Warbler
Labels: Carolina Wren, Spring Birds
Labels: Birdcam, Carolina Wren, Spring Birds
Labels: Carolina Wren, Winter Birds
Labels: Carolina Wren, Red Bellied Woodpecker, White-throated Sparrow
The Carolina Wren and the White-throated Sparrow are common birds in New Jersey in the winter but harder to photograph because they rarely come to bird feeders and spend most of their time in the underbrush.
Labels: Carolina Wren, White-throated Sparrow, Winter Birds
Labels: Brigantine, Carolina Wren, Fall Birds, Osprey, Sparrow
Labels: Carolina Wren, Winter Birds
Last evening I saw a little bird sitting on a deck-post outside my kitchen door. This deck-post often has a bird feeder on it, but hasn’t in a while. Anyway the little wren was singing a very lovely song as if trying to sing along with the music I was playing which was Alan Jackson’s “It’s all right to be itty bitty.” I stopped to watch & listen to this little bird which I thought be a Carolina Wren. After a little while, his/her song changed to what sounded like “we need you, we need you, we need you.” I took this as a cue to fill and hang the bird feeder back on the deck-post. Which I did because it seemed the Carolina Wren was telling me that her and her bird friends neede me to feed them. *:)
Labels: Carolina Wren, Fall Birds
Hi,
I love your photo of the Carolina wren sitting on the evergreen branch (carolinawren2_770586.jpg).
Can you possibly tell me what kind of tree the bird is sitting on? Is it a hemlock or a spruce tree or something different?
Thanks for your time.
Betsy
bdonovan1@nc.rr.com