Why do bluebirds hate me? More answers to common and not-so-common questions about birds and birding

Mike O'Connor, 1953-

Book - 2013

If you're even slightly interested in identifying birds or attracting them to your backyard with a feeder, then you've also had your share of strange and silly questions about birds and their sometimes inexplicable behavior. O'Connor applies his deep knowledge of all things avian to answer the questions that keep birders up at night.

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598/O'Connor
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 598/O'Connor Due May 28, 2024
Subjects
Published
Boston : Beacon Press c2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Mike O'Connor, 1953- (author)
Other Authors
Michael Chesworth (illustrator)
Physical Description
xii, 185 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780807012536
  • Introduction: Exactly the Same, Only Different
  • 1. Birds Everyone Should Know
  • Why Do Bluebirds Hate Me?
  • Woodpeckers Do Take Baths
  • Hip Catbirds
  • What's with All the Grackles?
  • Why Hummingbirds Hum
  • Carolina Wrens Singin' in the Fall
  • Titmice Love Peanuts but Hate Water
  • No-Bird Syndrome
  • Birds Can't Afford Bottled Water
  • Not All Cardinals Are Catholic
  • 2. It's Time to Look Past the Feathers
  • Don't Call Me "Pretty Boy"
  • Swans Support Integration
  • Sandhill Cranes Migrate (Mostly)
  • Quail Chicks Have Two Dads
  • They're Called Snowy Owls for a Reason
  • Doves Can Whistle without Moving Their Lips
  • Cattle Egrets Fit Right In
  • Fearless Red-breasted Nuthatches
  • Chickens Get No Respect
  • Don't Be a Bird Bigot
  • 3. A Few Things Even You Can Do
  • The Cost of Running a Heated Birdbath
  • Clean Your Birdhouses!
  • Sugar Water Brings More Than Just Hummingbirds
  • Bluebird Housing
  • Tree Swallows, the Bluebird Alternative
  • Homeless Baby Ospreys
  • Vintage Birdseed Is Not the Best
  • Orioles Like It Sweet, Perhaps Too Sweet
  • Oh, Rats!
  • Rotating Seed
  • 4. There's More to Life Than the Backyard
  • Pyrrhuloxia Is a Real Bird (Not a Strange Disease)
  • Avocets, the Birds to See When You Can't Go Shopping
  • Spoonbills Don't Eat Soup or Chowder
  • Kookaburras Always Get the Joke
  • Lapland Longspurs, More Fun Than Going to the Dentist
  • Caracara, the Mexican Eagle
  • Not All Flycatchers Are Dull
  • Nënë, Not Easy to Say and Impossible to Type
  • 5. Bet You Didn't Know Birds Did This
  • All Hatched Out and Ready to Go
  • Some Birds Fly in the Dark Better Than Owls
  • Paint-Eating Jays
  • Bee-Eating Birds
  • Puffins Aren't That Fussy
  • Kissing Cardinals
  • Hummingbirds-They're on Everyone's Menu
  • Vinyl-Eating Vultures
  • 6. Don't Forget Cities Have Birds, Too
  • Big-City Lifestyle Suits Peregrine Falcons Just Fine
  • Birding in Central Park
  • The Legend of Pale Male
  • City Turkey
  • City Bird Assortment
  • 7. Being Free as a Bird Isn't Always That Great
  • Birds and Power Lines-Sometimes It Works, Sometimes Not So Much
  • Battling Hurricanes
  • Birds Care about Which Coffee You Drink
  • Pesticides Aren't as Healthy as They Sound
  • The Disappearing Song of the Wood Thrush
  • We'll See Your Sparrow and Raise You a Squirrel
  • Birds and Planes-and You Think YOU Have Trouble with the Airlines
  • The Loss of the Carolina Parakeet
  • 8. Birds Are Superstars-and Publishers and Hollywood Know It
  • Bond, fames Bond, Ornithologist
  • African Eagles Can't Compare to Ours
  • That Quail, Robert
  • Turkeys Don't Come in Flocks
  • A Good Movie No One Saw
  • 9. A Bird Buffet
  • And You Think YOUR Feet Are Cold
  • The Twelve Days of Christmas Explained, Finally
  • How Could Anyone Be Afraid of a Chickadee?
  • Even Scary Places Have Birds
  • Red Squirrels, the Overlooked Annoyance
  • Stick with Who You Know
  • Scary Owls
  • Don't Give Kids "Bird Stuff
  • Turkeys Rule, Eagles Drool
  • Start the Year with a Bird List ... Instead of a Hangover
Review by Booklist Review

The owner of the Bird Watcher's General Store on Cape Cod and author of Why Don't Woodpeckers Get Headaches? (2007) is back with another humorous question-and-answer book of bird lore. O'Connor takes from both his bird column in Cape Cod's weekly newspaper and questions he is asked in his store to gather a nice selection of quirky and more common questions that teach the reader quite a bit of ornithology between the chuckles. Answering questions as diverse as whether or not bird feeders attract rats (no, if the correct seed is used), whether or not Central Park really is a good birding destination (it is), and why blue jays eat paint (for its calcium content), the author finds the answers to even the most bizarre questions. The birds range from the backyard species cardinals, chickadees, chickens to the less common, such as hummingbirds, peregrine falcons, and bluebirds; to the truly exotic, including hoopoes, puffins, and the African fish eagle. And, finally, scattered throughout are bits devoted to public enemy #1 squirrels and how to defeat them.--Bent, Nancy Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

