• About the Author

  • All original content on this weblog, including the archives, is licensed under a Creative Commons License and is copyrighted by the author. Images may not be used without permission.

Reading online




« ennui and immortality | Main | bird flu and wild birds »

07 February 2006

Comments

John

Grackles, phoebes, and catbirds aren't good harbingers of spring for me since I have seen all of these in the first week of the year. Usually the arrival of tree swallows is a better sign, since these come in large numbers around the end of March.

P.M.Bryant

Here in south Texas, it ain't spring until the robins disappear.

The scissor-tailed flycatchers are our harbingers (well, mine, at least).

Pamela

For me it's the red-winged blackbird that signals spring, even though there are apparently some wintering not far from me (I hear reports--I haven't seen them). Spring is when the flocks arrive and I hear the first one sing.

Home Bird

Hi Nuthatch: Nice to see you pick up this thread, provide more info, and post some excellent maps. I started paying attention to birds as a child in the Berkshires in Western Massachusetts, where winters were colder and longer than here or in central Michigan where I was born (and where you are, I think). I don't remember robins in Western Mass in winter. Further south I have certainly seen them occasionally all year. But this year there seem to have been many more than usual (from what I gather from people who have been here longer than me). After my first post about them I later saw a flock of 40 or so flying overhead.

The temps here have been way above normal--several spells near 70 for days in a row in January. I'm not counting on it lasting (and don't particularly want it to--although the occasional nice day is a gift, too many seem odd and unnatural to me). I haven't been here long enough to know what the real harbingers of spring should be, but I will be looking for the osprey which were overhead every day last summer.

Rurality

Even in Alabama people will still tell you that Robins "return in the spring"! I think people just start feeling spring-ish, look out their windows, and say, "Hey, Robins! It must be spring..." Most people who don't look for birds don't really see birds.

For me, "spring is here" when I hear a waterthrush.

Clare

About 6 or 7 years ago a Robin was found in Iqaluit, and it probably fared better than the barn swallow I saw here in Arctic Bay in early June my first year here. There wasn't much in the way of flying insects for him at that time of the year.

When I was in Ft Providence, one of the best harbingers of spring were the Mountain Bluebirds. Suddenly there was a profusuion of blue against the remaining snow banks. Of course eagles made back well before them.

Up here, I guess it would be the Snow Buntings that announce our spring.

TroutGrrrl

Like Pamela, I also feel more 'springy' when I begin hearing red-winged blackbirds. And tree swallows. We have robins almost year-round on campus - they hang around the greenhouses where the exhaust fans keep the ground warmer, and presumably, buggier.

Hey, swanky new address Nutty!

Dave

The robin also visits here. Unfortunatly spring is a little ways off yet. Our temps have been above freezing during the day though.

The comments to this entry are closed.

Well, search me!