ALL AROUND TOWN
Backyard Bird Sightings from our Members and Friends
It’s fall, and the first-of-the-season sightings continue to roll in! Cedar Waxwings are showing up in neighborhoods now, as well as Red-breasted Sapsuckers. We’ve also received more reports of Hermit Thrushes from around the area. Our year-round resident birds are also present and delightful as always, including owls, which are a thrill to hear on a crisp fall night.
A number of you have observed White-crowned and Golden-crowned Sparrows, our most abundant winter sparrows. Sometimes it can be hard to tell these birds apart, and the juveniles can be tricky. At the end of this piece, we’ve included a special section on these birds, with tips for how to identify the adults and the young ones.
Here’s what you’ve seen in your yards this October:
In mid-October, three Western Bluebirds visited Jack Cole’s birdbath in San Jose (photos above and below). Jack tells us this is the first time he’s had three bluebirds visit all at once.
Carolyn Straub and Steve McHenry (San Jose) report seeing a Bewick’s Wren take a dust bath in their yard. They also have House Finches, Lesser Goldfinches, Chestnut-backed Chickadees, and Anna’s Hummingbirds at their feeders.
Kerri Fox (San Carlos) hears a Great Horned Owl most nights in her neighborhood, “and one night recently a responding second owl.” This is the first year that she has heard Great Horneds in her area. She writes that her neighborhood normally has “a Western Screech-Owl or two” as well.
Monica N. (Milpitas) writes:
“Here are some of the new fall birds seen in my yard and neighborhood this month:
Northern Flicker
American Kestrel - one female was perching on a nearby redwood tree again at the end of October
Oak Titmouse - we have a pair
Hermit Thrush - came back to our yard for three years now
Cedar Waxwing - A flock of ten was seen moving from the redwood tree to a nearby magnolia tree on October 28, which is my first-of-season sighting this fall/winter.
White-Crowned Sparrow (see photo in our special section below)
Golden-Crowned Sparrow”
Eve Meier (San Jose) told us at the end of October: “My Red-breasted Sapsucker has returned! I was sitting out in my backyard yesterday and I noticed a quiet tapping coming from a nearby cedar tree. I went to investigate and found the bird halfway up the main trunk on the back of the tree. I like to think it's the same bird from last year but, of course, I don't actually know that.”
She adds: “Besides the tapping of the sapsucker, my other favorite fall sound is the ‘chup chup chup’ of the Hermit Thrush in the early mornings before the sun has fully come up.”
Deanne Tucker (Los Altos) sent us these pictures of an Anna’s Hummingbird that she took in her yard recently. The Anna’s is our Backyard Bird of the Month for November - click on the link to learn more about them!
Deanne also captured this picture of a jaunty Bewick’s Wren (below).
Jennifer Oliver (San Jose) says: “I’ve really been enjoying seeing the winter birds coming back into my neighborhood again! Here are a few of the ones I’ve seen in the last few days (end of October/early November). Happy fall!”
For more of Jennifer’s photos, see our special section on White-crowned and Golden-crowned Sparrows below.
Emma Shelton (Menlo Park) sent us her observations for the month of October. She writes: “Not a whole lot different from last month (reported just a few weeks ago) but subtle changes. The activity and monitoring itself is very rewarding though.”
“With the rain we are seeing more gulls flying over our neighborhood, on their commute from the bay to the parking lots.”
Here are Emma’s bird list and notes for the past month:
Canada Goose - every few days I catch them flying over the house
Mourning Dove
Rock Pigeon
Anna’s Hummingbird
Gull species
Cooper’s Hawk
Red-shouldered Hawk - heard and seen here a couple weeks ago
Downy Woodpecker - We are seeing more of this one lately. These and the Spotted Towhees are my husband’s favorite birds since they are so colorful!
Northern Flicker - not often, but have heard them here
California Scrub-Jay
American Crow
Common Raven
Chestnut-backed Chickadee - probably the most common bird here!
Oak Titmouse
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - I think I saw one in the back bushes last week. I’m primed after seeing them recently.
White-breasted Nuthatch
Pygmy Nuthatch
Bewick’s Wren
House Finch - The lots and lots of them don’t change. In fact, there seems to be a new crop? Many squabbling youngsters in the yard every day.
Lesser Goldfinch
Dark-eyed Junco
White-crowned Sparrow - Along with the Golden-crowned, they are now all over the front and back yards.
Golden-crowned Sparrow
California Towhee
Spotted Towhee - We both love this colorful bird. Its squawks are so distinctive too. Seriously, every time I encounter a foamy soap dispenser at a park restroom, I check to hear the sound. It’s the same.
Here are two views of a Downy Woodpecker enjoying Emma’s suet feeder (above and below).
