Thursday, November 21, 2019

Warbling White-eye Carving 126

Before traveling to Thailand, we stayed in Japan for very eventful 8 days. 

Japan was amazing, and exceded all my high expectations I had of the country. It was very clean, organized, fun, and just all around very beautiful!

Before the trip I did research on birds to see there, as well as doing research of common or popular birds. Though Japan has a lot of iconic birds such as: the Mandarin Duck, Red-crowned Crane, Japanese Large-billed Crow, and Japanese Pheasants to name a few, I decided to go with a common residential bird: the Warbling White-eye, formally known as the Japanese White-eye. 


While carving I thought that I would make its feet open so I could attach it to any branch and be able to take a picture of it in a natural setting, and thought it would be cool to do it with a nice Japanese temple on the banks of a pond in the background. 

Warbling White-eye, Zosterops japonicus ssp. japonicus, Carving 126
at Fushimi Inari Shrine, in Kyoto, Japan.
You can see its little legs and feet, which are slightly flexible with wire inside. 
This is where I saw the Warbling White-eye, aka, Japanese White-eye, warbling around the 
trees right above the thousands of tourist and visitors walking up the shrine. 

Warbling White-eye, Zosterops japonicus ssp. japonicus, Carving 126

at Fushimi Inari Shrine, in Kyoto, Japan.
Sitting in a sapling Japanese Cedar. This forest around the shrine was 
full of all sorts of birds.  In one spot there was a narrow pond and a Gray Heron in it fishing. 
Some people clapped loudly at it, but Im not really sure why or what the meaning is. 



Warbling White-eye, Zosterops japonicus ssp. japonicus, Carving 126

at Fushimi Inari Shrine, in Kyoto, Japan.
This was along a nicely wooded trail heading up the side of the shrine grounds. 
It was really peaceful here.

Thanks for reading and visiting as always!
David Kramer
Pond Cypress Studio

Saturday, November 9, 2019

Red-necked Stint Carving 125

I recently got back from vacation to Thailand and Japan. It was wonderful and both countries were very unique and interesting. In preparation for the trip I did lots of research on birds that I could look for while there, and I thought of doing a carving for each country.

The first carving I made was for Thailand. I wanted to visit the salt pans south of Bangkok and look for shorebirds. A wide variety of shorebirds can be found here, including the very rare and critically endangered Spoon-billed Sandpiper. I stayed in Bangkok for a few days and did see a lot of new birds, especially by the river and in a fruiting fig tree by my hotel. After that we traveled to Phuket and I did get a chance to be near the beach and look for shorebirds. The first few days I was only able to find Common Sandpipers, and even though I looked in appropriate habitats wasn't able to find any other species. Before going back to Bangkok we stayed in a hotel near Sirinat National Park. It was pretty much a standard tropical beach and I didn't expect to find any shorebirds there. Fortunately at the beach hotel we were staying at there was a coral sandbar that extended from the sandy beach and stuck out into the ocean. During high tide the sandbar, which was actually just massive amounts of broken coral fragments, was cut off from the beach and much smaller. This was perfect because a large flock of about 100+ Lesser Sand-plovers rested here. Among the Sand-plovers I was able to find some a few Common Redshanks, one Ruddy Turnstone, and one Sanderling. Also, very happily, a few Red-necked Stints. I was really worried I wasn't going to be able to find any!

Here's a bunch of Lesser Sand-plovers resting on the coral sandbar. During high tide it seems they would come here to rest until low-tide comes and they travel to exposed areas to feed. Oct 2019.


A close up of one of the Red-necked Stints I saw. They were easy to pick out among the many Sand-plovers because they are constantly moving, and the Sand-plovers were quite still. Oct 2019

Another shot of the Red-necked Stint. Its so tiny and very cute, they're also very active. 
Feeding and running, and then taking off and flying back to the sandbar. They could 
be described as "hyper". Oct 2019


Most of the island is made up of these broken coral branches as well as 
large plate corals and other broken chunks of hard coral. 

My Red-necked Stint - Calidris ruficollis, in the habitat where I saw them. 
This one I painted in the winter plumage with a few worn summer feathers. 
I also made the base to resemble the sand and mud from the salt pans. It has bits of clear/white fine glitter to resemble crystalized salt on the sand. 

Red-necked Stint - Calidris ruficollis,  Carving 125, a view of its back with a single summer feather. 
You can see all the broken pieces of branching corals that the birds feed and peck around during high tide. During low tide I think they travel to the shallow mudflats and river deltas.

Red-necked Stint - Calidris ruficollis, Carving 125. Standing on the coral sandbar. 
All around the sandbar there's a beautiful coral reef, full of coral, fish, and marine invertebrates. 
The water was crystal clear as well and thankfully not too much trash on the beaches here. 

