Tag Archives: birds

Attack of the Towhee, De Quincey on Macbeth and Murder

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In my 2008 blog entry Obsessed Towhee, I reported on a little brown bird attacking our car windows here in Willow Glen. What is probably that bird’s grandson has started attacking the house windows and those of WP668, our backyard caboose. The stupid California Towhee apparently sees his reflection in the glass and feels called to defend his territory against the other bird by knocking with his beak, flinging himself at the window, and smearing it with bird dirt. Sigh.

The Towhee moves from window to window knocking. I feel like I am in a performance of Macbeth:

Whence is that knocking?
How is’t with me, when every noise appals me?

The only good side is that regular knocking lead me to read the Thomas De Quincey 1823 essay “On the Knocking at the Gate, in Macbeth”, which in turn lead me to De Quincey’s black humor essays “On Murder, as Considered One of the Fine Arts” and “Second Paper on Murder”, the source of the famous quote:

If once a man indulges himself in murder, very soon he comes to think little of robbing; and from robbing he comes next to drinking and Sabbath-breaking, and from that to incivility and procrastination. Once begin upon this downward path, you never know where you are to stop. Many a man has dated his ruin from some murder or other that perhaps he thought little of at the time.

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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Amtrak: Portland to San Jose

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John and I just took Amtrak home to San Jose from Portland, Oregon. One of the disadvantages of air travel is that everywhere in between looks the same: airports connected by clouds. The train takes longer but the view and experience are well worth it. Passing through snowy mountain forests and beside alpine lakes, through rural back yards and city industry zones, watching seagulls and cormorants along the shore of San Francisco Bay, seeing the Drawbridge ghost town shacks sinking into the bay mud and reeds: all are a sweet experience of how America is put together.

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Images copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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Camping at the Lair of the Golden Bear

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Yesterday, we got back from our annual family camping trip at the U.C. Berkeley Alumni Association’s Lair of the Golden Bear near Pinecrest, California. We had 19 people in four tents, with 8 in just ours. As usual, we had an enjoyable and relaxing time. The car is unpacked and stuff is mostly put away but I am still working my way through the laundry. I have finished the towels and bedding and most of the clothes. I still need to wash the sleeping bags.

Some of the highlights of our week in the Sierras:

  • Hiking to the Natural Bridges swim-through cave. The air was so hot and the water was so cold! Carrying my camera in a zip bag to take pictures from the deep pool was tricky.
  • Seeing an eagle pulling big fish from the Pinecrest Lake right near the swimmers and boaters.  One of the Pinecrest summer residents said it was a bald eagle but it may have been an osprey (fish eagle).
  • Watching a white headed woodpecker eating his way from pine to pine.
  • Walking along the creek (Tuolumne River, North Fork), looking for wild flowers, animals, insects, and pretty stones.
  • Watching the sunset from the Trail of the Gargoyles, in the Stanislaus National Forest.  We could see Mount Diablo (a 3,864 feet or 1,178 meter peak in the San Francisco Bay Area) in the far distance.
  • Hanging out with family and friends.

This was the first time we have been camping since my father died – he loved the mountains.  We stopped at Railtown 1897 in Jamestown on the drive home yesterday to collect more caboose pictures – see my Caboose Sisters Pinterest page for the whole collection. I also put up a Camp Blue Pinterest page with more images from our camping week.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Why did the chicken cross the road?

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A local chicken (Rhode Island Red?) has been wandering loose all day, followed in our Willow Glen neighborhood email list by a string of silly chicken jokes. She was seen most recently eating snails under the lemon tree next door.  She seems determined to be independent, although she enjoyed a cool drink when offered a dish of water. We hope she finds her way home safely.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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CMU Creatures

While we were trailing after my daughter Jessica during her graduation events last weekend, I was charmed to see so many animals had infiltrated the ultra-geeky world of Carnegie Mellon University. I don’t just refer to the CMU Scottish Terrier official mascot – although Scottie was there – but wild animals too. From the early morning robin and bunny to the sparrows in the grass during the commencement service, CMU creatures joined our celebrations.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Birds vs. Mice

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We have two delightful boy birds, cockatiels named Sparky and Guapo. They are messy eaters, scattering seeds around their cage despite a guard skirt to catch such escapes. Where there is seed, there are mice. I have a running fight against small rodents coming in to eat bird seed.  Mice are fast, hard to catch, and happy to gnaw on most things.  I once found a new yellow cellulose sponge under the sink, with one whole corner eaten off. I sweep and vacuum and clean up seeds daily and all food is sealed away carefully. Even after setting traps, I still find mouse dirt. So frustrating.

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Images by Katy Dickinson Copyright 2012

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Guadalupe River, Canada Geese

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Living on the Guadalupe River in San Jose, California, is always interesting. A few days ago, I saw more than a dozen of our noisy local Canada geese walking under the bridge intermingled with a smaller flock of Mallard ducks. The birds had to open their great wings to balance as they climbed up the bank to nibble on dry weeds. This is the same bridge that four months ago spanned a river full bank-to-bank with a rushing brown flood waters.  The bank that the geese climbed up was far under water last Spring.

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Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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