She's an Indigo Bunting. Females are basically brown, with faint streaking on the breast, a whitish throat, and sometimes a touch of blue on the wings, tail, or rump.
Indigo Buntings nest in fields and on the edges of woods, roadsides, and railroad tracks. The female likes to conceal her nest in low vegetation, 3-5 feet off the ground. Raspberry bushes are a very popular nesting spot.
They can have a couple broods per year. The female builds the nest alone—a process that takes up to 8 days early in the season and as little as 2 days later in the summer. The male may watch but does not participate. The nest is an open cup woven of leaves, grasses, stems, and bark, and wrapped with spider webs. The inside of the cup is lined with slender grasses, tiny roots, strips of thin bark, thistle down, and sometimes deer hair. The cup is only about 1.5 inches deep and 3 inches across.
Read more at:
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/indigo_bunting/id
This guy started it all today, presumably also guarding a nest (which I never saw). Song Sparrow:
This guy started it all today, presumably also guarding a nest (which I never saw). Song Sparrow:
Thank you for sharing your photos! If anyone else would like to share a photograph of nature send it to bloubird@gmail.com and I'll put it on the Friday Photo posts.
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