Our house in the forest - Mauna Loa in the background |
It's been winter here in Volcano on the Big Island and at 3500 feet elevation 'this' Hawaii differs greatly from most peoples' impression of white sand beaches along the ocean. Here we are surrounded by a true "cloud forest;" it has been drizzling for a few days. But just as we were wishing for SUN we woke up to blue skies and fluffy clouds breezing by.
This time of year is good for bird watching - one form of "cheep" forest entertainment. We have a wider variety of birds at this time of year: beautifully bright red Cardinals, eye-popping Saffron finches, South American Cardinals wearing their tuxedos, tiny speckled seed-eating Manniqins. This time of year the trees are filled with the invisible song of the honey creepers - Apapane' whose lovely songs you can hear but are not easy to spot***. Year round we have hawks, but our favorite "locals" are the Kalij pheasants.
It seems it is mating season for most of them, so even the traditional female Cardinals have a bright look to their feathers as do the Saffron Finches, but it is the Kalij who are fun to watch. Here's a couple photos of Kalij in our front yard taken last winter.
Today, three males hopped over the driveway gate and tactfully followed a lone female inside the yard, while one other paced frustrated outside the gate the others had just flown over. He paced back and forth at the gate sticking his head underneath rather than flying over. During the yard-courtship he paced back and forth and 15 minutes later finally flew over to join the party, during which one of the largest males offered a wonderful display of feather fluffing and flapping of wings. She never "engaged" and finally wandered off, followed closely by by the four unsatisfied but patient males.
Here's a link to the calls they make (click on link) -- especially when there is a cat patrolling the bird feeders. Male Kalij calls --- and the sweet song of the Apapane: Apapane' Song