Seen This Week: Late Flowers, Acorns, Crows

Insect on New York aster, Toms Run, 16 Oct 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

19 October 2024

This week brought:

  • Fall colors and the first piles of fallen leaves
  • Late flowers and insects
  • “See Your Breath” cold mornings
  • The first juncos … and …
  • Several thousand crows in Oakland.

In photos, late asters attracted an insect at Toms Run and morning sun slanted through the trees in Schenley Park.

Fall colors and fallen leaves, Schenley Park, 18 Oct 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

Many trees are changing color. The oaks aren’t there yet but they have dropped their acorns leaving empty acorn cups on the branches. It’s a big mast year for red oaks in Pittsburgh.

Red oak leaves and acorn cups, 13 October 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

A rhododendron in Shadyside is confused. Is it spring?

Confused rhododendron blooming in Pittsburgh, 13 Oct 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

This week crows were absent from Oakland during the day but arrived in huge flocks at dusk, staging on rooftops before flying to the roost. I fumbled to photograph them on the RAND Building last Sunday. This is only a fraction of the flock that flew away.

Crows make a stop on the RAND building before sunset, 13 Oct 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

Obviously they’ve been roosting on Pitt’s campus. I found evidence below trees at the Pitt Panther statue. The Crows Slept Here Last Night.

Evidence at Pitt that The Crows Slept Here Last Night, 17 October 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

2 thoughts on “Seen This Week: Late Flowers, Acorns, Crows

  1. I am so curious about the crow gathering near me in East Liberty… they gather in trees near the corner of Shady and Marchand streets and then fly overhead to the west, southwest… I love to watch them but I don’t know much about how they communicate to gather, who leads the flight out of the trees and so on. Fascinating beings!

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