It hasn’t been a good year for much, but I did get a lot of birding in. Traditionally, on new year’s day, I post my “yard list” from the previous year: a list of all the bird species I’ve personally observed from my yard.
At my new house, I now have a full calendar year of observations. You’ll recall I moved to Albemarle from Shenandoah halfway through the previous year, meaning I only had a half-year’s worth of Albemarle observations to report. Notably absent was the species that passed through during spring migration. Here, that issue is rectified, and I am pleased to present a bumper crop and a new “personal best” number.
In chronological order of species’ first appearance, this year I saw:
- Blue jay
- American crow
- Pileated woodpecker
- Northern mockingbird
- White-throated sparrow
- Carolina wren
- Mourning dove
- Golden-crowned kinglet
- Dark-eyed junco
- Carolina chickadee
- Pine siskin
- Northern cardinal
- Yellow-bellied sapsucker
- Eastern bluebird
- Northern flicker
- White-breasted nuthatch
- Turkey vulture
- Belted kingfisher
- Raven
- Canada geese
- Tufted titmouse
- American goldfinch
- Red-shouldered hawk
- Great blue heron
- American robin
- Black vulture
- Downy woodpecker
- Song sparrow
- Eastern phoebe
- Cedar waxwing
- Hermit thrush
- Common grackle
- Eastern screech owl
- Red-tailed hawk
- Barred owl
- Pine warbler
- Fish crow
- Red-winged blackbird
- Yellow-rumped warbler
- Wood duck
- Brown thrasher
- Brown-headed cowbird
- Chipping sparrow
- Eastern towhee
- Red-breasted nuthatch
- Green heron
- Field sparrow
- Northern harrier
- Tree swallow
- Ruby-crowned kinglet
- Purple finch
- Ruby-throated hummingbird
- Merlin
- Osprey
- European starling
- Wild turkey
- Broad-winged hawk
- Barn swallow
- Gray catbird
- Great crested flycatcher
- Blue-headed vireo
- Blue-gray gnatcatcher
- Worm-eating warbler
- Baltimore oriole
- Chimney swift
- Scarlet tanager
- Chestnut-sided warbler
- Blackpoll warbler
- Louisiana waterthrush
- Orchard oriole
- Red-eyed vireo
- Northern parula
- Indigo bunting
- Black-throated green warbler
- Bald eagle
- Eastern wood-pewee
- Spotted sandpiper
- Common yellowthroat
- American redstart
- Rose-breasted grosbeak
- Blue grosbeak
- Wood thrush
- Yellow-billed cuckoo
- Eastern kingbird
- Black-billed cuckoo
- Common nighthawk
- Golden eagle
A few thoughts about this list:
- It’s larger by ~20 species than even my best year at the Fort Valley house.
- I benefit here with more diverse habitat: more open country for grassland-preferring species (though I’m shocked I didn’t get a meadowlark or a kestrel) and a lake that draws in some waterfowl like the sandpiper, ducks, and herons. I’m also at lower elevation and on the seaward side of the Blue Ridge, which both facilitate a milder climate.
- Hummingbirds are NUTS here; it’s so delightful to watch their sipping and sparring each evening in the summer.
- I would not have thought I would ever see a golden eagle here, but I got clued in by watching the daily reports of the Rockfish Gap Hawk Watch during fall migration, where they document a healthy number of them. I only had one, and it flew over for only about 20 seconds, but I had my binoculars and got a solid look at it.
- The black-billed cuckoo (my first) was, sadly, a window-kill. This surprised me – we don’t get window-smacking birds nearly as much here as we did with the big plate glass windows at our Fort Valley house.
- I’ve been using the eBird app on my phone to keep regular lists; I find it motivates me to take walks: I’m not only getting exercise, I’m also birding and documenting what I see.
- I still have so much to learn about birding, and just took the step of joining a local birding club for the first time. Hopefully the skills I learn there will help me identify more species this coming year.
Our one and only cuckoo (yellow billed) was also a window strike fatality. So sad.
Susan K
Very impressive, Callan!