blood feathers

blood feathers

This is a blood feather of a barred owl. Blood feathers, also known as pin feathers, are new feathers that grow in birds during a normal molt, or feather loss. When a feather is pulled out or falls out, a new feather is stimulated to grow from the skin’s feather follicle. This new feather has a blood supply running through it, which gives it a deep purple, maroon, bluish-purple, or black color, instead of the usual white or clear color of a fully developed feather. The feather is also encased in a keratin sheath, or feather sheath, to protect it while it develops.  I don’t find many blood feathers, so this was a special find.

barred owl blood feather

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Crow Love

Crow Love

Not everyone loves crows. But I do. Crows are part of the corvid family, which includes the Common Raven, American Crow, Western Scrub-Jay, Pinyon Jay, Blue Jay, Steller’s Jay, Gray Jay, Clark’s Nutcracker and Black-billed Magpie. They are known for being bold, beautiful, brainy, and gregarious. And loud. So yes I do love them but on the occasional summer morning, when the young of a brood are calling constantly to their parents, I could wish they would shut up for an hour or two.

two crow feathers in the rain

  • Old Lady Gardener says:

    Awesome birds, irresistible solid black feathers, so collectible. What’s reflected in the water drops, which are great for added interest, by the way?

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  • Susan L. says:

    I feed them peanuts each winter. They gather in the trees in the morning and wait for me to come out with my bucket. But in early summer, those young ones squawking set my teeth on edge!

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a summer rainbow

a summer rainbow

A rainbow selection of common backyard bird feathers. Look at the diversity of color and shape. Some help to fly, some to attract mates, some to keep warm. But each is also just a feather, with a single shaft and barbs. I love to ponder the millennia of miniscule trial and error adaptations it took to get to this panoply.

a collection of colorful songbird feathers

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Striped Perfection

Striped Perfection

I refer to these as wood duck feathers because they tend to litter my yard during fall preening when the wood ducks are gorging themselves on our acorns. But, to be honest, they could also be Canada goose feathers.  Anyone have a positive ID on these downy feathers I only find during preening season?

wood duck feathers

  • Judy says:

    After looking up black and white feathers used for fly tying I’m going to go with wood duck

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Land of Sky Blue Waters

Land of Sky Blue Waters

As I have mentioned before, these blue-flagged feathers are not really blue. They have micro-structures on the barbs that reflect only blue light. I had to turn this composition around and around until the light hit it just-so in order to make the blue pop. It’s easy to understand why blue would be a good color for a wading duck in the land of sky blue waters*.

mallard duck feathers

*My dad worked for Hamm’s brewery all of his adult life. Bonus points to anyone who read “land of sky blue waters” to the tune of the famous Hamm’s beer jingle.

  • Old Lady Gardener says:

    Amazing (the feathers, not the Hamm’s jingle ;)
    The natural world is endlessly incredible and astounding, isn’t it? Thanks for turning in circles to get it just right!

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  • Mary Ann B says:

    That’s one of the things I love about your site: you take things we all see everyday without a thought or second glance & make them special with some little detail we didn’t notice or some fact about how nature & function are so intertwined. And then, they are all just beautiful!
    P.S. I’ve lived in the Chicagoland area all my life & definitely remember the Hamm’s jingle from my childhood . . .

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