pauraque: patterned brown and white bird flying on a pale blue background (Default)
[personal profile] pauraque
Early spring in Vermont is a lot like winter, but with less snow. We can see the ground, but the trees are still completely bare, grass hasn't grown, and the only flowers yet are the occasional bloodroot and optimistic crocuses. On one hike I got excited to see some green on a hill, but it turned out to be last year's ferns, all squashed flat. There are still many days that hover around freezing, alternating between rain and snow. Earlier this week I had to drive in a sudden aggressive windy snowstorm that didn't stick but made visibility near zero.

But the important question: How are the birds doing? Migratory species keep showing up one by one. We saw our first Double-crested Cormorant of the year flying over Lake Champlain while we were visiting the waterfront. Eastern Phoebes are also back, including the one who makes its summer home in our yard. Several mornings I've seen it in the tree out my bedroom window, doing its characteristic tail-bob. And I heard my year's first Wood Duck before I saw it on the river—they don't quack, but let out a distinctive squeal.

We're on the edge of the year-round range for White-throated Sparrow and I have seen them here in winter before, but they're much more common in the spring and I've been hearing their ohhh sweeet caaaaanada song. Red Crossbill can supposedly be here in the winter too, but I saw my first of the year this week.

It's also getting easier to see waterfowl now that some of the smaller lakes and ponds aren't completely frozen over. Hooded Mergansers can be seen on the non-frozen parts of Lake Champlain in the winter, but now they're back on our local pond too.

We also get species briefly passing through while headed elsewhere on their migration routes. I was excited to spot a pair of Northern Shovelers on the pond in late March, which was a little early for them to show up here—the eBird app prompted for evidence when I reported them, so I attached this very non-aesthetic but at least diagnostic photo. They're both in this picture, but the tan female is much harder to see!

low quality photo of pair of ducks in reeds

I think I was the first to see them, or at least my eBird report was first. I felt kinda special scrolling through all the subsequent reports as birders flocked to take a look. I also saw a pair in the same spot last year in the first week of April; I wonder if they're the same birds.

And the year-rounders who have been here all winter are shifting into breeding mode. Every day the American Goldfinches at our feeder are a little yellower, their breeding plumage showing up in scruffy patches. Black-capped Chickadees are a constant as always, but I'm hearing more territorial yooo-hooo calls as well as the eponymous chick-a-dee-dee-dee. The little Brown Creepers are singing instead of just buzzing, and I spotted one darting in and out from behind the peeling park of a tree, immediately after I saw a video explaining that that's where they nest!

So that's 53 species for me in 2026 so far. Countdown to warbler season in a couple of weeks!

Date: 9 Apr 2026 04:49 pm (UTC)
trepkos: (Default)
From: [personal profile] trepkos
You get some cracking birds there! Hooded mergansers are amazing!

Date: 9 Apr 2026 05:23 pm (UTC)
phantomtomato: (Default)
From: [personal profile] phantomtomato
53 birds! Which is the one you’re most excited to have seen so far this year?

Date: 9 Apr 2026 06:44 pm (UTC)
silverflight8: male cardinal, bright red, perched on a snowy branch (cardinal in snow)
From: [personal profile] silverflight8
Early warblers are already showing up for me here, a little south of you! Lots of palm and palm warblers. I think this orange crowned probably overwintered though.

Date: 9 Apr 2026 07:32 pm (UTC)
raven: [hello my name is] and a silhouette image of a raven (Default)
From: [personal profile] raven
I saw the pelicans today, and they were posing. Some excited American tourists were lining up to take pictures and the pelicans were turning their heads and stretching out their necks and looking just very cool and weird and total asshole. I thought you should know.

Date: 9 Apr 2026 11:02 pm (UTC)
senmut: an owl that is quite large sitting on a roof (Default)
From: [personal profile] senmut
You've already got one per week and we're only a quarter into it!

Date: 10 Apr 2026 11:02 am (UTC)
k2daisy: (Default)
From: [personal profile] k2daisy
Wow, that is a lot of different birds! I feel like we only have a handful of the same ones, but they are here as big families so there are many of the same kinds. So, so many fat-chested robins right now in my yard.

Date: 13 Apr 2026 12:59 pm (UTC)
k2daisy: (Default)
From: [personal profile] k2daisy
Good point. I know we have cardinals and sometimes woodpeckers and little wren-like birds. Our arbrovitae is home to a lot of birds. I should get binoculars and start counting the exact kinds.

Date: 14 Apr 2026 10:57 am (UTC)
k2daisy: (Default)
From: [personal profile] k2daisy
Ohh, thanks I will check it out!

Date: 10 Apr 2026 01:22 pm (UTC)
kaishin108: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kaishin108
What beauty and what lovely sounds. 53 so far this year is so great! I listened to the sound of those Shovelers at your link, they sound so unusual.

Happy Spring!

Date: 13 Apr 2026 01:10 am (UTC)
octahedrite: elf girl with a slight smile (Default)
From: [personal profile] octahedrite

Woohoo, 53 species! You're on fire.

Also, Pauraque! I saw a Bird yesterday and thought of you! It looked like a duck, it was brown all over and had a deep blue patch on its wing.

Date: 15 Apr 2026 11:39 pm (UTC)
octahedrite: (izumi_smile)
From: [personal profile] octahedrite

I wasn't really trying to get a bird ID, I just wanted to tell you about a cool bird I saw haha. But thank you for finding me its name! I do think it was an American black duck.

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