While watching the shorebirds an interesting thing happened. A Peregrine Falcon swooped down on the shorebird flock. They had all taken off just a moment before the falcon got to where the shorebirds were resting. It chased them fiercely and the shorebirds formed a tight and winding flock over the ocean. It was pretty amazing!! The falcon returned back to the island and rested for a moment on a coral boulder. It had failed to catch any of the shorebirds despite its incredible speed! 


Blue Jay Carving 124

In South Florida, we have a subspecies of Blue Jay, that is smaller and has a slightly different coloration. These birds are common all around South Florida, even in busier parts of the city. They feed on insects, at bird seeds, and fruit like mangos! They usually travel in small groups making a lot of noise and imitating Red-shouldered Hawks.

This summer during mango season by friend in the Miami Lakes area sent me a video of a Blue Jay eating a mango from his tree. The mango had a large hole from the Blue Jay pecking out chunks of the fruit and swallowing it. The mango looks about the same size of the Blue Jay and I'm sure weighs more!


Here's the original video, sent to me from my
 friend Alfredo Hernandez in Miami Lakes, FL.
The video was taken July 6, 2019. 

Blue Jay, South Florida subspecies - Cyanocitta cristata semplei.
I made a stand to resemble and older dead mango branch 
with a few cracks and drops of sap leaking out. 
David Kramer - Pond Cypress Studio 2019

Blue Jay, South Florida subspecies - Cyanocitta cristata semplei.
A closer look, in a habitat which I usually see these Blue Jays.
 Lots of live oaks and other fruiting trees with a canal in the background, in Hollywood, FL.
David Kramer - Pond Cypress Studio 2019


Heres a video of my Blue Jay taken next to my townhouse bird feeder. 
You can see the Blue Jay come down to get some black sunflower seeds and when it goes to the feeder it takes a few glances at my carving. It doesn't seem to mind it. 
Blue Jay, South Florida subspecies - Cyanocitta cristata semplei.
David Kramer - Pond Cypress Studio 2019

Thursday, October 31, 2019

Seaside Sparrow Carving 123

On Sept. 3rd, 2019 South Florida started to feel the effects of Hurricane Dorian.  We had about a week to prepare, buying water, supplies, and gas, as the slow moving storm headed toward Florida. The day it was closest to Florida, and was starting to hit the state, I went to the beach, in hopes of possibly seeing rare seabirds blown in with the winds. I suppose I should have been more specific in my wish, because of getting a rare Tern, Storm-Petrel, or Shearwater, I got another "sea"bird. 

Dr. Von D. Mizell-Eula Johnson State Park on Sept 3, 2019 
during Hurricane Dorrian.  As you can see it was quite calm with 
a few bands of rainclouds passing by.  A pretty nice beach day for bird watching,
especially with the Fort Lauderdale Hollywood Airport closed for the storm.
Usually its very noisy here as the planes take off over the ocean. 

A band of rain from Hurricane Dorian.  While walking down the beach
 a band of rain came and I took shelter underneath a Cabbage Palm.  While standing
watching the rain I noticed out of the corner of my eye a small bird emerge from a stunted seagrape tree right on the edge of the dunes. The bird popped out and fed in the sand. I took some photos of it, knowing it was a sparrow, and to help with later identification. 

This is the exact area I saw the bird. It appeared right behind the sea turtle nest, and it used the seagrape as a sort of walkway for it to get further out onto the beach, but still remained covered. When the waves came up to the dunes the bird would come out and peck around at the sand. I suppose eating all the little amphipods that were abundant on the sand. When I crouched down I brushed the sand gently and many of the clear shrimp-like amphipods started jumping around and fleeing. They about the size of a grain of rice, so prefect for a small bird. 

And here is the bird. Its a Seaside Sparrow! I originally thought it must be a Savannah Sparrow because that was the only sparrow eBird did not deem rare for this time and location. Its quite rare here, and had only been seen 3 other times in Broward County. I did see another one on eBird that one was spotted here almost exactly 4 years ago, and of a similar plumage, and also photographed on a seagrape tree. It was found and photographed by Steve Kaplan and Bruce Pickholtz. Both of whom I'd meet the following day when I returned to look for this Seaside Sparrow again. 


This is when the Seaside Sparrow was out feeding on the exposed beach where the waves would come up too. I never expected to see this "sea" bird, and that is what I mean by be careful what you wish for, even with bird watching! But I am thankful I saw it! So after this whole event I had to make a carving of this bird. Luckily Bruce and Steve, and other eBirders took much better photographs and posted to their eBird checklist, which helped so I could get the plumage right. 

Seaside Sparrow - Ammospiza maritima,carving 123, at the spot I found this individual bird. 
I tried to get the plumage as close to the actual bird as possible, and made a sand base to match the sand at Dr. Von D. Mizell-Eula Johnson State Park, in Dania Beach, Florida. 

