8 December 2025

Posts Tagged ‘roc pigeon’

Gully Birds

Saturday, August 7th, 2021
Portrait of Cooper’s Hawk (imm.), East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 07 August 2021.
Portrait of Cooper’s Hawk (imm.).

More smoke in the air this morning, but not nearly as smoky as yesterday. Still, dog and I hiked early (in the cool, cool air) and kept it rather short. Still, as always, there were birds.

Three hummingbird species again today. Cooper’s Hawks again (one posing agreeably nearby). The surprise birds included Warbling Vireo and Black-throated Gray warbler—near where they both surely nested, up the leafy gully a ways. (I saw all these species there, in fact.)

Not many birds down in the neighborhood—although the red-tail stood sentinel late in the day on its utility pole toward town.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 7:04 a.m. (8:04 MDT), I hiked a few hundred feet up a mountain.

1. House Finch*
2. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay
3. Black-chinned Hummingbird
4. Lesser Goldfinch* (v)
5. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
6. Mourning Dove
7. Broad-tailed Hummingbird
8. Lazuli Bunting
9. Cooper’s Hawk
10. Black-capped Chickadee (v)
11. Warbling Vireo
12. Rufous Hummingbird
13. Black-throated Gray Warbler
14. Spotted Towhee (v)
15. Black-billed Magpie*
16. American Robin* (v)

Elsewhere

17. Rock Pigeon
18. Eurasian Collared-dove
19. Red-tailed Hawk

Mammals

Red Squirrel
Rock Squirrel

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

Observations

Thursday, July 29th, 2021
Broad-tailed Hummingbird, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 29 July 2021.
Broad-tailed Hummingbird.

This morning was kinda cool—not only temperature-wise, but birding-wise. E.g., a random Olive-sided Flycatcher appeared out of nowhere and perched at the top of the tallest Russian Olive (no great photo, alas). And a good-sized flock of Lesser Goldfinches showed up out of the (literal) blue.

But most cool wasd my first-ever look at hummingbird parent dealing with hummingbird youngsters. The gully had broad-tails again, but this time I saw more than one—three, in fact. It wasn’t a close look, and I wasn’t exactly positive what was going on, but it sure looked like a busy adult was dealing (not always patiently) with a pair of fledglings. Twitters were uttered, and tailes were flashed. It was some fun.

(Back at the house, the little quail family remains obsessed with the garden out front. Also a fun distraction.)

No rain today. Now crossing my fingers for the weekend.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 6:57 a.m. (7:57 MDT), I hiked a few hundred feet up a mountain.

1. Lazuli Bunting
2. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay
3. Black-capped Chickadee**
4. House Finch*
5. Black-chinned Hummingbird
6. Olive-sided Flycatcher
7. Mourning Dove
8. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
9. Broad-tailed Hummingbird
10. Black-throated Gray Warbler
11. Lesser Goldfinch**
12. Black-billed Magpie*
13. Rock Pigeon*
14. Cooper’s Hawk (v)

Elsewhere

15. California Quail
16. House Sparrow
17. Eurasian Collared-dove

Mammals

Red Squirrel

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

The Solitaire

Friday, January 8th, 2021
Townsend’s Solitaire, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 08 January 2021.
Townsend’s Solitaire.
Townsend’s Solitaire, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 08 January 2021.
The Solitaire.

This quiet, clear morning, in the mountain shade, just as dog and I reached Coyote Canyon, a.k.a., “the gully,” a silent bird flitted up the trail in front of us. It was plain, but I glimpsed of a flash of white. “Could that’ve been a solitaire?” I asked myself. On our ascent, I caught sight of the bird again but couldn’t ID it.d

Three or four minutes and about a hundred yards later, I heard a faint, animated warbling song. It sounded like it was coming from the south slope above us. It also sounded familiar—like the song of a Townsend’s Solitaire. Too far up there, I thought, and memorized bits of the song to look up later.

Thirty seconds and maybe a dozen paces later, the direction of the song had changed. Now it came from behind us. I stopped, turned, scanned the treetops—and there, atop a juniper, perched a Townsend’s Solitaire. The bird was singing. Very, very softly, almost like a whisper.

I got a couple photos before it left its perch, and we continued up the gully and turned onto the deer trail. (Our daily route.) A few minutes later, I glanced down among the junipers until I found the solitaire’s tree. There it was perched there again. I couldn’t resist creeping down a different deer trail until I got near enough for another pic or two.

Pretty sure it’s the same bird I’ve seen there three or four other times the past several weeks. I really, really, like Townsend’s Solitaires.

Even so, my most thrilling sighting today happened earlier, on our short drive up to the trailhead: a Long-tailed Weasel, in its full-white winter coat (aside from black-tipped tail), dashing across the street in front of us and diving into a residential hedge.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 8:58 a.m. (MST), I hiked several hundred feet up a mountain.

1. Black-billed Magpie**
2. House Finch*
3. Black-capped Chickadee*
4. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay*
5. Rock Pigeon*
6. Spotted Towhee**
7. Townsend’s Solitaire

Elsewhere

8. House Sparrow

Mammals

Long-tailed Weasel
Red Squirrel

*Also elsewhere
**Voice only elsewhere

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



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