
I LOVE keeping my eyes out for wildlife in my garden. Lots of regular visitors of all kinds, and then there are the rare and unusual

I’ve been meaning to post about the male Ruby-throated hummingbird I saw the other day — females and juveniles are frequent and daily visitors, but males with the metallic red gorgette are rare sight around here. I’m hoping for more frequent sightings and eventually nesting couples.
Monarch butterflies have been here occasionally, but nowhere near the numbers we used to get.
Eastern Tiger swallowtails are the biggest — languidly sweeping across the entire garden in no time at all. They are occasional but steady — I’m pretty sure they use the host trees on and behind my property, and the ones aI see are often freshly eclosed.
Frogs — my pond is full of tadpoles and the other day, what I thought was a bird dropping on pond-side flagstone turned out to be a tiny finger-tip sized dark brown frog.
Haven’t seen my snakes since spring — hopefully they are still around.
This morning while I was inside the Sunflower Hoophouse, a raucous fight erupted right outside between a house wren and a Carolina wren.
…OK NOW, just before coming back inside, a flash of white caught my eye as a bird swept in for a landing by the birdbath— it was almost entirely white with dark grey markings (…mentally struck off ‘magpie’ as not possible…) and a glimpse of a crest that my mind immediately ID’d as BLUEJAY. But as much as I could see of it — there was WAY too much white and NO BLUE, and too fully formed and sized to be a fledgling, although it could still be young enough to be just finishing with the adult feathers.
This was the best I could get with my old iPhone (I want to upgrade so bad!)
From what I’ve found online, they are rare — maybe 1% in the case of all white, no pigment. This one had the black bluejay markings in dark grey, just no blue feathers where you would expect them to be.