Brown Creeper
Spring has sprung!! Winter is already hard enough for the birders (cold weather plus fewer birds = don't wanna go outside - brrr) add to that my adjusting to a new job and you get a whole lot of not going outside in general. Spring will always bring out the birder in me though - my favorite season for a reason. On a visit to my parents house I decided to head to the OSU botanical gardens on my way back to the city. Because it was a weekday, very few people were out there - so I had the opportunity to sneak over the fences to the wooded area that is probably off limits to the public. As I was ducking through the bush I saw quite a few american goldfinches and tufted titmouses (mice?), I decided to try to climb around some throney brambles to get deeper into the woods - and the slight scrapage I incurred was well worth it because I got to see the subject of this post for the very first time!
The brown creeper is one of those wood skimming birds that can climb upsidedown, and I got to watch its distinctive feedimg behavior that anyone familiar with the bird could recognize in an instant. What it did was starting at the base of a lone tree, it climbed upwards in a circular motion, I guess skimming the bark for unsuspecting insects. Then, when it reached the first branches of the tree, it flew to the next ones base and started again. It's a very dark brown color - almost black - and I almost mistook it for a downey woodpecker. OH! Their beak is ever so slightly curved downwards, and when it stood still the curve of the beak looked so elegant with the way it continues where the brown and white meet on its body. Such a beautiful bird.