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  1. Mar 5, 2021 · The Baltimore Oriole, also known as Maryland ’s state bird, is a brilliantly colored songbird that wears a bright-colored orange plumage. They were initially considered the same species as the Bullock’s Oriole and was known as the Northern Oriole. These birds are known as backyard feeders and are easily attracted to the orange color, fruits ...

  2. The brilliant yellow-and-black Audubon’s Oriole is a shy species of woodlands and brush in Mexico and South Texas. Its pleasing, rising-and-falling whistles are usually the first clues to its presence. Both sexes sing this song, often back and forth to each other during the nesting season. Unlike many orioles, the male and female look very much alike—with a black head, wings, and tail ...

  3. Description. 7-8 1/2" (18-22 cm). Male resembles male Baltimore Oriole but has orange face, more white in wing, different tail pattern. Female usually not as orange as female Baltimore, with grayer back, whiter belly, darker eyeline, but some not safely identified.

  4. Jun 25, 2021 · Bullock’s oriole eating an orange. Start early. Your best chance of attracting orioles is when the birds first arrive in early spring. Use the same sugar-water recipe for orioles as you do for hummingbirds. Keep sugar-water fresh, and don’t use food coloring. Orioles also can’t resist this oriole nectar recipe.

  5. The Orchard Oriole swaps the typical flame-orange of other orioles for a deep, burnished russet. Hopping among riverine shrubs or scattered trees, male Orchard Orioles sing a whistled, chattering song to attract yellow-green females. The smallest of North America’s orioles, it gleans insects from foliage and builds hanging, pouchlike nests during its brief breeding season, and then heads ...

  6. Baltimore Oriole nests are cup-shaped hanging or pendulum structures made of grasses, string, and other plant fibers, lined with softer materials like hair and feathers. They are usually suspended from dropping branches or hanging from shrub branches. The nests are usually about the size of a baseball and look like a hanging pouch or sock.

  7. Orioles are colorful, vocal members of the blackbird family. In Massachusetts they are represented by two species—the Baltimore Oriole and the Orchard Oriole. The bold patterning of black and yellow-orange sported by male Baltimore Orioles reminded early observers of the black and gold heraldry of Lord Baltimore—hence the species' common name.

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