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White-crowned Sparrows Are Regular Visitors to Redding

White-crowned Sparrow

White-crowned Sparrow

Birds are among the most evident wildlife around the world. They sing, sport a crazy variety of shapes and sizes and live in all sorts of habitats. They’re also often colorful and can be lured into close-up viewing. And they live here.

In Shasta County, we have more than 250 species seasonally every year, plus another 50 species who have made cameo appearances.

One regular visitor that graces our parks and backyards every winter is the diminutive white-crowned sparrow. This ball of feathers, the size of a child’s fist, is perhaps our most common bird of brush and patio. It has a subtle beauty that unmindful people will easily miss.

Its underside is a plain gray and, like most sparrows, its back is a mottled brown. But its bill is egg-yolk yellow and its head is decked out in bold black and white racing stripes.

That yellow beak is short and chunky — good for cracking seeds. These sparrows are eager visitors to bird feeders, where they specialize in eating up grains scattered on the ground. A close-up feeder or a pair of binoculars will allow precise inspection of the black-and-white head, which can reveal where the bird travels to nest in the summer. If the black-line behind the eye continues forward of the eye, that sparrow likely nests in Lassen or the Northern Rockies, from Colorado through Montana and Idaho.

These birds have mostly passed through our area and are now wintering at a resort in Baja. If the black line stops at the eye, these travelers may nest as far north as the high arctic of Canada and Alaska, a journey of as much as 200 miles — no mean feat for little birds that often look like they have to work hard just to cross the yard.

Whether in Redding, Baja or Fairbanks, sparrows are brush birds. White crowns nest within a few feet of the ground, building a soft cup of plant material. As is the case in many species, the female picks the nesting site. She typically lays three to five eggs, and both parents feed the young until they fledge in a week and a half, and then a little longer to get them going.

If you notice a sparrow whose black and white stripes are replaced with reddish-brown and tan, you are looking at a young bird, just hatched last spring. If it can survive through winter, it will fly to its nesting grounds, grow adult feathers, and try its own hand at raising a brood or two before returning to your yard next fall.

Wintu Audubon provides the new BirdWords column. Please send your local bird questions to education@wintuaudubon.org

Great Backyard Bird Count Starts Friday!

Great Backyard Bird Count 2014

February 11, 2014 – New York, N.Y. and Ithaca, N.Y.—The 17th annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) kicks off this Friday, February 14, and runs through Monday, February 17. Anyone anywhere in the world can count birds for at least 15 minutes on one or more days of the count and enter their sightings at www.BirdCount.org. The information gathered by tens of thousands of volunteers helps track the health of bird populations at a scale that would not otherwise be possible.

Last year’s Great Backyard Bird Count shattered records after going global for the first time, thanks to integration with the eBird online checklist program launched in 2002 by the Cornell Lab and Audubon. Participants reported their bird sightings from 6 continents, including 110 countries and independent territories. About 34 million birds and 4,258 species were recorded—more than one-third of the world’s total bird species documented in just four days.

The Great Backyard Bird Count is a great way for people of all ages and backgrounds to connect with nature and make a difference for birds. It’s free and easy. To learn more about how to join the count visit www.birdcount.org and view the winning photos from the 2013 GBBC photo contest.

The GBBC is a joint project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society with partner Bird Studies Canada and is made possible in part by sponsor Wild Birds Unlimited.

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Contacts:

  • Pat Leonard, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, (607) 254-2137, pel27@cornell.edu; contact for photos

Wintu Audubon’s First Mini Christmas Bird Count

Birders at CBC

A group of six youths and thirteen adults split into three teams that scoured Turtle Bay from the Highway 44 bridge to above the Sundial.  They were looking for something, and they found it in profusion: Birds!  It was Wintu Audubon’s Mini Christmas Bird Count for Youth and Beginners, and December sunshine after the cold snap made for a warm show of feathered flutterings from all over the rainbow.

The three teams each took an area and tried to identify and tally every bird they found in ninety minutes of searching.  They totaled 791 birds from 57 different species, from stately herons and egrets, to squabbles of ducks down from the arctic, to “now-you-see-me-now-you-don’t brushbirds who, being hungry in the leafless trees, made themselves delightfully more visible than they often do.

A few highlights: an unstately heron gulping a fish that really shouldn’t have fit.  An immature bald eagle in silhouette on a snag, being harassed by a handful of half-hearted crows.  A resplendent Eurasian wigeon gleaming in the sun.  A brown creeper finding its insect breakfast in the fissures of oak bark.  A flock of cedar waxwings enjoying wild berries along the river.

Eurasian Wigeon Drake

Eurasian Wigeon Drake

 The species most counted, at ninety-nine, was Buffleheads, black and white diving ducks who typically nest in northern plains pothole country but come to our area for the unfrozen water in winter.  The different counting teams might argue about which was the rarest bird to find in Redding in winter—perhaps the osprey, or the brown creeper or Hutton’s vireo, perhaps the Eurasian wigeon.

