[Tweeters] pine siskins
dgrainger at birdsbydave.com
dgrainger at birdsbydave.com
Sun Jul 3 14:28:29 PDT 2022
Glister of Goldfinches has a nice alliterative lilt to it. Therefore,
for Siskins, how about "Sisterhood of Siskins," or "Plister of Piney
Siskins"
On 2022-07-03 11:23, Wim van Dam wrote:
> I looked up your question in James Lipton's "An Exaltation of Larks",
> but that one does not mention anything for Siskins. It does, however,
> list a _Glister of Goldfinches_. Given the shared genus Spinus we may
> have to go for a Glister of Siskins then.
>
> Wim van Dam
> Solvang, CA
>
> On Sun, Jul 3, 2022 at 9:38 AM <dgrainger at birdsbydave.com> wrote:
>
>> Our feeder area is now populated "ten to one" Pine Siskin, with
>> flight
>> school and how-to-be-a-Siskin school in high session, which has
>> caused
>> me to ponder the question of What one calls a large gathering?
>>
>> I thought of these:
>>
>> A Circus of Siskins
>>
>> A Silliness of Siskins
>>
>> A Plethora of Pine Siskins
>>
>> A Surge of Siskins
>>
>> A Surfeit of Siskins
>>
>> One youngster Siskin sat on the crown of my baseball cap while I
>> was
>> training the Nikon's lens on an outlier, a non Siskin Mob Member, a
>> Rufous hummer that was examining a Pale Swallowtail which was
>> systematically working columns of catmint blossoms a few feet from
>> my
>> chair. Photographs done, I measured one blossom in images containing
>> the
>> butterfly and also the hummer (separate photos) and discovered that
>> the
>> wing spans were the same. Apparently Rufous was checking to see
>> whether
>> Papilio eurymedon was a territorial intruder.
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