All Around Town

BACKYARD BIRD OBSERVATIONS
FROM OUR MEMBERS AND FRIENDS

August was a quiet month for backyard birding, but also one of subtle seasonal change.  You observed our year-round residents going about their daily lives, but also marked the departure of some summer residents, like Hooded Orioles.  You photographed a Rufous or Allen’s Hummingbird, possibly passing through our area on its way south for the winter.  And you noticed a Western Bluebird with muted colors in its plumage, a sign that the nesting season is coming to a close and that we are beginning the transition to a cooler time of the year (hard as it is to imagine during the recent heat wave!).

Here are your observations for the month of August:

An Anna’s Hummingbird samples a plant at Kristin’s home.

Kristin Lynn (San Jose) writes: “I got a little salvia plant, and the hummingbirds love it!”

A young Hooded Oriole at Kristin’s hummingbird feeder.  Hooded Orioles like nectar and will attempt to feed at hummingbird feeders, in addition to visiting special nectar feeders for orioles.

She adds: “I also had an unusual visit from a Hooded Oriole twice in the same morning in late August.  It grabbed onto one of the salvia stalks (which completely bent over, but survived!) before trying earnestly to get into the side of the hummingbird feeder.  What a treat to enjoy a few moments in the presence of this beautiful bird!”

Carolyn Straub and Steve McHenry (San Jose) shared stories of the Hooded Orioles that visited their yard this year:

“The weekend of August 5-6 - about the time the orioles often leave for the season - a male Hooded Oriole brought two young orioles along with him to our orange feeder. That we have not seen before - an adult and two young. To top it off, the male was pecking back and forth at one of them on the feeder. The other perched in a side bush....maybe this was training for the road.”

Later, Carolyn wrote: “As our Hooded Oriole family prepared to leave mid-August: the very last time we saw them at the feeder, the adult male was gesturing to one of the young ones, looking at it and pointing with his beak frontward and then backward as if to say, ‘This is how you use the feeder and obtain your sugar water.’  The second fledge was sitting to the left side watching from a juniper bush. The next day they were gone! What would you think the male was saying to the young ones?”

The Rufous or Allen’s Hummingbird spotted by Deanne.  It is often not possible to tell these two species apart in the field.

Deanne Tucker says: “I don't have anything special from my backyard, but I did visit a friend who lives in Cupertino.  She has a Rufous or Allen’s Hummingbird that has been guarding her California fuschias.”

In late August, Jack Cole (San Jose) shared a first-of-the-season sighting for his yard.  He writes: “I don’t know how uncommon it is for this time of year, but a male Western Bluebird has been visiting my bird bath today.  It’s the first one I’ve seen that wasn’t in full breeding plumage.”

Emma Shelton (Menlo Park) says: “August has still been pretty busy around our place, although some birds come and go, and often come back again.  Depends on if you’re out there watching.  The numbers of Oak Titmice, Lesser Goldfinches, Chestnut-backed Chickadees, House Finches, Dark-eyed Juncos, White-breasted Nuthatches, Pygmy Nuthatches, and Mourning Doves have been pretty constant since June, and often it’s pretty noisy outside.”

A Downy Woodpecker visits Emma’s feeder.

Here’s Emma’s neighborhood list for August:

  • Canada Goose - We’re seeing and hearing them doing flyovers almost every day this month.  Have they resumed their back-to-work schedule of bay to golf courses? 

  • Rock Pigeon

  • Mourning Dove - We have dozens or more in the neighborhood.  It was nice to figure out from others on All Around Town what to look for!

  • Anna’s Hummingbird - We’re seeing more Anna’s these days, in our yard and in neighbors’ yards.  I keep the plants they like watered so they have some nectar and water.  

  • Gull species

  • Downy Woodpecker - Not so often these days, but did have a sighting on the feeder this month.

  • Nuttall’s Woodpecker

  • Black Phoebe - I’m getting one sighting a month in our yard.

  • California Scrub-Jay

  • American Crow

  • Violet-green Swallow - A few sightings at the beginning of August, but none since    

  • Chestnut-backed Chickadee - Lots 

  • Oak Titmouse - Lots

  • Bushtit - A flock came through a couple weeks ago.  Have to be outside at the right time of day.  

  • White-breasted Nuthatch - Lots

  • Pygmy Nuthatch - They went on a vacation for a few days, then all of a sudden, back again!  

