Shy Jewel
of the Hills
By Pat
Gibson
This
beautiful photograph of a painted bunting was shot by
Steven Kazianis, Ph.D.
He teaches at Southwest Texas State University.
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The first time I ever
encountered a painted bunting here above Sulfur Creek, I thought someone's
parakeet had gotten loose. The crew were small then and came running into
the house all excited. They had seen this pretty bird that was red and
yellow and blue and boy Mom had better come see.
I went out thinking
of what we could catch that wandering pet with and came back in
looking for my Peterson' Birds of Texas. I quickly discovered
that the bright flash of color I had seen in the garden was not
a loose pet but a bright jewel-like critter of the Texas Hills.
Most buntings, small seed eating birds of the same family as cardinals,
are bright colored. They range from just lightly shaded to vivid
or as Peterson describes the painted bunting, "The most gaudily
colored American bird."
The male is deep
blue violet on his head, green on his back, red on his body and tail,
and his wings are green shading to black at the tips. Now Peterson describes
the female as plain and I guess compared to her mate she is. But standing
alone, she is a pert little green bird. Her head is a medium green that
gradually lightens to a light lemony green on her under parts and tail.
Now if you have never had the pleasure of seeing a pair of these jewels
of the Hill Country, you have missed out on quite a sight. 
They are not like their relative the sparrow the most sociable of birds.
They seem to prefer the woods and stream canyons and don't come around
the houses very often. We see them here above Sulfur Creek mostly out
past the garden or down in the meadow along the creek. They won't sit
still long for you either. They flit away at a close approach. I guess
they're afraid that human kind might try to cage them like the parakeet.
They are summer residents here. They spend their winters in Mexico or
Central America. Keep a sharp eye out this summer and maybe you'll be
rewarded by seeing the Jewel of the Hill Country, the painted bunting.
There is one small,
white harbinger of summer that you might just keep an eye out for now
that the weather is getting a little warmer. It's called an anemone,
but that's another story.
©
Copyright 1986,1996 by Sulfur Creek Enterprises, Austin, Texas
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