Saturday, March 21, 2026

Pre-spring birds of late (February 28-March 21)

Common Raven Corvus corax






February 28, NDG
-6 species in an hour.
-No woodpeckers or finches around.
-Two Common Ravens patrolling the high ground.
-Grey, -1 and tricky slicky black ice everywhere – I did ‘the dance’ a few times.

My NDG humblepatch. A place where I can collect my thoughts once a week, and watch the changing of the seasons in slow motion. I sometimes mumble a prayer to the birding gods for something rare to pass through, but I’m never disappointed when that doesn’t come to pass. In any case, spring in coming, I smelled it on the morning wind, something something.


March 1, Lasalle
-Ring-billed Gulls spotted in Lasalle.


'Artistic'

This sure as hell looked like a gull at first glance



March 7, NDG
-A balmy 0 degrees and rainy…jacket came back wet inside and out.
-4 species in an hour.
-Mushy.


March 9, Lasalle, Sunny and 15
-Male House Finch singing from atop an apple tree.
-Personal first of year Red-winged Blackbirds spotted, seeming to be in ‘stake out territories’ mode.
-A dozen Canada Geese flying east along the river.


March 11, NDG
-Common Starlings are everywhere in NDG, very much out and about.
-Ring-billed Gulls over NDG now.


Black-capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus











March 14, NDG
-0 degrees…a landscape weighed down by 10cm of wet overnight snow (an ice storm came later in the week).
-8 species in an hour.
-A Merlin was heard screeching. Breeding time?
-Several Ring-billed Gulls overhead.
-Where have all the woodpeckers gone?


Northern Cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis

Northern Cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis

Northern Cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis


Pileated workings on one of three remaining tall pines

One of the four big pines in the area is down - last week's wind got it




March 21, NDG
-Technically, it is spring.
-Sun broke through clouds, 0 degrees.
-8ish species in an hour.
-Thought I heard a House Finch singing in the distance.
-Some evidence of Pileated Woodpeckers.
-I imagine Song Sparrows will be back next week, or the week after that. Groundhogs and Mourning Cloaks will also return soon, followed by Hermit Thrushes and Eastern Phoebes, then all the rest.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Robin (in my) Hood

European Robin/Rougegorge familier Erithacus rubecula



Fortunately for the homeowners in the area, the Robin hangs out in
the cedars at the end of the block, meaning twitchers are relatively out of sight
 

Dan using terrain to his advantage

February 21, 2026, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Earth

Saturday last, I finally headed out to Hochelaga-Maisonneuve (The Shlag) to twitch the world-famous European Robin (Familiar Redthroat) with Dan. It was a brief encounter, after an extended wait in the frigid cold (-12 but felt colder in the stiff breeze). It was one of those ‘wait 20 minutes for 20 seconds with the bird’-type deals. Anyway, neat to see one so far from home.

Plenty of efforts have been made to keep the bird fed during the frigid spells of the past month, with at least 3 feeding stations set up inside the cedars. I was reminded of a European Robin that showed up in Seoul many moons ago, kept fat and happy by an endless supply of photog meal worms.

On the way out, we rescued an older American birder who we spotted wandering the streets far from the Robin. We gave him proper directions to the bird and drove him back to his wife who was waiting in their car many blocks away. Seems they got turned around with faulty directions. The fellowship of the dangling binoculars at work.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

NDG Patch Birding January 17-February 14, 2026

Black-capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus

Not an Eastern Screech-Owl



-->January 17
-A chipper -17
-9 species in 75 minutes
-House Finch and American Goldfinch notable


Downy Woodpecker Picoides pubescens

House Sparrow Passer domesticus

Black-capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus





-->January 24
-With the vaunted Polar Vortex it was -25 BEFORE windchill.
-8 species in an hour, all the usual suspects.
-No finches.

American Robin Turdus migratorius

American Robin spot

Also not an Eastern Screech-Owl

Sapsucker workings

Evidence of Eastern Cottontail gnawing



-->January 31
-It was -10 but felt warm…had to unlayer
-7 species in an hour
-Three American Robins at an unfrozen stream
-A Common Raven (is back?)








Comings and goings

Mallard Anas platyrhynchos
(In a Lasalle parking lot, February 8th.
They were fine, and flew off soon after)


-->February 7
-Coldest in a while…-15 with a wind chill of -25 (can confirm). Exposed-skin-on-the-face-freezing-weather.
-Just 3 species in an hour (House Sparrow, Black-capped Chickadee, Downy Woodpecker)

Northern Cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis

Northern Cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis


More bunny work



-->February 14
-9 species in an hour
-Snowing lightly and overcast, a balmy -8