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Yes, they stay year round. I've never seen them fly in v nor have I seen that many altogether. Family groups. With that number, a pair with this year's babies, 3-4 of last year's offspring AND their babies too.... speculating that each V might be one of the clutches with the older birds being the outflyers. Where they were headed or where they were coming from and why? Not a clue.Don’t the crows stay year round?
I have lots of them but they live here. That makes me happy as they mib the hawks relentlessly. The most I have seen at once though is about a dozen.
Lapdog-ponies are wonderful!Happy pony Sunday. Since I don't have a Pony, but Elroy is big enough to be a small pony, I give you Elroy:
(trouble is, instead of being able to ride him like a Pony, HE thinks he is a 'lap pony!)
That said, he is a big ole scaredy cat! We were getting ready to lock up the chickens, (Elroy sometimes 'helps'), and someone shot off some fireworks - quite a ways away - but he immediately SQUEEZED through this little chicken pop door to 'hide' All 72 lbs of him!
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They clearly are accustomed to being around your place....so close to the house! Yes, I have lost all but one tomato plant this year and all my squash/cucumber plants.Tomato/strawberry plant bandits strike again
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Well done! Now relax and take a break Kelly, you deserve it.All done, packed to the roof top….
500 rather large heavy square bales of really nice hay packed away for the geegeesand we made the hay elevator fit too hahaha.
In the beginning, it was a big void… occupied by the dreaded hay elevator, and about 150 of last years bales.
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I even put the horse trailer to use - I was able to put 50 bales in it! Load…. Unload…. Hard work! But my cousin and her husband helped
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Then it started to fill up, 300 bales is a lot of hay! But I wheezed and struggled and my cousin her husband and I (and eventually my niece) did 300…. Filling up nicely!
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Today we completed the job with an additional 200. Packed it in, and dragged the dreaded hay elevator back up for storage for the winter.
Done for another year
The east side of the barn where my access hatch is located.
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The west side of the barn and the dreaded hay elevator, without which non of this would be possible! Had to haul out my ladder to access this side.
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Truly hoping I will throw down some hay for her… hold the ladder Tru! I am coming down…
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In the northeast, it is not uncommon for crows to 'gather' into larger flocks in certain 'amenable places' as winter approaches, and stay there for most of the season. There is a place along the Hudson in NY where there are regularly a few hundred that congregate for the winter. They somewhat disperse during the day, but all come back together at night to roost in close proximity. You might be seeing the beginnings of that general 'congregation'. They don't really relocate per say for the winter, just more congregate together in some nearby locale. (I hope that makes sense???) Heard that on my local NPR station last year when they had a wildlife biologist/bird (avian) specialist on a call-in talk show.Yes, they stay year round. I've never seen them fly in v nor have I seen that many altogether. Family groups. With that number, a pair with this year's babies, 3-4 of last year's offspring AND their babies too.... speculating that each V might be one of the clutches with the older birds being the outflyers. Where they were headed or where they were coming from and why? Not a clue.
Thanks wish I could!Well done! Now relax and take a break Kelly, you deserve it.