Showing posts with label Lincoln's Sparrow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lincoln's Sparrow. Show all posts

Saturday, May 30, 2015

SE Vermont Birding

I spent several mornings this past week wandering many of my favorite back roads in southeastern Vermont - narrow, remote, quiet - occasionally requiring use of the four-wheel drive - often with no other people or vehicles encountered. Relaxing and delightful - with many good sightings.

That said, the best sighting came when I stopped at my mechanics shop to find out why a check engine light had come on (no serious problem except for the cost :( . On the door jamb was this Luna Moth ...

Luna Moth

Luna Moth
In the Town of Somerset, high in the Green Mountain National Forest, a wildlife management area is a fairly dependable place for breeding Lincoln's Sparrow, an uncommon and sought after species for local birders. In the small area I surveyed, there were at least three singing males ...

Lincoln's Sparrow
White-throated Sparrows are common to abundant on the wintering grounds that I visit (e.g., Heinz NWR in Philly). They are also commonly present at winter feeders in Vermont. As Spring comes, they disappear from those winter areas. High in the Green Mountains, their plaintive song is heard throughout the edges of the boreal, or near-boreal forests. A welcome sound ...

White-throated Sparrow
In the last 60 years, much of the farmland in Vermont has been abandoned and grassy fields have reverted to forest, with habitat loss for grassland species. Some extensive fields do survive in southeastern Vermont, and there the Bobolinks are still to be found. The bubbly song is happy and cheerful to the human listener. To the male, it is territorial warning to other males and an invitation females, and is accompanied by frenetic flight. These photos sort-of capture the energy expensive life style of the males ...

Bobolink

Bobolink

Bobolink
And finally (for this post) on a remote back road I encountered this Ruffed Grouse gentleman leisurely chomping away on dandelion leaves and quite unconcerned by the long lens I pointed at him. I assume the bird was a cock, since the hens should be incubating, or leading young about.

Ruffed Grouse

Ruffed Grouse

Ruffed Grouse
Good Birding ! !

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Lincoln's Sparrow et alia

Lincoln's Sparrow (which is hard to find in Windham Co) greeted me with song at a management area just off the road to Grout Pond from Kelly Stand Rd in Somerset, Green Mtn Nat’l Forest.

Lincoln's Sparrow

Lincoln's Sparrow

A few additional photos from this morning ...

White-throated Sparrow

Alder Flycatcher

Common Yellowthroat - a favorite rogue of the bush

Tiger Swallowtail on wild azalea

... and back at home, this visitor passed through the neighbor's yard, probably scared away from the feeders by the crew of painters working on the exterior. We all watched as it crossed the river and headed into the pines. But, it is certainly time to take in the feeders ...

Black Bear on opposite bank of Rock River
 Good birding ... and other stuff!

Friday, January 21, 2011

LBJs - IDs for Exercises 11 & 12

Song Sparrow (default sparrow) - see! We don't need to use the breast spot to ID this songster.
Pine Siskin
American Tree Sparrow
Swamp Sparrow
Lincoln's Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow (l), Blue Grosbeak, female (r)
Fox Sparrow (foreground), White-throated Sparrow (2)
White-throated Sparrow (l), White-crowned Sparrow (r)
Purple Finch, female (foreground), White-throated Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco (background)
Song Sparrow (foreground), White-throated Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

LBJs - IDs for #7 & 8

#31 - American Tree Sparrow
 #32 - Field Sparrow
 #33 - Fox Sparrow
 #34 - Purple Finch, female
#35 - Seaside Sparrow -a large and awkwardly shaped sparrow found in the coastal salt marshes. Habitat is one of the best "field marks." Drab, with just a hint of yellowish lores. Big bill and a tail that looks like it has been clipped off with scissors, if you manage to get any kind of a look at it.
#36 - White-crowned Sparrow - an adult in molt. Note the absence of a tail.
#37 -White-throated Sparrow (oops - I did not catch the typo until after this was posted, but this is truly a White-throated, not a White-Crowned)
#38 - Seaside Sparrow - singing male, if you can call his buzzy hissing a song.
#39 -White-crowned Sparrow, juvenile
#40 - Lincoln's Sparrow

Thursday, December 16, 2010

LBJs - IDs for 3 & 4

Little Brown Jobs - Here's the IDs on the Sunday and Tuesday posts. Scroll down for last week's IDs, or go further to see Quiz 1 & 2. Thanks for dropping by.

#11 - Chipping Sparrow, non-breeding adult, late October. The cap is not the deep red of a breeding adult, but still very rufous, more so than that of the juvenile. In late summer and early fall, the juveniles I see in the yard are even plainer than this bird, which leads me to say this is an adult. Note the clean, grayish breast -  an important field mark so as not to confuse this sparrow with a similar winter sparrow.

#12 - House Sparrow, female - A bird that birders love to hate, although that is not fair to the handsome male, and the fact that in NA this bird has adapted to harsh environments, such as inner cities. She is dingy brown, but lighter stripe behind her head is a good field mark. Also, a big head, stout bill.
#13 - Lincoln's Sparrow - Looking at the head, one might think Song Sparrow, but the supercilium is a much broader gray, the streaking on the breast is crisp and thinner, and the breast is buffy. It is smaller than the Song, more delicate; its beak is more pointed. Even so, this is a difficult bird for me, because I do not see it often. Even when I chased down breeding Lincoln's in the Green Mountains this past June, this shy sparrow gave few good looks. It is always something of a surprise to see one in my neighborhoods, though I suspect I may be overlooking it because I don't expect it.

#14 - Purple Finch, female - Quite a contrast to the deep, red wine color of the male. She is similar to the female House Finch, but stouter, more heavily streaked. The stripe above the eye is a good field mark. I sometimes think of her as a scaled down version of the female Rose-breasted Grosbeak. Her finch beak is larger that the House Finch; Pine Siskin beak is smaller and pointed.

#15 - Brown-headed Cowbird, female - Larger than most LBJs, this blackbird is another bird that birders love to hate, which is unfair because she finds so many more nests to drop her eggs into due to our radical alteration of the landscape. She is a dirty brown-gray, or gray-brown. I photographed this bird on the back of a horse. She was in a mixed flock of female cowbirds and female House Sparrows; it was a flock of nondescript birds. Either species could have been overlooked in the colorless plumage and songless calls.

#16 -  American Tree Sparrow - Very similar to the non-breeding and juvenile Chipping Sparrow, but considerably larger, with a bi-color bill, a warm tan wash along the flanks, and a distinct, isolated dark spot on the breast
#17 - Chipping Sparrow, fledgling - This was a very young bird just recently out of the nest, photographed in mid-August. It was being fed by parents. Even without those helps, the strong, dark eye-line remains a good clue to ID.
#18 -  House Sparrow, male - Putting aside prejudice, this introduced species is handsome, and the black bib and bold pattern is distinctive.
#19 -  Pine Siskin - goldfinch in disguise. Pointed beak, strong streaking, and hints of yellow in the wings, set this finch apart from other finches.
#20 - Purple Finch, female - Note the strong brown and white pattern on the head, and large finch beak.

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