blackbird in a hand
Daily Create, Family Inspired, Poetry, The Daily

Red-Winged Blackbird

Banks Lake with basalt columns towering at the right and tules along the shore with poem: Blackbird

Delicate in black
red-wing bold
fluffed to another
flying by

Cling to the tule
waving with the wind
above the gentle waves
flowing to the shore.

“Conk-la-ree!”
[I am here]
“check” replies the others
and a “check” to another.

One scolds “chak chak chak”
One flies away
Another fluffs his red
as I pass by

Sheri Edwards
on Flickr

Poetry for Today

Today’s poem is inspired by the Daily Create below– after learning about the red-winged blackbirds, I wrote a poem about the ones I’ve seen resting on these tules in Banks Lake.

Blackbird

Delicate in black
red-wing bold
fluffed to another
flying by

Cling to the tule
waving with the wind
above the gentle waves
flowing to the shore.

“Conk-la-ree!”
[I am here]
“check” replies the others
and a “check” to another.

One scolds “chak chak chak”
One flies away
Another fluffs his red
as I pass by

Sheri Edwards
10.17.22 292.365.22
Poetry/Photography

WRITEOUT DAILY CREATE

Today’s Daily Create Prompt — #DS106  @ds106dc   #tdc3930 #writeout Explore Birds — asks us to look at Audubon’s Bird Migration Explorer site to learn about a bird. I chose the Red-winged Blackbird.

I found the birds on the explorer and captured a screenshot of when the red-winged blackbirds are most likely to be in our area during their migration, which would be sometime in June.

I love these beautiful birds with their sleek black feathers except for the bright red and a big of yellow on the tops of their wings. You can see and hear them puff out in a show of strength at the Macaulay Library here.

I did not know that the females were striped, or that the birds are polygamous. And look at that cup-shaped next — it’s like a funnel. The National Park Service’s Mississippi National River and Recreation Area of Minnesota shares a wonderful page about the red-winged blackbirds.

At Audubon I learned that these birds eat in a way that’s called “gaping.” Instead of having beaks strong to crush the insects and seeds, these birds have a beak that’s strong to OPEN the ground to dig in to get the seeds and insects. Their eyes also can look straight ahead down their beak to see what they’ve found. Learn more at this Audubon page: Blackbirds…Gaping

The National Park Service has a delightful page for younger kids– Junior Ranger Blackbirds with several great links and an activity. You might find the NPS’s Kids in Parks page great for a family day at a national park.

So, as you can see in this image, I gathered as much of this information into a poster with QR code links to the important pages to learn about these things. You can share it as much as you want! And, of course, I tweeted it for WriteOut. Enjoy the infographic and see the tweet:

Infographic with QR codes to more information about red-winged blackbirds; info in post

A bit of facts and more
Red-winged blackbirds, galore
North America- everywhere
Fields, marshes, and wetlands there
Feeding on insects, seeds, and more.
Take a look to learn about
Blackbirds and the red they tout.

grammasheri

VIDEOS

I also remembered creating these videos of Banks Lake of the tules and cattails where the red-winged blackbirds live in our area.

Autumn, early winter migration

OTHER POEMS

Writing is what I do every day. A poem for over a thousand days in a row. Here are a few about blackbirds.

cattails and tules along Banks Lake, WA with poem: Audience of Cattails The lake's edge whispers in dried cattails, audience to songs of blackbirds. Sheri Edwards.
cattails and tules along Banks Lake, WA with poem Waving Cattails I am wind whispering in your ear
I am cattails waving that you pass
I am red-winged blackbird chirping your presence
I am damselfly dashing here and there
I am waves breaking onto sandy shore
I am water-skippers flitting back and forth
I am minnows scattering at any move
I am carp browsing the water's edge
I am pondweed stretching up and up
I am cottonwood shading over
I am turtle peeking "Who are you?"
I am kayaker enjoying the view. ~ Sheri Edwards
illustrated red-winged blackbird in palm of outstretchted hand

This post is part of the October WRITEOUT adventure of the National Writing Project and the National Park Service — a STEAM-powered Write Out 2022. Organized as a public invitation to get out and create, supported by a series of free online activities, Write Out invites educators, students, and families to explore national parks and other public spaces. The goal is to connect and learn through place-based writing and sharing. Learn more and sign up: https://writeout.nwp.org


1327 days of posts in a row on Ask What Else

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