O'Connor (Why Don't Woodpeckers Get Headaches? And Other Bird Questions You Know You Want to Ask), owner of the Birdwatcher's General Store in Cape Cod, Mass., offers a second q&a compilation from his weekly column, Ask the Bird Folks, which appears in the local newspaper Cape Codder. Here, the author focuses on the more obscure questions he receives to "expand the readers' bird horizons." O'Connor's humorous answers are extensively researched, and include explanations of why quail chicks may appear to have two dads, the sad fate of the Carolina Parakeet, and the connection between American chickens and India's wild jungle fowl. O'Connor also provides practical advice on issues such as cleaning birdhouses, keeping rats away from feeders, the perks of owning a heated birdbath, how and why to make a bird list, and of course, birdseed. While many questions come from readers in Massachusetts, O'Connor makes a point to include birds from other countries and sings the praises of the good-natured Australian Kookaburra, the story of Lapland Longspurs and their Canadian breeding ground, and the scavenging habits of Mexican Eagles. This detailed q&a will appeal to bird enthusiasts and birdwatchers, but O'Connor's friendly approach will also appeal to novices. Illus. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

INTRODUCTION Exactly the Same, Only Different When I mentioned to a friend that I was putting together another book, he asked what this new book would be about. His response caught me off guard. We have been friends for a long time. He knows me pretty well and is aware that I don't know much else once the topic gets beyond birds. Still, I understand why he was asking. After all, I had already written one bird Q&A book. Does the world really need a sequel? My response to that is, yes, of course it does. (How else do you think I was going to answer that?) I don't know when the first cookbook came out, but cookbooks didn't end with that original book. They still keep coming. There will always be newer and yummier recipes to write about. This same principle applies to bird Q&A books. I've been operating a birding store for over thirty years, and hardly a day goes by when I don't hear a question I've never heard before. Some questions are trivial, some are intriguing, and a few truly scare me. One of the main reasons for this sequel is that sometimes people want to ask a question but it takes them a while to work up the nerve. It's like when we go to the local auditorium to hear someone speak about some topic (birds, flowers, pet hypnotism) that we thought we were interested in at the time. Sometimes the talks are enlightening, and sometimes they make us wish we had stayed home and done the laundry. But whether the talks are good or bad, they all end the same way: the speaker's last four words are always, "Anyone have a question?" For the next eight seconds the room is filled with deadly silence. Half the people in the audience want to ask a question but are too self-conscious to be the first to raise a hand; the other half of the audience are praying that no one raises a hand so they can get the heck out of there, or at least be first to the refreshment table. This book was written for the first half of the audience. It is for the people who were too shy to raise a hand and thus their question didn't make it into my previous book, Why Don't Woodpeckers Get Headaches? And Other Bird Questions You Know You Want to Ask. I realize this book should have come out sooner, but I've been busy hanging out at the refreshment table with the other half of the audience. They're my kind of people. Writing a Q&A bird column for Cape Cod's weekly newspapers is not as easy as it sounds. There are always issues to deal with. For example, some folks insist I get right to the point and give them a straight answer. Others don't like seeing their name in print. First of all, I never give a straight answer, so making such stipulations is a waste of time. Second, relax. I use only first names. No matter how lame the question is, no one is going to know you asked it. I'm sure there is more than one Mary or Rick in, say, Tallahassee. Besides, having your name appear in a bird column is not the worst thing in the world. It's not like having your name in the police blotter or the obituaries. Asking questions about birds is nothing to be ashamed of. It's not as bad as admitting to being from Tallahassee. One of my favorite ways to receive a question is what I call the "clandestine approach." Someone will catch my eye at work and motion for me to come over to a dark corner of the store. They want to talk to me privately. Suddenly, I feel like I'm about to receive national secrets from Deep Throat. But instead of secrets, I'm asked which is the last bird to go to bed at night or why wrens have such weird tails. Edgy stuff. Soon I understand why these people don't want to be overheard by anyone else. In this book I've tried to answer the questions that didn't make it in the first time around. I've also included questions from the shy, the paranoid, and the clandestine types. I address such burning topics as these: Why do hummingbirds hum? Why do doves' wings whistle? Do woodpeckers take baths? (Again with the woodpeckers.) I also add a few columns on birds that many folks aren't familiar with. (Ever see a Hoopoe?) It's my way of trying to expand the readers' bird horizons. There's life beyond backyard chickadees and wren tails, you know. I'm often asked what is the strangest question I've ever gotten, to which I reply, "That question." (It always leads to puzzled looks.) However, I think the top contender for the strangest question has to be one I found on my answering machine one morning. (I swear this is true.) A lady called wanting to know if thistle (nyjer) seed is safe for humans to eat. It seems this woman had bought a bag of thistle, took it home, and put it in a different container to keep it fresh. The next morning she found her houseguest chowing down a bowl of fresh thistle. We played her call over and over until the tape wore out. (I'm starting to understand why some people have second thoughts about asking me questions.) The person who ate the seed suffered no ill effects, BTW, but reportedly now sleeps by standing on one leg and sings very early in the morning. One last thing: When my first book was released, some folks complained that the illustrations didn't match the text. They suggested that when I wrote about a Belted Kingfisher, for example, it would have been helpful if an appropriate illustration had accompanied the text. In this new book I responded to those complaints by ignoring them. There are tons of precisely illustrated books out there. I didn't want to compete with them. It just wouldn't be fair to those other books. Besides, illustrations cost money. If the publisher put extra dough into illustrations, there wouldn't be enough left to pay me. I certainly can't have that. Excerpted from Why Do Bluebirds Hate Me?: More Answers to Common and Not-So-Common Questions about Birds and Birding by Mike O'Connor All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.