Friday, January 04, 2008

Oriole Feeders and JELLY

Some Friday Silliness as the temperatures soar from 6 degrees this A.M. to a blistering 19 at this moment!

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Peanut Butter And Jelly ~ remember the camp song?
^^^^^^^^^^^^^ "First ya find the peanuts and ya dig 'emYa dig 'em, dig 'emThen you take the
peanuts and ya smash 'emYa smash 'em, smash 'emThen you take the butter and
ya spead it,Ya spead it, spread it.Peanut, peanut butter, and jelly!Peanut, peanut
butter, and jelly!"
A melancholy bird? Oh idle thought! In nature there is nothing melancholy. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Baltimore oriole Icterus galbula More pictures here!
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ "Then ya find the grapes and ya pick 'emYa pick 'em, pick 'em.Then you take the
grapes and ya smash 'emYa smash 'em. smash 'emThen you take the jelly and ya
spread it,Ya spread it, spread it.Peanut, peanut butter, and jelly!Peanut, peanut
butter, and jelly!"

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

My Sweetie got me a gorgeous copper-finished "umbrella" shelters 2 loops that
hold glass jelly cups and 2 metal scrolls that hold orange halves. (Metal spikes
help hold the oranges in place.)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^ How neat is this, now not just humming birds…but I need to wait until at least
May. However I did hang it outside as an anticipatory gesture of the daylight
getting longer each and every day.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

To be successful in attracting Orioles you must be diligent about getting feeders up early before they arrive. May 1st is the earliest time and is a great time to start. Orioles migrate at night and are tired and hungry when they arrive. Offering jelly will keep the Orioles around longer so selecting a feeder that offers jelly is a great choice. Also add a water source.(bird bath, fountain, pond, etc.)
With its brilliant orange and black plumage, the Baltimore Oriole's arrival is eagerly awaited by birders each spring migration. Its preference for open areas with tall trees has made it a common inhabitant of parks and suburban areas.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The "orioles" of the Americas were named after similarly-appearing birds in the Old World. The American orioles are not closely related to the true orioles in the family Oriolidae. They are more closely related to blackbirds and meadowlarks. Both New and Old world orioles are brightly colored with red, yellow, and black; have long tails and long pointed bills; build hanging, woven nests; and prefer tall trees around open areas.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Feeding: Orioles often eat fruit and can be attracted with orange halves placed on platform feeders, a deck railing, or nailed to a tree. It is important to have the oranges available just as the orioles arrive, which is around April 1st in the South and April 15th to May 1st in the northern half of the country. Some orioles seem to be more attracted to oranges when they first return from their wintering areas but switch to an insect diet soon after. Other orioles seem to eat oranges throughout their breeding season.

In addition to fruit and sugar water, orioles can be attracted to grape jelly and mealworms.
Offer the jelly in a small dish placed on a platform.
Mealworms can be placed in a small container, but make sure it has straight sides that are high enough (about 1 1/2 to 2 inches), enough so that the mealworms cannot climb out.
Mealworms are found in pet stores and wild bird stores.
Many orioles feed the mealworms to their nestlings, who require a good protein source.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

"Then ya take the pieces and ya smash 'emYa smash 'em. smash 'em.Then you take

the bread and ya fold itYa fold it, fold itThen you take the sandwich and ya

munch itYa munch it, munch it,(Mumble)Peanut, peanut butter, and jelly!

Peanut, peanut butter and jelly!"

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Grilled Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwiches

8 slices bread

1/2 cup peanut butter

2 Tbs. plus 2 tsp. jelly

2 Tbs. plus 2 tsp. unsalted butter, softened

Spread 4 slices bread with equal portions of jelly.

Spread remaining slices with peanut butter and place on top of jellied bread.

Spread butter on outside of each piece of bread.

Heat a heavy nonstick skillet over medium heat and cook sandwiches 1-2minutes

per side, or until golden.

(Serves 4)

;)

4 comments:

Tom said...

I real do hope you can attract these beautiful birds to you home.. then we can view the pictures. The feeder is stunning and would bless any garden.

Great post again 'D' :O)

imac said...

Great post hope you get some great shots.

See my Photo Hunt Piccy.

Coy Hill said...

Feeding the orioles all sounded good until you mentioned mealworms. I just cannot go that far! I only feed them to tastey slab Bluegills. You could call it their "last supper" for after eating my mealworm they soon hit the skillet :)

Seriously I'm interested in how well your oriole feed works out, they are a particularly hansome bird.

DeeMom said...

Salty I too cringed with the mealworm thing; the thought of the worms in Grape Jelly was ewwieeeeeeeeeeeee

“O” and IMAC lets hope the pictures will be good ones, long wait until spring