6 April 2026

Posts Tagged ‘black-chinned hummingbird’

Vireo

Monday, June 1st, 2020
Warbling Vireo, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 01 June 2020.
Warbling Vireo.

For the past two or three weeks, in one particular stretch of trail dog and I hike daily, I’ve heard and/or seen at least one Warbling Vireo. I’ve really begun to like these birds a lot.

Back in Maine, before I moved out west, I encountered only a few Warbling Vireos. Not that they’re uncommon—but they clearly like the landscape hereabouts. They seem to like to hang out in bigtooth maples. And usually I hear a pair of them (today there were three) singing their warbly, un-vireo-like tune to each other, declaring their territory.

That tune has grown on me. It’s a fairly rapid warble, a bit House Finch–like but not very long, typically ending on a rising note. It’s subtle, though. As is the bird itself. Stays deep in the leaves. Doesn’t flit about too much, so they’re easy to miss.

This morning it took me ten or fifteen minutes of waiting quietly in one place to get a photo.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 7:30 a.m., I hiked several hundred feet up a mountain.

1. American Robin* (v)
2. Black-headed Grosbeak
3. Black-billed Magpie*
4. Black-chinned Hummingbird
5. Lazuli Bunting
6. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
7. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay
8. Spotted Towhee
9. Rock Pigeon*
10. Black-capped Chickadee (v)
11. House Finch**
12. Warbling Vireo
13. Chipping Sparrow (v)
14. MacGillivray’s Warbler
15. Orange-crowned Warbler (v)
16. Song Sparrow*
17. Turkey Vulture

Elsewhere

18. House Sparrow
19. Mourning Dove
20. California Quail

Mammals

None

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

Gnatcatchers

Sunday, May 31st, 2020
Gnatcatcher on the nest, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 31 May 2020.
Gnatcatcher on the nest.

The magpies have fledged. Pretty sure the scrub-jays, too. Certainly the starlings have. But up on the mountain trails, a few species have yet to build their nests—or have just built them, just laid, or are still incubating eggs (or warming nestlings). Gnatcatchers are still sitting on the nest I found.

I expect the youngsters to start making subtle begging sounds any day now. The adults are surely making plenty of noise when a human and/or a dog come near. Or, heaven forbid, a scrub-jay: Today I watched a tiny Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher dive-bomb a jay that had dared to approach to near its nest. Over and over. It drove that big bird a good hundred feet away, at least.

I admire the feisty little gnatcatchers. Not sure the gnats agree.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 8:30 a.m., I hiked several hundred feet up a mountain.

1. Song Sparrow** (v)
2. Black-headed Grosbeak
3. Rock Pigeon
4. California Quail*
5. European Starling* (v)
6. Lazuli Bunting
7. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay
8. Black-capped Chickadee
9. Lesser Goldfinch (v)
10. Northern Flicker (v)
11. Black-billed Magpie*
12. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
13. Spotted Towhee
14. Black-chinned Hummingbird*
15. American Robin*
16. House Finch**
17. Orange-crowned Warbler (v)
18. Warbling Vireo (v)
19. Chipping Sparrow (v)
20. Black-throated Gray Warbler (v)
21. MacGillivray’s Warbler
22. Pine Siskin (v)

Elsewhere

23. Mourning Dove (v)

Mammals

Rock Pigeon

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

Warblers, Revisited

Saturday, May 30th, 2020
MacGillivray’s Warbler, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 30 May 2020.
MacGillivray’s Warbler.
Black-throated Gray Warbler, East Millcreek, Salt Lake City, Utah, 30 May 2020.
Black-throated Gray Warbler.

Today was the first scorcher of the year. Dog and I got to the trailhead a bit late, but already the temperature (in the shade) was well up into the 70s (F). And by the time we returned a couple hours later, the sun had warmed things by at least ten degrees or so.

Still quite a bit of bird activity. Plenty of buntings and towhees and hummingbirds and gnatcatchers. And, along stretch of trail in the shady valley area, the two warblers we see on the regular: MacGillivray’s and black-throated gray. A shoutout to those two guys.

Yep, a scorcher. Still no rattlesnakes, though.

Grandeur Peak Area List
Beginning at 8 a.m., I hiked several hundred feet up a mountain.

1. Song Sparrow** (v)
2. Black-billed Magpie*
3. Lazuli Bunting
4. American Robin*
5. Rock Pigeon
6. Black-headed Grosbeak
7. Pine Siskin (v)
8. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
9. Spotted Towhee
10. Black-chinned Hummingbird
11. California Quail*
12. Woodhouse’s Scrub-jay
13. House Finch*
14. Warbling Vireo
15. MacGillivray’s Warbler
16. Chipping Sparrow (v)
17. Black-throated Gray Warbler
18. Golden Eagle
19. Sharp-shinned Hawk
20. Black-capped Chickadee** (v)

Elsewhere

21. European Starling
22. House Sparrow

Mammals

None

(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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