5 December 2025

Posts Tagged ‘evening grosbeak’

A Between Season

Thursday, November 17th, 2022
Downy Woodpecker, Beech Hill Preserve, Rockport, Maine, 17 November 2022.
Downy Woodpecker.

Autumn is close to two-thirds over. This day was about half-clear, not too breezy, and right about freezing when dog and I started up the wooded trail. Not a mad rush of birdies about—chickadees were probably best represented again—but enough to keep me on my toes.

Couple corvids, couple woodpeckers, couple finches. Then, at one point on our descent through the woods, I heard the distinctive voices of grosbeaks—Evening Grosbeaks.

I thought I’d heard some a week or two (or three?) ago, but I couldn’t be sure. And the fact that I cant recall seeing any at all in decades made me doubt it anyway. But these—these birds awakened my memories of all the grosbeaks that used to hang out around here when I first moved to the Maine coast. Even got a glimpse of yellow as they flew overhead.

Compared the sounds on my GoPro video with the Cornell Lab’s snippets, and I have no doubt that’s what they were. Cool. Was the highlight of our good hike, pretty much, on this day in the latter half of fall.

Beech Hill List
Beginning at 7:19 a.m., I hiked all trails.

1. American Crow*
2. Blue Jay (v)
3. Black-capped Chickadee**
4. Hairy Woodpecker
5. American Goldfinch
6. Red-breasted Nuthatch (v)
7. Yellow-rumped Warbler (v)
8. Downy Woodpecker
9. Evening Grosbeak†
10. Eastern Bluebird (v)
11. American Robin (v)

Mammals

Eastern Gray Squirrel

(v) Voice only
*Also elsewhere
**Voice only elsewhere

†First-of-year

Surprise Bird

Monday, May 17th, 2021

A lovely hike with dog this clear, birdy morning. Before we’d barely left the switchback, in fact, I had more than a dozen species on my list—including a strange, unexpected bird perched in the big Russian olive tree.

A huge-beaked bird it was, but no Black-headed Grosbeak. Every several seconds it emitted a single bright note, a call I didn’t recognize. Had to be another grosbeak, but which could it be? Not until we got back home and I searched the Cornell Lab site for Utah grosbeaks did I realize what I’d seen: an Evening Grosbeak, a female or immature male.

. Every several seconds it emitted a single bright note, a call I didn’t recognize. Had to be another grosbeak, but which could it be? Not until we got back home and I searched the Cornell Lab site for Utah grosbeaks did I realize what I’d seen: an Evening Grosbeak, a female or immature male.

Decades ago, back in Maine, great flocks of Evening Grosbeaks descended during winter irruptions, and I got to know them very well. And then one year they didn’t return, and I hadn’t seen one since. Not in a span of at least 30 years—and never, I think, a solo individual.

Good to see you, great-beaked bird. I hope you find more of your kind.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 7:05 a.m. (8:05 MDT), I hiked a few hundred feet up a mountain.

1. Song Sparrow** (v)
2. Lazuli Bunting
3. Lesser Goldfinch** (v)
4. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay
5. Red-breasted Nuthatch (v)
6. Spotted Towhee
7. Black-chinned Hummingbird
8. American Robin* (v)
9. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
10. Evening Grosbeak†
11. Chipping Sparrow
12. Rock Wren
13. Rock Pigeon (2)
14. Black-capped Chickadee
15. Warbling Vireo (v)
16. Black-billed Magpie* (v)
17. Black-throated Gray Warbler (v)
18. Orange-crowned Warbler (v)
19. Hermit Thrush
20. House Finch
21. Black-headed Grosbeak
22. Turkey Vulture

Elsewhere

23. House Sparrow
24. Eurasian Collared-dove (v)

Mammals

Red Squirrel
Rock Squirrel

(v) Voice only
*Also elsewhere
**Voice only elsewhere
†First-of-year bird

 
Bird Report is a (sometimes intermittent) record of the birds I encounter while hiking, see while driving, or spy outside my window. —Brian Willson



3IP Logo
©1997–2025 by 3IP