Another shot of my Seaside Sparrow - Ammospiza maritima. This time close to some seagrass, I believe Sea Oats, and with a coconut in the background. As you can see in this photo the bird looks quite dark, and in my photos it looks quite dark too, especially because the real sparrow was a little wet, but in other eBird photos of the same bird the next day it appears lighter. Here I photographed the bird on the same day with different lighting, and it almost looks like 2 differently painted birds. This is one thing that makes bird watching very challenging, is that: what the mind thinks it sees, might not be exactly what it appears. It can make identification very difficult, and mind boggling sometimes. 

And a final close up. 

I do wonder a few things about this Seaside Sparrow:

-Was it was related to the one spotted 4 years ago at the same spot?

-Which subspecies of Seaside Sparrow is this? Florida does have a resident Seaside Sparrow subspecies, the Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow  (which I don't think this is) and an extinct subspecies, the Dusky Seaside Sparrow, that was once found a few counties north of Broward County, FL. There is also a few Gulf Coast subspecies and a few Atlantic Coast subspecies. I suppose it could be one of the Atlantic subspecies that migrated south after the breeding season, or if it is a juvenile bird, dispersed south to Florida, as the one spotted four years ago may have did. 

-Where is it now?  The bird hasn't been spotted since Hurricane Dorian, and its been two months. I wonder if it migrated further, or it's just living its secretive (seacretive ? ) Seaside Sparrow style. 

Thanks for reading and I hope you'll keep in touch, there's many excited projects coming soon, including a trip to Asia and a very special project. 


Thursday, September 12, 2019

Bachman's Sparrow Carving 112, part 2

In my recent post about my Brown-headed Nuthatch carving I wrote about how I was inspired to plant Longleaf Pines, Pinus palustris, after reading about the habitats of Florida. This pinewood were vast and seemingly endless at the time, but now, they are scattered and remnant patches. Longleaf Pine used to cover 90,000,000 acres, from Virginia to Florida, and over to Texas, now less than 5% of this habitat remains. The Red-cockaded Woodpecker, Brown-headed Nuthatch, and Bachman's Sparrow, were three signature birds of this habitat.

A few years ago, while flipping through the pages of my Sibley's Guides to Birds, I was looking for resident birds of Florida, that I have not seen yet. One that caught my eye was the Bachman's Sparrow. I had never seen one, or heard one, and after looking up the sightings on eBird, I learned that this bird was spotted recently down the road from my parents house. This got me thinking that if I made a suitable habitat for this bird maybe I could get them to return. My parents have 5 acres, and about half of it is Slash Pine/Palmetto habitat. There was a section, close to the pond, that I adopted to by my "prairie" and I would work on it to make an open pine forest with native grasses and wildflowers. The first and most important step was to remove all the non-native, invasive plants (Brazilian Pepper, Japanese Climbing Fern, non-native grasses such as Bahia and Cogon). Once these plants were removed native plants started to fill back in naturally, such as Coreopsis, Sundews, Bladderworts, Skullcaps, Polygala, Bog-Buttons to name a few!).  I also planted more native wildflowers and ferns, including the Hooded Pitcher Plant, Sarracenia minor, that was once found at a sight down the road, but the sight was destroyed by mining. Most recently I planted native blueberries, shiny fetter bush, Liatris, and three Longleaf Pines. Even though a few years have gone by, I still have not seen any Bachman's Sparrows here at my parents house. I think there just isn't enough suitable habitat, and my small prairie can not support them, though it does get visited by many other birds. It is an ongoing work in progress...

Bachman's Sparrow carving with a Hooded Pitcher Plant, 
in my restored pine land habitat.

Bachman's Sparrow carving among some wildflowers:
Hypericum, Scutellaria, Sarracenia minor, Polygala. I've recorded 60 species 
of native plants in just this few hundred square feet. 


Bachman's Sparrow carving with a newly planted Longleaf Pine, Pinus palustris, and to the left a Slender Gayfeather, aka Blazingstar, Liatris gracilis. Both plants were bought from Sweetbay Nursery, in Parrish, Florida. 


Ruby-throated Hummingbird Carving 122

At my parents house I designed and planted a Hummingbird Garden, which has nectar plants to attract hummingbirds, but also attracts a wide variety of nectar feeding insects and other native wildlife. This garden is planted with different species which I will list below and is very low maintenance except for annual pruning and occasional weeding. It doesn't get any supplemental watering except maybe during the winer dry season.

