ALL AROUND TOWN

BACKYARD BIRD SIGHTINGS FROM OUR MEMBERS AND FRIENDS

It’s late summer, and the breeding season is drawing to a close.  For many of you, our year-round residents are the most visible birds in your yards right now, like House Finches, Dark-eyed Juncos, and Anna’s Hummingbirds.  Many birds are molting now - changing their old, worn plumage for a fresh set of new feathers - and the young ones are growing up fast.  

Eight species are making their All Around Town debut this month!  A number of raptors are among the new entries, including the Golden Eagle, the Northern Harrier, and the American Kestrel.  Although more often seen in the countryside and open spaces, these birds of prey can sometimes be found in residential areas, especially at the edges of developed land.

Here’s what you’ve seen in your yards and neighborhoods over the past month and earlier this summer:

Adult male Western Bluebird in Jack’s yard, feathers a bit disheveled, perhaps molting

Adult male Western Bluebird in Jack’s yard, feathers a bit disheveled, perhaps molting

 A family of three Western Bluebirds visited Jack Cole (San Jose) in late August, including the first juvenile bluebird that Jack has ever spotted in his yard.  In early September, he also saw two Violet-green Swallows in flight behind his house.

A Mourning Dove cooing - hence, the inflated throat - in Jack’s yard

A Mourning Dove cooing - hence, the inflated throat - in Jack’s yard

Jack adds:  “A pair of Mourning Doves visits my birdbath every evening,” and “I have a Black Phoebe (photo below) in my backyard most of the year.  It picks the insects off the screen cloth over my patio and deck.”

Emma Shelton (Menlo Park) sent us her yard bird list and notes for August:

  • Canada Goose (flyover)

  • Mourning Dove

  • Anna’s Hummingbird

  • Gull species (flyover) - “We still see a lot flying overhead every day, back and forth from the bay to shopping center parking lots or wherever there’s some free ‘lunch’.”

  • Turkey Vulture

  • Red-shouldered Hawk

  • Nuttall’s Woodpecker

  • Northern Flicker (flyover)

  • California Scrub-Jay - “They try to bump the other birds off the feeders and suet, and squawk at me for a long time if I’m just sitting in the backyard.”

  • American Crow

  • Common Raven

  • Chestnut-backed Chickadee

  • Oak Titmouse

  • Bushtit

  • White-breasted Nuthatch - “I hear them squeaking outside the window right now.  I love these birds.  Seems like I hear and see them wherever I go - in the suburbs and out in the forest.”

  • Pygmy Nuthatch

  • Bewick’s Wren

  • House Finch - “This is probably our most common bird these past few months.  My notes every day say ‘lots!’”

  • Lesser Goldfinch

  • Dark-eyed Junco

  • California Towhee

  • Spotted Towhee

About molt, Emma writes:  “I guess I never paid much attention before, but I did this year.  Many of the birds look pretty scraggly, and there are feathers everywhere!  It’s most noticeable when California Scrub-Jays are molting since they’re so big.”

She also tells us:  “The Pygmy Nuthatches, Lesser Goldfinches, and House Finches in particular are quite fond of the new less-mess seed we got from the feed store.  No sunflower hulls.  They are all still messy eaters though.”

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Deanne Tucker (Los Altos) captured the above photo of two Anna’s Hummingbirds at her feeder:  “I am never sure if they are fighting or playing. I have noticed that in the evenings, it seems more like they're all playing with one another rather than being aggressive. These two had both been drinking next to each other for a few moments before this shot was taken.”

Red-tailed Hawk calling, photographed by Deanne

Red-tailed Hawk calling, photographed by Deanne

Deanne adds:  “We’ve had hawks in the area more than in the past,” including “two Red-tailed Hawks in and around the trees in our neighborhood.”

Here are some more of Deanne’s photos from this summer:

Chestnut-backed Chickadee

Chestnut-backed Chickadee

A molting House Finch

A molting House Finch

A California Scrub-Jay in Deanne’s yard

A California Scrub-Jay in Deanne’s yard

Kathleen Cahill (San Jose) wrote to tell us:  “For the past six years Hooded Orioles have been visiting my backyard.  I have five hummingbird feeders, and in 2016 I saw a beautiful yellow bird attempting to feed from the feeder.  I quickly jerry-rigged a feeder for it.  I vowed to be ready the following year, and purchased a proper feeder.  A mated pair always shows up between late June and mid-July and raises two broods.”

