I’ve been attracting birds to my yard for more than 25 years. and southern Canada, there are simple ways to entice them for a closer look. While they only spend part of the year in the U.S. Wendy and her husband Hank have two grown children and are avid hikers, cyclists, and kayakers.ĬLICK HERE to explore all of the local bird profiles Wendy has authored in our Birds of Barrington series at wouldn’t want to attract indigo buntings to their yard? To see this all blue bird up close would be amazing. ![]() She is chairman of The Bobolink Foundation, serves on the board or advisory committee of multiple conservation and bird-related organizations, both domestic and international, and is former chairman of IL and NY chapters of The Nature Conservancy. Wendy Paulsonĭuring interludes in New York City and Washington, DC, Wendy taught classes about birds in the public schools and is helping to develop a similar program in Chicago public schools with Openlands. Wendy developed the education program for Citizens for Conservation, initiated and edited its newsletter, and has been an active volunteer with CFC for over 30 years. Anne’s in the late 70s, under the auspices of The Garden Club and Little Garden Club of Barrington. She re-established the Nature Lady program in the Barrington 220 school district and St. Wendy Paulson has lived in Barrington Hills since 1975, and has led bird walks in the area for many years. Their ringing treetop songs will fade until next spring when we can welcome back both their music and blue brilliance to our countryside. The buntings will linger until September or even October, then will depart for their wintering grounds in Central America and the West Indies. At this time of year, I hear and spot them regularly as I bike local country roads. They favor shrubby edges between open and wooded areas. You won’t see buntings in town but can expect to see and hear them in local natural areas, such as Citizens for Conservation’s Flint Creek Savanna and Grigsby Prairie, and Lake and Cook County forest preserves. The species is surprisingly common in the Barrington area. As the season progresses, you can recognize young males by the splotchy brown and blue plumage as their adult blue feathers begin to grow in. Both birds have the short, conical bills of seedeaters and both have small, beady black eyes. They hardly look like a pair – the plumage is so completely different – until you notice that the size and shape are alike. ![]() During and after nest season, I often see the male and female together. Indigo buntings regularly visit bird feeders, especially in early spring when they first arrive, and sometimes in colorful association with goldfinches and rose-breasted grosbeaks. She is the sole incubator, leaving her mate free to serenade. It is built of coarse grasses and bark strips, lined with deer hair or fine grass, and contains usually three or four white eggs. ![]() While he sings ostentatiously, she tends the nest she has made in dense vegetation usually only a foot or two above the ground. She is unremarkable, a dull brown that is as drab as her mate’s color is vibrant. The female is an entirely different matter. It can appear dark, even blackish, from a distance but once you get binoculars on the bird, you gasp at the ultramarine blue, especially when illuminated by sunlight. It favors open perches, often at the top of a dead tree. Once you hear the song, it’s usually easy to locate the bird. The notes of Midwestern buntings (often quite different from those of their Eastern counterparts) are strong, evenly spaced and, if you listen closely, given in pairs and hopping up and down the musical scale. The song of the indigo bunting has a ringing quality that readily distinguishes it from other birds still singing at this time of year. One of the most conspicuous songsters is the indigo bunting (Passerina cyanea), a diminutive summer resident of the Barrington area that excites observers with its electric blue. But a few species still vocalize regularly. A month into summer, birdsong has diminished considerably.
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