  • Bewick’s Wren - Seeing and hearing a few every day.  I haven’t noticed our tail-less Bewick’s Wren again.

  • House Finch -  Lots

  • Lesser Goldfinch - Lots

  • Dark-eyed Junco - Lots

  • California Towhee - A lot

  • Spotted Towhee - Seeing several every day, and hearing them almost all the time.  Lots of juveniles too.

Happy backyard birding in September, everyone!


What birds are you seeing and hearing in your yard and neighborhood?

Send your stories, lists, photos, sketches, and videos 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

  1. Greater White-fronted Goose

  2. Canada Goose

  3. Mallard

  4. Bufflehead

  5. California Quail

  6. Wild Turkey

  7. Indian Peafowl (feral)

  8. Rock Pigeon

  9. Band-tailed Pigeon

  10. Eurasian Collared-Dove

  11. Mourning Dove

  12. Vaux’s Swift

  13. White-throated Swift

  14. Anna’s Hummingbird

  15. Rufous Hummingbird

  16. Allen’s Hummingbird

  17. Killdeer

  18. California Gull

  19. Great Blue Heron

  20. Great Egret

  21. Snowy Egret

  22. Black-crowned Night-Heron

  23. Turkey Vulture

  24. White-tailed Kite

  25. Golden Eagle

  26. Northern Harrier

  27. Sharp-shinned Hawk

  28. Cooper’s Hawk

  29. Bald Eagle

  30. Red-shouldered Hawk

  31. Red-tailed Hawk

  32. Ferruginous Hawk

  33. Barn Owl

  34. Western Screech-Owl

  35. Great Horned Owl

  36. Red-breasted Sapsucker

  37. Acorn Woodpecker

  38. Downy Woodpecker

  39. Nuttall’s Woodpecker

  40. Hairy Woodpecker

  41. Pileated Woodpecker

  42. Northern Flicker

  43. American Kestrel

  44. Merlin

  45. Olive-sided Flycatcher 

  46. Western Wood-Pewee

  47. Pacific-slope Flycatcher

  48. Black Phoebe

  49. Say’s Phoebe

  50. Western Kingbird

  51. Hutton’s Vireo

  52. Cassin’s Vireo

  53. Warbling Vireo

  54. Steller’s Jay

  55. California Scrub-Jay

  56. Yellow-billed Magpie

  57. American Crow

  58. Common Raven

  59. Chestnut-backed Chickadee

  60. Oak Titmouse

  61. Northern Rough-winged Swallow

  62. Tree Swallow

  63. Violet-green Swallow

  64. Barn Swallow

  65. Bushtit

  66. Wrentit

  67. Ruby-crowned Kinglet

  68. Red-breasted Nuthatch

  69. White-breasted Nuthatch

  70. Pygmy Nuthatch

  71. Brown Creeper

  72. House Wren

  73. Bewick’s Wren

  74. European Starling

  75. California Thrasher

  76. Northern Mockingbird

  77. Western Bluebird

  78. Varied Thrush

  79. Hermit Thrush

  80. American Robin

  81. Cedar Waxwing

  82. Scaly-breasted Munia

  83. House Sparrow

  84. House Finch

  85. Purple Finch

  86. Pine Siskin

  87. Lesser Goldfinch

  88. Lawrence’s Goldfinch

  89. American Goldfinch

  90. Chipping Sparrow

  91. Dark-eyed Junco

  92. White-crowned Sparrow

  93. Golden-crowned Sparrow

  94. White-throated Sparrow

  95. Savannah Sparrow

  96. Lincoln’s Sparrow

  97. California Towhee

  98. Spotted Towhee

  99. Western Meadowlark

  100. Hooded Oriole

  101. Bullock’s Oriole

  102. Brown-headed Cowbird

  103. Orange-crowned Warbler

  104. Yellow Warbler

  105. Yellow-rumped Warbler

  106. Townsend’s Warbler

  107. Wilson’s Warbler

  108. Western Tanager

  109. Black-headed Grosbeak

  110. Lazuli Bunting

Hybrid ducks, domestic ducks, unidentified gull species, and Rufous/Allen’s Hummingbirds have also been reported to All Around Town.

All Around Town is compiled by SCVAS Member Julie Amato.

Banner Photo: Rufous or Allen’s Hummingbird by Deanne Tucker