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| Cedar Waxwing; note 'wax-like' deposits at tips of wings and tail. |
I anticipated seeing the leaf-bare winterberry branches sporting a generous display of red berries. Instead, they looked picked over. And then I saw the culprits. A flock of about 20-25 Cedar Waxwings were alternating between sunning themselves in the branches of a near-by tree and diving down into the shade to sample the berries.
Cedar Waxwings and Robins consume winterberry berries but most of the over-wintering bird species such as Sparrows, Cardinals and Blue Jays do not. Waxwings are not long-distance migrators, but they do tend to head south - to our area - in winter.
Robins, in contrast, summer here but in the past almost all migrated south for winter, returning in spring. (Hence, "First robin of spring.") However, what with native Winterberry and invasive plants that provide berries - for example Multi-flora rose and Oriental bittersweet - significant numbers of Robins stay year-round. They travel in flocks in winter, and can clear a patch of winterberries in the course of an afternoon.
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| Robin in a Winterberry thicket |

