The Celery Farm & Beyond Blog

The Celery Farm & Beyond Blog This blog celebrates the Celery Farm Nature Preserve in Allendale, High Mountain in Passaic County, Red-shouldered Hawks and nature next-door.

04/22/2026
Monday Morning Mysteries   The photo of the mystery blob was recently taken in the Celery Farm Nature Preserve by Ken Wi...
03/23/2026

Monday Morning Mysteries
The photo of the mystery blob was recently taken in the Celery Farm Nature Preserve by Ken Wiegand. The photo of the mystery bug was taken yesterday in an Allendale basement. What are they? (Sorry, no quarters to use for size comparison, but the bug was about that size, legs and all.

Owl, Mouse and Mousetrap   My "Screech Owl Companion" co-author, Scott Weston, caught an incredible prey capture on his ...
03/20/2026

Owl, Mouse and Mousetrap
My "Screech Owl Companion" co-author, Scott Weston, caught an incredible prey capture on his owl cam. The whole story is here:

https://owloasis.wordpress.com/2026/03/18/owl-mouse-and-trap/

It served as a reminder not to use mouse traps outside -- and that owls do go after easy targets, whether it's a mouse in a trap or a rodent compromised by rat poison.

Site 9 First a Warning contains some nature CSI type images. Site 9 has been in this location since 2014 and has been quite insightful through out its tenure with lots of interesting activity over …

03/16/2026

MONDAY MYSTERY
Without Googling, do you know what "twtterpated"or "twitterpated" or "twitterpating" is, and where the term originated?
I think it might apply to many NJ birds these days.
No Googling! I mean it.

Send a message to learn more

Monday Morning Mystery   Who's that hanging out on my friend's suet feeder?
03/09/2026

Monday Morning Mystery
Who's that hanging out on my friend's suet feeder?

The Sky's the Limit for This Tenafly Birder   Last week, my "Bird Watcher" column was about Tenafly birder Marc Chelemer...
03/05/2026

The Sky's the Limit for This Tenafly Birder
Last week, my "Bird Watcher" column was about Tenafly birder Marc Chelemer, who has now birded for (updated today) 1,892 days. You can read the column here. The photo caption names the mystery bird in the photo. Congrats to Kevin Watson for IDing the mystery bird in the photo.

By Jim Wright
Special to The Record | USA TODAY NETWORK - NEW JERSEY
Remember Marc Chelemer? I last wrote about this dapper birder extraordinaire two-and-a-half years ago, when his consecutive birding streak approached 1,000 days.
I recently checked in again with Marc to see how he’s doing. For a mere mortal birder like me, it was a humbling experience.
Consider: As Feb. 19, the Tenaffy resident has birded for 1,878 days in a row, as per his eBird reports.
Marc’s life list is now 3,724 species, which ranks him 906th worldwide – out of more than 1.2 million eBirders. His most recent lifer: a short-billed gull, a bird of the Canadian Northwest and Alaska. Another birder found it on Raritan Bay in late December.
As for his nemesis bird – the bird that keeps eluding him – it’s still a south polar skua.
“In all the pelagic trips I’ve taken over the last decade, I’ve never seen one,” Marc says. “It’s the last remaining ‘common’ pelagic species that one is expected to see in New Jersey that I’ve never encountered.”
Marc’s best day is still from May 2023, when he saw 183 species during New Jersey’s World Series of Birding, but he did have 111 species one day last month, “which I think is pretty darn good for a winter’s day.”
The most unusual bird that Marc tallied recently is the blue-moustached bee-eater, which he saw in Ghana in November 2024. Marc notes that eBird shows that fewer than 500 people have ever observed this bird, whereas the number for Blyth’s tragopan, his previous rarest bird, is now more than 1,000.
With all that experience, what’s his advice for aspiring birders? “Learn birding by ear as much as possible. I find even today that my ability to identify birds by their sound FIRST, before seeing them, is a great advantage. Even if one can’t identify the bird, just training one’s ear to pick up small bird sounds will aid in trying to find them in a bush, a tree, or a field.”
When it comes to his birding streak, Marc says the sky’s the limit: “I see no reason to stop at 2,000. To me, this now seems like a life’s endeavor: Until such day as I am completely unable to use my eyes and ears to find a bird…regardless of weather or circumstance, I’m going to keep my streak going.”
Why does Marc love birding so much?
His answer: “Birds are amazing creatures. They’re so well adapted to the way they live, they seem impervious to cold, and they can fly. And because birds can fly, they, can move across the planet in ways that we have to work very hard to do. We’re unlikely to ever see an African elephant in Cape May, but we just might see an African reef-heron someday!”
The Bird Watcher column appears every other Thursday. Jim’s next book, “The Peregrine Falcon,” arrives in late April. Email him at [email protected].

Monday Mystery Answered      One Monday I wrote:   "Whenever I first see this bird each spring, a millisecond goes by be...
03/04/2026

Monday Mystery Answered
One Monday I wrote:
"Whenever I first see this bird each spring, a millisecond goes by before I realize what it is.
"A friend sent me this pic from central New Jersey late last week. What is it?"
The answer: A female red-winged blackbird. I know, it doesn't have red wings and it isn't black. It's a difficult I.D., which is why "a millisecond goes by before I realize what it is." each spring.
Coincidentally, my March 16 Bird Watcher column in The Record is about how difficult it can be to identify a bird from one or two photos -- especially when the photo gives no sense of scale.
Congrats to all who answered correctly.
More about red-winged blackbirds here:
https://nationalzoo.si.edu/animals/red-winged-blackbird

Monday Mystery   Whenever I first see this bird each spring, a millisecond goes by before I realize what it is.   A frie...
03/02/2026

Monday Mystery
Whenever I first see this bird each spring, a millisecond goes by before I realize what it is.
A friend send me this pic from central New Jersey late last week. What is it?

Birdy 30 Winner!   We have a winner from yesterday's friendly competition -- and I think it is an all-time record for se...
02/23/2026

Birdy 30 Winner!
We have a winner from yesterday's friendly competition -- and I think it is an all-time record for seeing/hearing the most species in one continuous 30-minute period.
The winner is Ali Fragale, who saw/heard 26 species in the Atlantic Highlands in NJ yesterday.

American Tree Sparrow
Chipping Sparrow
White-throated sparrow
House sparrow
Song sparrow
House Finch
Cardinal
Blue Jay
Grackle
Dark-eyed Junco
Starling
Red Wing Blackbird
Turkey Vulture
Cooper's Hawk
Bald Eagle
American Robin
Black Capped Chickadee
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Downy Woodpecker
Hairy Woodpecker
White-breasted Nuthatch
Crow
Tufted Titmouse
Morning Dove
Carolina Wren
Brown-headed Cowbird

Second place: Judy Thomas, 24 species, from Juno Beach, Florida. Pictured here is Judy's list -- gotta love the species she got down there.

Third place: Georgie Thomas, 20 species, Westport, Mass.

Fourth Place, Marina Marino, 18, Cape Coral, Florida.

Thanks to all for participating. I hope you enjoyed it, even if you didn't send in your tally. I wish we North Jerseyans had done better.

(I had 17, including Little Nutty, the resident red-breasted nuthatch. Also photographed a red-winged blackbird, in hopes that it's a sign of spring. think I had a purple finch, but was not sure enough to count it, and it flew before I could photograph/confirm it.)

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