Thursday, October 24, 2024

Poetry Friday: Birdtober Day Twenty-Five: Cedar Waxwing

Here are my Birdtober posts so far:

 

Week 1 (October 1-4): (Plush-crested Jay, American Robin, Mountain Bluebird, Giant Kingfisher)

Week 2 (October 5 - 10): (Eastern Plantain-eater, Red-winged Blackbird, Cardinals, Black-headed Heron, Gray Crowned-Crane, Speckled Mousebird)

Week 3 (October 11-18): (Red-billed Firefinch, House Wren, White-necked Crow, Red-headed Woodpecker, Red-eyed Dove, Rüppell's Starling, House Sparrow)

Week 4:

Day 19: Pink-backed Pelican

Day 20: Abyssinian Ground-Hornbill 

Day 21: Vervain Hummingbird

Day 22: Green Jay 

Day 23: Painted Bunting

Day 24: American Goldfinch 


At most of these links you can find the prompts I'm using. 

 

Today's bird is the Cedar Waxwing. I've seen them eight times, in South Dakota, Kentucky, and Tennessee. They are such lovely birds. 


Photo Source: eBird.com


Cedar Waxwing

The natty Cedar Waxwings,
while always quite well-dressed
sometimes steal other birds’ supplies
when building a new nest.

They eat so much delicious fruit
that they get drunk on lunch
but also dine on flowers
or a bug or two to crunch.

They give small gifts while courting
and hang out after snacks.
They’re dapper in appearance,
with wings tipped, bright, with wax.

Disreputable bandits
yet charming, friendly fellows:
natty Cedar Waxwings
in grays and browns and yellows. 


©Ruth Bowen Hersey

 

Come back next week for links to all my 2024 Birdtober posts!  Carol has this week's roundup.

4 comments:

TraceyKJ said...

Thank you for sharing the Cedar Waxwing, Ruth. I have never seen one, but the peachy-tan crown, the red tip of the wing, and the black eye mask are a fascinating combination!

laurasalas said...

I love "dapper" and "natty" in here. I saw (or maybe just noticed) one of these for the first time in the wild in the past year. It's amazing how smooth they are!

Patricia Franz said...

The Cedar Waxwing looks like a 3-D bowl of orange-lemon sherbet! Beautiful!

Linda B said...

I've seen them on the western slope but not on the side I live, Ruth. They are so special to see, and your poem shows it all! I loved "Disreputable bandits
yet charming, friendly fellows:" and their cheeky call.