Thursday, March 4, 2021

Raretés hivernales

White-throated Sparrow Zonotrichia albicollis

White-throated Sparrow Zonotrichia albicollis

Hermit Thrush Catharus guttatus

female Northern Cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis

male Northern Cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis

Downy Woodpecker Picoides pubescens

Black-capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus

Dark-eyed Junco Junco hyemalis

Current mood


Secret path

Parc Jean-Drapeau, March 3, 2021

  A lovely winter’s day for a long afternoon bimble round Parc Jean-Drapeau. Loads of Northern Cardinals were out and about, and well-dispersed, with a conservative count of 20. Eight White-winged Crossbills drew a crowd as they fed in tall pines north of the Jardins des Floralies.

  ‘Raretés hivernales’ came in the form of a White-throated Sparrow (near P5) and a Hermit Thrush (near the Watersports Pavillion), both shy and skulky. Not mind-blowing records, but interesting to see a few summery birds sticking it out through Montreal’s wicked wacky winter. First-of-year birds included Canada Geese (5) and a Ring-billed Gull.

  Ended with 18 species on the day, in spite of numerous ‘easy’ species missed. All in all, a lively little patch, I’ll try to check it out in spring this time.

Friday, February 26, 2021

Follow the Fox

Pine Grosbeak Pinicola enucleator

American Robin Turdus migratorius

House Finch Haemorhous mexicanus

Follow the fox



Follow the crow?

Follow the birder


The end of the 'Great Horned Owl woods' in Notre-Dame-des-Neiges Cemtery?


Sleepy NDN



Rush hour at Mount-Royal Cemetery

Mount-Royal Cemetery and Notre-Dame-des-Neiges Cemetery, February 14, 2021

  Old news! But time is relative anyway, eh. MRC was super crowded, whereas NDN was abandoned. Maybe that’s because it was near impossible to find a way in, what with all the closed gates and mended fence gaps. Is it closed on the weekend? Probably should look into that.

  Nothing much going on in NDN, but it was worth a try. Who knows what avian mysteries lurk in those chronically underbirded dells.

  A rambling set of fresh Red Fox prints made for an entertaining game of Follow the Fox (“Y’know, technically, if we follow these prints there’s a fox at the other end.”). In spite of being able to smell fox musk at times, the fox won this particular round. I think Buddha discussed that once.

  Ended up with 15 species in four hours – nothing super unexpected, but overall much birdier for this time of year when compared to past years. What else? Pine Grosbeaks were showing well in MRC.

Thursday, February 11, 2021

All Redpolls, all the time

Hoary Redpoll Acanthis hornemanni?

Another interesting Redpoll, showing some Hoary features,
but...too much pink? Or just enough?


spot both White-winged Crossbill Loxia leucoptera

spot both White-winged Crossbill Loxia leucoptera

male Pileated Woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus

female Pileated Woodpecker Dryocopus pileatus

House Finch Haemorhous mexicanus
(with an interesting amount of white in the greater coverts)

Black-capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus

And a long-forgotten, lonely cairn of stones

Mount Royal Cemetery, February 6, 2021
  Super cold in the MRC on February 6, but not unbearably so. Canada, eh! Faffed around with the Redpolls some more, and saw a couple of good candidates for Hoary, one of which I’m gonna go ahead and declare a Hoary Redpoll — fight me! I guess I come off a bit silly in that last post, whingeing and moaning about how frustrating birding is and how shit I am at it. Oh well, I reckon most birders will relate to that if they’re honest.

  About ten White-winged Crossbills were showing well in the conifers by E5, and one female Red Crossbill was well seen nearby at first, before it flew off with a brace of unidentified finches. The day ended after four hours with 16 species (and 16 unfrozen digits), which is respectable for this time of year. I have a weird feeling something nutty will turn up soon at the cems.

  In other news, Harry dug a giant hole.

  In other other news, there are some twitchable owls around, but I’m a misanthrope at the best of times, and I get extra crabby at owl twitches. Apparently there have been 30-50 photogs mobbing a Boreal Owl, and I would lose my shit if I was there. Better I just not go.

  Still not used to the idea of 2021. I swear I typed 2018 the other day when trying to write the date, no joke.

Friday, January 29, 2021

CORE vs HORE

Common Redpoll Acanthis flammea

Common Redpoll Acanthis flammea

Apparently not a Hoary Redpoll







Sibley's Hoary showing much potential for streaking






Me after 10 minutes of Redpolling


AKA "The Redpoll Venn diagram from Hell," Mount Royal Cemetery, January 24, 2021

  That’s COmmon REdpolls vs HOary REdpolls, one of the oldest and most dastardly of birding brain-busters. With an irruption year of northern species, and several recent sightings of Hoarys mixed in with a batch of Common Redpolls at the Mount Royal Cemetery feeders (maintained tirelessly by George Levtchouk), it seemed like a golden opportunity to gain some experience with the relatively scarce, and thoroughly frustrating species.

  There is a range of mythical features one must look for to pick out the odd HORE from a pack of ho-hum COREs: smaller bill, white rump and undertail, relatively reduced streaking, more white in the wing coverts, bull-necked appearance, silvery and fluffy overall. Of course, there is much overlap within any one of these features between the two northern chonkballs…much like an Orange-crowned Warblers (or every gull ever), birds showing just one or two of these features may not be enough to rule Hoary in or out. I was even reading online about how the sacred bill size may not always be a reliable feature:

"Importantly, measurements of bill depth do not differ significantly between the species, so a Hoary should have a short and stout bill (if a 7 mm bill can be called stout). In other words, a Common’s bill should be longer and more slender, a Hoary’s shorter and stubbier. But this is also subject to overlap, and we don’t know if the longest-billed Hoaries still have a relatively thick bill or a bill shape just like Common (or if the shortest-billed Commons have slender or stout bills)."

  Long story short, I thought I’d spotted two good candidates for HORE after standing around and freezing my face off (red Poll) for a few hours. And it was cold up there — solidly into the low minus teens when that Mount Royal wind got up. We were well prepared with layers, neck tubes, and flap hats, but cloth can only do so much. Toes started freezing after five minutes of inaction/immobility, and fingers…who needs those anyway?

  After running my images of potential Hoarys by some online birders, they were dismissed as COREs. One guy did so based solely on “too much streaking,” but when I showed him Hoarys in Sibley’s with as much (or more) streaking, he changed his tune to “Well maybe it’s a female or immature Hoary, but it’s definitely not a male. Anyway, people think they’re not even a distinct species anyhow, so whatever.”

  Well said. So it seems that unless you spot the ‘perfect Hoary Redpoll’ — one that shows every single feature, then Hoarys don’t exist, and it’s all just in your head. Or something. And I could just suck at birding.

  In any case, it was nice to get out of the house.