American Kestrels in Monica’s neighborhood

American Kestrels in Monica’s neighborhood

Monica N. (Milpitas) says:  “We have American Kestrels in the neighborhood, up to three in the spring after nesting in redwood trees.  The parents were last seen around the neighborhood teaching their juvenile to fly on June 17.  One lone parent was last seen last week, around August 30.”

Golden Eagle spotted in early September in Monica’s neighborhood

Golden Eagle spotted in early September in Monica’s neighborhood

She continues:  “Golden Eagles are seen very regularly, up to two can fly by at sunset.  I’ve seen them two or three times a week.  Sometimes they appear in the daytime near the hills and screech loudly and fight with the Red-tailed Hawks, Turkey Vultures, and even American Crows.”

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“Our neighborhood park contains surprises sometimes such as the Chipping Sparrow (photo above), last seen on August 23, and the Cassin’s Vireo, last seen on July 22.  This last week we also have an Allen’s/Rufous Hummingbird visiting our feeder (below).”

Monica also reports a White-tailed Kite on September 5, and Band-tailed Pigeons nearly every week around her neighborhood.

Linden Skjeie (San Jose) observed eleven egrets flying together over her neighborhood at dusk in late August.  She’s also seen a Northern Harrier in her neighborhood recently, a first for her.

Anna’s Hummingbird, profiled against the blue sky, in Jon’s yard

Anna’s Hummingbird, profiled against the blue sky, in Jon’s yard

Jon Nuehring (Cupertino) tells us:  “Our yard has seen a lot of bird action in August.  But our most frequent visitors have certainly been Anna's Hummingbirds and Dark-eyed Juncos.”

Dark-eyed Junco foraging in Jon’s yard

Dark-eyed Junco foraging in Jon’s yard

Happy backyard birding in September!


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
(species in bold are new this month)

  1. Canada Goose

  2. Mallard

  3. Bufflehead

  4. California Quail

  5. Band-tailed Pigeon

  6. Mourning Dove

  7. Anna’s Hummingbird

  8. Allen’s/Rufous Hummingbird

  9. Gull species

  10. Great Blue Heron

  11. Great Egret

  12. Turkey Vulture

  13. White-tailed Kite

  14. Golden Eagle

  15. Northern Harrier

  16. Cooper’s Hawk

  17. Bald Eagle

  18. Red-shouldered Hawk

  19. Red-tailed Hawk

  20. Ferruginous Hawk (seen in winter 2020)

  21. Barn Owl

  22. Great Horned Owl

  23. Red-breasted Sapsucker

  24. Acorn Woodpecker

  25. Downy Woodpecker

  26. Nuttall’s Woodpecker

  27. Pileated Woodpecker

  28. Northern Flicker

  29. American Kestrel

  30. Merlin

  31. Pacific-slope Flycatcher

  32. Black Phoebe

  33. Say’s Phoebe

  34. Hutton’s Vireo

  35. Cassin’s Vireo

  36. Steller’s Jay

  37. California Scrub-Jay

  38. American Crow

  39. Common Raven

  40. Chestnut-backed Chickadee

  41. Oak Titmouse

  42. Tree Swallow

  43. Violet-green Swallow

  44. Bushtit

  45. Ruby-crowned Kinglet

  46. Red-breasted Nuthatch

  47. White-breasted Nuthatch

  48. Pygmy Nuthatch

  49. Brown Creeper

  50. Bewick’s Wren

  51. California Thrasher

  52. Northern Mockingbird

  53. Western Bluebird

  54. Varied Thrush

  55. Hermit Thrush

  56. American Robin

  57. Cedar Waxwing

  58. House Finch

  59. Purple Finch

  60. Pine Siskin

  61. Lesser Goldfinch

  62. American Goldfinch

  63. Chipping Sparrow

  64. Dark-eyed Junco

  65. White-crowned Sparrow

  66. Golden-crowned Sparrow

  67. White-throated Sparrow

  68. California Towhee

  69. Spotted Towhee

  70. Western Meadowlark

  71. Hooded Oriole

  72. Brown-headed Cowbird

  73. Yellow-rumped Warbler

  74. Townsend’s Warbler

  75. Black-headed Grosbeak

  76. Lazuli Bunting

All Around Town is compiled by SCVAS member Julie Amato.

Banner photo: Chestnut-backed Chickadee by Deanne Tucker