What does that have to do with birding? you might ask. A lot, actually, unfortunately. When we bought the place it had the foundations of a great birding yard, courtesy of esteemed omnologist Bill Vermillion. Bill added the beginnings of a great understory to the existing plantings his grandparents had established decades before. Bay laurel, kumquat, fig, pomegranate, Indian pink, and many other plants were tucked below live oaks, holly, camellias, and a volunteer wild cherry. In the years since we moved in, generous plant lovers such as Dave Patton, Bill Fontenot, and Donna Dittmann have added dozens of other plants, including a dense thicket of firespike, a red buckeye, buttonbush, soap aloe, agave, and honeysuckle azalea. We added satsuma, bromeliads, milkweed, and a variety of hummingbird and butterfly plants. And all of that was just in one tiny corner of the yard!
The neighborhood where we live is an older one that exists in the shade of huge live oaks and magnolias. For the most part, our neighbors subscribe to a different philosophy of landscaping than we do, with well-mowed lawns beneath the canopy. As a result, our yard acts like a magnet for understory birds that the community canopy pulls in, and our yard list of migrants and winterers is pretty attractive. Seven species of flycatcher, six of vireo, four wrens, thirty warblers, and eight species of hummingbird, among others, have been recorded in the yard.
Sadly, some of the yard needed to be cleared to in order to demolish and construct. Yesterday, the treecutters came and did what they must. Here are some before and after shots:
This side of the yard, above, had buttonbush, pomegranate, Satsuma, kumquat, bay laurel, azalea, and Abutilon.
A huge holly that was a favorite of winter hummers and a cherry laurel filled the space in the pictures above, with a mixed understory of hummer plants.
Another angle of the side yard, before and after.
Let's hope that the cut worm forgives the plow, and that in a year or two, our new living space is hidden behind a dense new crop of green. And let's hope that in that thicket Hooded Warblers and White-eyed Vireos can find shelter when they find themselves in the neighborhood, and hummers can find a safe place to spend the winter. For now, though, it's a new and brutal nakedness.
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