Emma adds: “On my trips around the area I often think if my backyard were just two to five miles west, I would be reporting Great Blue Herons flying over, Canada Geese hanging out on the Woodside high school lawn, American Robins, California Thrashers, Acorn Woodpeckers by the hundreds, Brown Creepers, Hermit Thrushes, more hawks and Turkey Vultures. We reported a thrush of some sort and a Ruby-crowned Kinglet here last month, but without our son’s sharper eyes I’ve missed them here. He was trained as a little kid through the teenage years by SCVAS on field trips. I’ve definitely seen kinglets and Hermit Thrushes in Woodside near the town center!”
WHITE-CROWNED AND GOLDEN-CROWNED SPARROWS
Every year, the start of fall is marked by the arrival of White-crowned and Golden-crowned Sparrows. These pretty, sweet-singing birds breed further north but live here during the fall, winter, and early spring. They love to forage in backyards, and if you scatter a little bird seed on the ground, you are sure to attract a small flock or two.
Viewed closely, adult White-crowned Sparrows aren’t hard to tell from adult Golden-crowned Sparrows, but the young birds can be tricky, and observing from a distance, you may have a hard time knowing which species is which, regardless of age.
Here are some tips to help you identify these two sparrows:
An adult White-crowned Sparrow has crisp black and white stripes on its head that strongly contrast with one another, and an orange bill.
An immature (young) White-crowned Sparrow resembles an adult White-crowned but has a gray and brown striped head, and is overall a gray/brown color. Depending on the light, its crown stripes might be hard to see. Having trouble telling it apart from a Golden-crowned? Look for the orange in its bill.
Golden-crowned Sparrows of any age have a yellow patch in the middle of their crowns, bordered on each side by a thick dark stripe. The patch can be smaller or larger, duller or brighter, depending on the individual as well as the season. The bird also has a dark or dull-colored bill, lacking the brighter orange color of the White-crowneds.
Are you watching these birds from a distance and can’t see their crowns? Notice their size and shape. Golden-crowneds are a bit larger than White-crowneds and have stockier bodies. White-crowneds have a slimmer profile, and their heads may appear slightly peaked. Having trouble seeing these differences? Spend some time observing the birds when they forage side by side (they often forage in mixed flocks).
Finally, the birds have distinctly different songs. While both birds sweetly whistle, the White-crowned’s song spirals, rises, and tapers off, while the Golden-crowned’s has three long falling notes. A popular way to remember this song is “no gold here,” a common refrain from gold rush days, when Golden-crowneds foraged next to unlucky prospectors!
For more information about crowned sparrows in Santa Clara County, see our Backyard Bird of the Month article about these birds. And if you want to compare the birds side by side, look them up in All About Birds and use the Similar Species comparison tool on the Identification page.
Happy backyard birding in November!
What birds are you seeing and hearing in your yard and neighborhood?
Send your notes and photos to backyardbirds@scvas.org. We’ll feature them in our next edition of All Around Town.
Bird species reported to All Around Town
from October 2020 onwards
Greater White-fronted Goose
Canada Goose
Mallard
Bufflehead
California Quail
Rock Pigeon
Band-tailed Pigeon
Mourning Dove
Anna’s Hummingbird
Allen’s/Rufous Hummingbird
Gull species
Great Blue Heron
Great Egret
Turkey Vulture
White-tailed Kite
Golden Eagle
Northern Harrier
Cooper’s Hawk
Bald Eagle
Red-shouldered Hawk
Red-tailed Hawk
Ferruginous Hawk
Barn Owl
Western Screech-Owl
Great Horned Owl
Red-breasted Sapsucker
Acorn Woodpecker
Downy Woodpecker
Nuttall’s Woodpecker
Pileated Woodpecker
Northern Flicker
American Kestrel
Merlin
Pacific-slope Flycatcher
Black Phoebe
Say’s Phoebe
Hutton’s Vireo
Cassin’s Vireo
Steller’s Jay
California Scrub-Jay
American Crow
Common Raven
Chestnut-backed Chickadee
Oak Titmouse
Tree Swallow
Violet-green Swallow
Bushtit
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
Red-breasted Nuthatch
White-breasted Nuthatch
Pygmy Nuthatch
Brown Creeper
Bewick’s Wren
European Starling
California Thrasher
Northern Mockingbird
Western Bluebird
Varied Thrush
Hermit Thrush
American Robin
Cedar Waxwing
House Finch
Purple Finch
Pine Siskin
Lesser Goldfinch
American Goldfinch
Chipping Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
White-crowned Sparrow
Golden-crowned Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
California Towhee
Spotted Towhee
Western Meadowlark
Hooded Oriole
Brown-headed Cowbird
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Townsend’s Warbler
Black-headed Grosbeak
Lazuli Bunting
All Around Town is compiled by SCVAS member Julie Amato.
Banner photo: Immature White-crowned Sparrow by Jennifer Oliver