Usually I go out New Year's morning to a wetland and start my year bird list out right, but this year, between work and getting back to running, it'll be a slower start. My #birdsof2023 list starts with a quick park walk this morning:

1) Canada Goose
2) Mallard
3) Downy Woodpecker
4) Northern Flicker
5) Black-capped Chickadee
6) Bushtit
7) Song Sparrow

#birds #oregon #pnw

Short walk this morning, but two more for the sloooowly starting year list. Weird that either crows or robins or both will land outside of the first ten. They're everywhere, just not when I'm looking.

8) Lesser Goldfinch
9) California Scrub-Jay

#birds #birdsof2023

Another neighborhood walk, and this time I picked up three rare and elusive Northwest species. And me without my camera! Seriously though, all birds are good. Even starlings. Maybe especially starlings. I'll fight you over starlings.

10) Dark-eyed Junco
11) European Starling
12) American Crow

#birdsof2023 #birds #oregon

Two short walks at two very different locations added a few species to this year's list. The highlight was seeing Song and Fox Sparrows nearly side by side - a rare opportunity and so helpful for similar species.

13) Fox Sparrow
14) American Robin
15) Steller's Jay
16) Great Egret
17) Double-crested Cormorant
18) American Coot
19) Pied-billed Grebe
20) Common Merganser

#birdsof2023

I had a chance this week to revisit one of my old haunts from before my last move: Tualatin River National Wildlife Refuge. What a place for geese, ducks, and songbirds, and very helpful for the year list.

21) Townsend's Warbler
22) Cackling Goose
23) Northern Pintail
24) Green-winged Teal
25) Ring-necked Duck
26) Bufflehead
27) Ruddy Duck
28) Great Blue Heron
29) Red-tailed Hawk
30) Ruby-crowned Kinglet
31) Red-breasted Nuthatch

#birdsof2023 #oregon #birds

Between farm upkeep and (a little) running, I've been putting a lot less of my outside time into birding this year than usual, but I have managed to slowly grow this year's list, mostly by accident. Sometime in the next few weeks I'll make an effort to get out with the binocs more intentionally. In every possible way today, go birds.

32) Anna's Hummingbird
33) Common Raven
34) Eurasian Collared-Dove
35) White-crowned Sparrow

#birdsof2023 #birds

My first #GreatBackyardBirdCount of the weekend wasn't wildly diverse - 11 pretty expected species - but it all counts. One of the really useful functions of GBBC is seeing population trends in the most common birds. And I did get one new one for the year list that had somehow hidden from me until now.

36) Red-winged Blackbird

#GBBC #BirdsOf2023 #birds #oregon

The #GreatBackyardBirdCount continues. This morning, I spent an hour at Baskett Slough National Wildlife Refuge, picking up a decent list of birds, including 5 new for me for the year (Officially anyway. I'd seen kestrels before but not counted them in a list):

37) Tundra Swan
38) Killdeer
39) Northern Harrier
40) American Kestrel
41) Western Meadowlark

#BirdsOf2023 #birds #gbbc #oregon

Probably my last birding of this year's #GreatBackyardBirdCount, a quick wetlands walk that produced four new species for the year for me. The highlight was a pair of Canvasbacks, which I generally only see a few times a year at most. And finally some butterbutts. Where have you been hiding?

42) Northern Shoveler
43) Canvasback
44) House Finch
45) Yellow-rumped Warbler

#BirdsOf2023 #birds #oregon #gbbc

Got out into the winter mix today, not far but enough to see a few birds. I was rewarded for my wet cold walk with a pair of new year birds, one I didn't expect to see or at least to identify in these conditions. I don't think of looking for swallows in snow here, but they do overlap.

46) Gadwall
47) Tree Swallow

#birds #BirdsOf2023 #oregon

I wasn't looking for birds today, but that's not how any of this works. Right down the street, clear as day and posing to be counted, my first sapsucker of the year. Hi, bird. As you were.

48) Red-breasted Sapsucker

#BirdsOf2023 #birds #oregon

In addition to the plum flowers and tiny spood, today was a most auspicious bird day: my first vultures of 2023. No offense to the kinglet or the magnificent wood duck - all birds are good birds - but I'm a vulture fanboy. Vultures are the best.

49) Wood Duck
50) Turkey Vulture
51) Golden-crowned Kinglet

#birds #BirdsOf2023 #oregon #vultures

Finally. So the odd thing about my year bird list is that there are some birds I see several times before they make it to a list, because I see them primarily from the road while driving. That is the case this year with the baldies. I saw probably ten over the winter, but didn't pull over to list them. Now they are officially on the year list, which is actually a huge relief. It was getting weird.

52) Bald Eagle

#BirdsOf2023

Speaking of turkeys, I realized I hadn't updated my year bird list in a while here. The first four of these are from clamming in Washington, the next two from sitting on my new back porch. Caspian tern is always a special one to see for the first time in a year, since I spent a good chunk of my twenties chasing them around the Northwest as my job. Glorious birds.

53) Western Gull
54) Pelagic Cormorant
55) Surf Scoter
56) Caspian Tern
57) Wild Turkey
58) Bewick's Wren

#BirdsOf2023

Moving is never fun, but the new place is just night and day better in a lot of ways, certainly including the birding. The first few days here have let me fill in a few I was missing from the winter and early spring.

59) Hooded Merganser
60) Spotted Towhee
61) Mourning Dove

#BirdsOf2023

Guess who (who-who who) was in my yard calling last night? Beautiful, powerful, fascinating birds. I'm always hesitant to positively ID owls, because I don't know many calls and rarely see them, but no question on this one.

62) Great Horned Owl

#BirdsOf2023

Spring is definitely here in terms of birds. The adorblers are arriving, along with other early migrants. The bonanza will be in May, but it's starting for sure.

63) Chestnut-backed Chickadee
64) Pacific Wren
65) Wilson's Warbler
66) Pacific-slope Flycatcher

#BirdsOf2023 #Spring #Oregon

@ianrosewrites Central Interior Alaska: the juncos arrived this past week at our feeder. #BirdsOf2023
@AlaskaWx I always forget that juncos migrate to Alaska. They're residents here. Glad to hear they're arriving safe in AK.
@ianrosewrites @AlaskaWx Birdcast is always neat to watch in the spring - even though it’s US-centric. https://birdcast.info/migration-tools/live-migration-maps/
Live bird migration maps - BirdCast

See real-time analysis maps of intensities of actual nocturnal bird migration, as detected by the US weather surveillance radar network between local sunset to sunrise. Cornell Lab of Ornithology currently produces these maps.