6 April 2026

Posts Tagged ‘spotted towhee’

Juncos & Towhees

Sunday, March 8th, 2020
Spotted Towhee, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 08 March 2020.
Spotted Towhee.
Dark-eyed Junco, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 08 March 2020.
Dark-eyed Junco.

A gray, warmish, muddy, springlike day. Got to the trailhead at late morning under a mostly overcast sky. Saw elk, deer, dogs, and humans—and ten bird species.

Two of the species were towhee and junco. These two bring me back more than fifty years, to when I was in junior high school in North Carolina. My mother kept a backyard feeder back then, and I remember her being impressed one day by two new birds that had come by. She must’ve looked them up in a book. Towhee and junco. I remember thinking what curious bird names those were.

That former was an Eastern Towhee, of course, and the one I saw today was a spotted Towhee. But they’re very much alike, as are all the assorted races of Dark-eyed Junco that inhabit North America.

Still and all I remember my mom’s muted excitement at identifying those two new birds. Likely she had a lot to do with my being a birder.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 11:15 a.m. (DST), I hiked a few hundred feet up the mountain.

1. Black-billed Magpie*
2. Northern Flicker** (v)
3. Black-capped Chickadee
4. American Robin*
5. House Finch* (v)
6. Dark-eyed Junco*
7. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay**
8. Golden Eagle
9. Spotted Towhee
10. Townsend’s Solitaire
11. Downy Woodpecker

Elsewhere

12. European Starling
13. Lesser Goldfinch

Mammals

Rocky Mountain Elk
Mule Deer

(v) Voice only
*Also elsewhere

**Voice only elsewhere

Crows

Friday, March 6th, 2020
American Crows mobbing Golden Eagle, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 06 March 2020.
American Crows mobbing Golden Eagle.

Before this morning, I’d listed American Crow just three times on my daily bird list—twice, small silent groups of crows in parking lots in town, and once the caws of a crow I heard from the mountainside. It’s been eerie to me not to be surrounded by crows daily, as I was in Maine.

Imagine my surprise, ascending the trail with Captain Jack this morning, when I heard the caws of more than one crow somewhere off in the warm hazy air behind me. I turned and saw four crows, flying fast, apparently distressed about something. They circled back over the city

A couple minutes later, I heard them again, turned again—and this time saw them mobbing a Golden Eagle (much as crows mobbed Bald Eagles back east). The eagle flew quickly away from such folderol.

The whole scene thrilled me (rather more than it should have, probably).

Singing towhees, chickadees, house finches, and juncos; a circling sharpie, elk high on a ridge, and a couple yearling mule deers along the street out from of my house. All in all a good day for wildlife generally.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 9 a.m., I hiked a few hundred feet up the mountain.

1. American Robin* (v)
2. Black-billed Magpie*
3. House Finch*
4. Dark-eyed Junco*
5. Black-capped Chickadee
6. Spotted Towhee
7. Sharp-shinned Hawk
8. American Crow
9. Golden Eagle
10. Northern Flicker**
11. Song Sparrow** (v)
12. California Quail (v)
13. Pine Siskin
14. Downy Woodpecker (v)

Elsewhere

15. Eurasian Collared Dove
16. European Starling

Mammals

Rocky Mountain Elk
Mule Deer

(v) Voice only
*Also elsewhere

**Voice only elsewhere

Chasing Towhees

Wednesday, March 4th, 2020
Spotted Towhee, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 04 March 2020.
Spotted Towhee.

Dog and I hit the trail at 9 a.m. this cloudless morning. (Seriously not a single cloud in the sky.) Encountered a herd of elk and quite a few birds—including a couple of towhees.

Not that Spotted Towhees are rare here—I’ve seen two or three this winter—but I was proud to be able to recognize their whiny call more than once today. In both instances I spotted the bird.

First on the high trail, when I heard the whine down in the scrub oak. Next, nearing the end of our hike, when I heard the whining bird down along the lower trail somewhere.

And I actually tracked it down.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 9 a.m., I hiked a few hundred feet up the mountain.

1. Black-billed Magpie*
2. Lesser Goldfinch** (v)
3. Song Sparrow* (v)
4. Dark-eyed Junco
5. Black-capped Chickadee**
6. American Robin* (v)
7. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay*
8. Spotted Towhee
9. House Finch*
10. European Starling*

Elsewhere

11. Rock Pigeon
12. Red-tailed Hawk

Mammals

Rocky Mountain Elk

(v) Voice only
*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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