This is the famous Davie Poplar, approximately 350 years of age.
At dusk, hundreds and hundreds of Chimney Swifts swirl in vortex above, before darting into the hollow trunk to spend the night. An Eastern Gray Squirrel, however, awaits their arrival, fulfilling its classification as an omnivore. [see 3rd photo].
30 years ago, Dr. Jerome Jackson had amongst the slide set for his students of Ornithology, a photo that elicited primal gasps of horror and shock. The photo showed in gruesome detail an Eastern Gray Squirrel holding a male Northern Cardinal like an ice cream cone. The head of the cardinal had been devoured.
The memory of that photo sprang to mind when I espied the Eastern Gray Squirrel lingering around the hollow into which the Chimney Swifts would descend. And then it quietly slipped in to greet them upon their arrival.
American Robin defending her nest from a Red-Headed Woodpecker.
First flower of the year for me! February 12th
This fruiting body is emerging through the blacktop in the same location that a fruiting body erupted through the blacktop last year. Other fruiting bodies are pushing-up the blacktop hither and thither. One of them must be enormous, and the one pictured here is no tiddler.