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Carolina wrens, having chosen a hollowed gourd just outside my window, tag team now with beaks full of dried leaves to insulate their cozy abode. ... FOR THE BIRDS: Carolina wren nesting.
Wren facts. The Carolina wren is a small, 5-inch-long bird with a tawny body, white eyebrow and a long decurved beak used to ferret insects from crevices and leaf litter.
This Carolina Wren parent dutifully gathers a beakful of live mealworms from the ... Notice the woodpecker’s tongue at the end of the video as he tries to reach the suet that is stuck to his beak.
The Carolina wren, a bird measuring 5 1/2 inches from the end of its comparatively long tail to the point of its thin, slightly curved beak. That’s big for a wren.
The species I speak about is the Carolina Wren ... Note the long, slender, “decurved” beak, the bold white “eyestripe,” and the powerful coloration of shades of cinnamon.
Carolina wrens, unlike house wrens, ... beaks full, prepared to feed their nestlings. ... Now I’ll have a front-row seat for wren family life, ...
For the last few weeks, just before sunrise — if it is not cold or rainy — I wake to the lovely song of a Carolina wren, sweet, ... partially striated breast of the house wren. I watch this bird, the ...
Carolina wren are a year round resident bird in backyards, gardens, parks, ... The bird sports a tawny coat of feathers, a swooping white eyebrow and a long, thin, pointed beak tapering downward.
Today, Brooklyn Bird Watch features a Heather Wolf photo of a Carolina Wren. The Carolina Wren is an interesting bird and is third on the list of the five most common Wren species in New York ...
It was looking like a wren, but seemed almost too large of a mass. Grabbing the trusty phone, I snapped a shot, a profile which documented the beak. It amazed me that the little thing did not take ...
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