Bufflehead Drake

Bufflehead Drake

The Mini Count was part of Wintu Audubon’s Youth/Beginner Walks, which meet the second Saturday of every month at 9:00 a.m. at the Turtle Bay Monolith.  Binoculars are provided.  The public is invited.

Several full-day Christmas Bird Counts run in our area.  See our event page for more information.

Youth/Beginner Mini Christmas Bird Count Totals:

  • Canada Goose 58
  • Wood Duck 1
  • Gadwall 8
  • American Wigeon 50
  • Eurasian Wigeon 1
  • Northern Shoveler 1
  • Mallard 37
  • Ring-necked Duck 2
  • Bufflehead 99
  • Commoon Goldeneye 51
  • Barrow’s Goldeneye 21
  • Hooded Merganser 1
  • Common Merganser 24
  • Double-crested Cormorant 19
  • Great Blue Heron 6
  • Great Egret 6
  • Turkey Vulture 28
  • Osprey 1
  • Bald Eagle 1
  • Red-shouldered Hawk 1
  • Red-tailed Hawk 1
  • American Coot 88
  • Killdeer 7
  • Spotted Sandpiper 4
  • Gull (species unkn.) 19
  • Ring-billed Gull 6
  • Glaucous-winged Gull1
  • Rock Pigeon 15
  • Anna’s Hummingbird 5
  • Belted Kingfisher 2
  • Acorn Woodpecker 3
  • Red-breasted Sapsucker 1
  • Nuttall’s Woodpecker 3
  • Northern Flicker 4
  • Black Phoebe 5
  • Hutton’s Vireo 2
  • Western Scrub Jay 22
  • American Crow 51
  • Oak Titmouse 7
  • Bushtit 26
  • White-breasted Nuthatch 2
  • Brown Creeper 1
  • Bewick’s Wren 3
  • Golden-crowned Kinglet 2
  • Ruby-crowned Kinglet 9
  • American Robin 7
  • Northern Mockingbird1
  • European Starling 4
  • Cedar Waxwing 21
  • Orange-crowned Warbler 2
  • Yellow-rumped Warbler 15
  • California Towhee 1
  • Song Sparrow 12
  • Lincoln’s Sparrow 3
  • Golden-crowned Sparrow 7
  • Red-winged Blackbird 12

Burrowing Owl Named Audubon California’s 2013 Bird of the Year!

Burrowing Owl

It’s official! From the California Audubon’s Press Release:

San Francisco – One of California’s most beloved owls today was named the 2013 Audubon California Bird of the Year. The Burrowing Owl – which nests underground in burrows rather than trees – received the designation after receiving more than 48 percent of votes cast during an online poll this fall.

The Burrowing Owl finds its home in dry open areas with low vegetation, sometimes in vacant properties along the urban and surburban edges where bird enthusiasts delight in watching them. However, it is exactly this type of habitat is often targeted for development, putting the Burrowing Owl in a precarious position.

More than 22,000 votes were cast in this year’s Bird of the Year poll. The Burrowing Owl finished with 48.3 percent of the votes cast. Thanks to all of you who voted for my favorite bird, the Burrowing Owl! We hope this adorable little bird will get much more attention in the coming year because of this designation.

Sign-up for the 114th Christmas Bird Count is Now Open

Cedar Waxwing

From December 14 through January 5 tens of thousands of volunteers throughout the Americas take part in an adventure that has become a family tradition among generations. Families and students, birders and scientists, armed with binoculars, bird guides and checklists go out on an annual mission – often before dawn. For over one hundred years, the desire to both make a difference and to experience the beauty of nature has driven dedicated people to leave the comfort of a warm house during the Holiday season.

Birders of all skill levels are urged to participate in the Christmas Bird Count.

If you love birds, especially if you are a beginning bird watcher and want to learn about the birds where you live, you will want to participate in at least one Christmas Bird Count. You see, there is always at least one experienced birder in each field party, and each field party needs a recorder, someone to record the birds as they are counted.

While participating in my first Christmas Bird Count, not only did I learn which birds lived in my neighborhood in the winter, I learned where to find them on an American Ornithologists Union arranged bird check list, the same arrangement used by most bird guide books. If you are the group recorder, by the end of the day I guarantee you will have learned how to use a field guide to birds.

If you are an experienced birder you may be asked to lead a field party that covers a specific area within the 15 mile radius of your local count circle. Not only is this an excellent way to support bird conservation but you can also influence younger or less experienced birders by helping them identify birds and build their confidence in bird identification.

Getting involved in the Christmas Bird Count is easy!

All you have to do is go to Audubon’s get involved page to find a count circle near you and sign up! Don’t delay though, the counting starts in less than a month.

If you live in a designated Christmas Bird Count circle and are unable to go out into the field, you may still be able to participate by counting the birds in your own backyard. For more information on the 114th Audubon Annual Christmas Bird Count go to their FAQ page.

To see where and when our local Christmas Bird Counts are happening, check out our calendar of events page and above all, whatever you do, have fun birding!