Hummingbird Garden Plant List for my garden in Manatee County, Florida:
Darlington Oak - Quercus hemisphaerica
Slash Pine - Pinus elliottii
Firebush - Hamelia patens
Walter's Viburnum - Viburnum obovatum
Coral Honeysuckle - Lonicera sempervirens
Rangoon Creeper - Combretum indicum (not native - bought because I saw a hummingbird on it at the nursery. Is beautiful and fragrant)
Corkystem Passion-flower - Passiflora suberosa (supports a colony of Zebra Longwing butterflies)
Firecracker Plant - Russelia equisetiformis
Shrimp Plant - Justicia brandegeena
Scarlet Sage - Salvia coccinea
Sage - Salvia x 'Wendys Wish'
Sage - Salvia x 'Mystic Spires'
Coleus various cultivars
Common Violet - Viola sororia
Wild Boston Fern - Nephrolephis exaltata
Florida Butterfly Orchid - Encyclia tampensis (I've only seen tiny bees on these)
Giant Airplant - Tillandsia utriculata
Northern Needleleaf - Tillandsian balbsiana

So since the winter of 2018 I've been seeing a female Ruby-throated Hummingbird, Archilochus colubris, feeding in a large Laurel Oak, I think picking off insects. It spend a lot of time searching all the branches of the trees and making short quick movements and then hovering throughout the tree. Later I saw her in my Moms vegetable garden feeding on some nice healthy Scarlet Sage. Then this spring and summer I saw her in my hummingbird garden and also feeding on the other fire bush I've planted around the yard, and defending the bushes from a juvenile male hummingbird (which Im wondering if its her son).  Here is her carving. I made her with a slightly turned head, and siting on a wood finial.

Ruby-throated Hummingbird - Archilochus colubris
Finished carving made of basswood, acrylic paint, and glass eyes,
sitting on a wood finial base. 
David K. Kramer 2019

Ruby-throated Hummingbird - Archilochus colubris
Here is carving in my hummingbird garden where I saw her, feeding on
Coral Honeysuckle, a beautiful native vine. 
David K. Kramer 2019

Brown-headed Nuthatch Carving 121


This summer I took a trip to Destin, FL on an invitation from one of my friends from Virginia Beach. We stayed a few days there in a nice Airbnb, and each day went to Henderson Beach State Park (where I photographed some of my shorebirds and Least Tern in a previous post).  It was very beautiful there in Destin and the state park was really nice as well. After the trip and on the way back to Miami, we stopped at Topsail Hill Preserve State Park. I really wanted to see pitcher plants, and to look for birds. While hiking I came across a small flock of Brown-headed Nuthatches. They were pretty high up in the pines and actively feeding and chirping a lot. So after getting home I started work on my Nuthatch. The bird I carved is based off of the Florida subspecies: Sitta pusila caniceps, which was once called the Gray-headed Nuthatch.

While doing research on this subspecies I came across a lovely book with a great quote from the book "Life Histories of North American Nuthatches, Wrens, Thrashers, and their Allies" by Arthur Cleveland Bent:

The Gray-headed Nutchatch was recorded by Arthur H. Howell (1932) as "an abundant resident in northwestern Florida; moderately common in the central and southern parts." It has been taken at least as far south as Miami. Its home is in the extensive open pine forests of the State, known as the "flatwoods." The northern tourist, seeking a winter sojourn in Florida, rides in the southbound train for hour after hour with nothing to see from the car window but apparently endless miles of uninteresting flat pine barrens, until he wearies of the monotony. He does not appreciate the intriguing vastness of these almost boundless flatwoods; nor does he admire the stately beauty of the longleaf pines and the picturesque charm of the Caribbean pines. Only the naturalist fully appreciates them, for "there is a nameless charm in the flatwoods, there is enchantment for the real lover of nature in their very sameness. One feels a sense of their infinity as the forest stretches away into space beyond the limits of vision; they convey to the mind a feeling of boundless freedom. The soft, brilliant sunshine filters down through the needle-like leaves and falls in patches on the flower covered floor; there is a low, humming sound, something mimicking the patter of raindrops, as the warm southeast wind drifts through the trees; even the loneliness has an attraction," as so well expressed by Charles Torrey Simpson (1923).

...It's such a charming and magical statement. And now-a-days these vast boundless flat woods are unfortunately a thing of the past. Knowing this and doing more research of the Long-leaf Pine forest that once grew over much of Florida, and the Southeast United State, prompted me to plant a few of these trees at my parents house in Manatee County, FL. The trees I bought from Sweet Bay Nursery, in Parrish, FL, and I highly recommend them for finding a wide variety of Florida native plants, and great customer service.

Brown-headed Nuthatch - Sitta pusilla caniceps
Almost finished carving, just needs legs and feet. 
David K. Kramer 2019

I’m back!

 Hello Readers,  As everyone in the world knows, the last 2 years of the pandemic has been tumultuous and really threw a wrench in everythin...