Project FeederWatch -- Week #19 Report 2021-2022 Season

in Feathered Friends2 years ago

This week's featured birds are an American Robin, Common Grackle, and Hairy Woodpecker.

I typically watch and count birds on Saturday and Sunday. This is my report for 19-20 March 2022.

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Bird Watching Notes

American Robin (Turdus migratorius, ORDER: Passeriformes, FAMILY: Turdidae)

Seeing an American Robin is usually the first indication that spring will come soon.

American Robin PFW03.jpg
Original Photos

American Robin PFW11.jpg
Original Photos

Range map for American Robins throughout North America.


Image Source

You can learn more about the American Robin at the "All About Birds" webpage.

Common Grackle (Quiscalus quiscula, ORDER: Passeriformes, FAMILY: Icteridae)

The Common Grackle is another sign that spring is just around the corner.

Common Grackle PFW14.jpg
Original Photos

Common Grackle PFW19.jpg
Original Photos

Range map for Common Grackles throughout North America.


Image Source

You can learn more about the Common Grackle at the "All About Birds" webpage.

Hairy Woodpecker (Dryobates villosus, ORDER: Piciformes, FAMILY: Picidae)

Hairy Woodpecker PFW20.jpg
Original Photos

Hairy Woodpecker PFW25.jpg
Original Photos

Range map for Hairy Woodpeckers throughout North America.


Image Source

You can learn more about the Hairy Woodpecker at the "All About Birds" webpage.

Bird Counts

My bird counts for the two-day period.

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Snapshot from Project FeederWatch Bird Count Summary

Summary of Counts This Season

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Snapshot from Project FeederWatch Bird Count Summary

Signing Up for a Season

Project FeederWatch is a great way to introduce children and adults to science and conservation through bird watching.

If you are interested in joining Project FeederWatch this season, you can learn more and sign-up at the Project FeederWatch website. During the season you will need to record your observations during two consecutive days each week.

Sources

All About Birds

Project FeederWatch -- Collecting Bird Counts for North American Continent

eBird -- Collecting Bird Counts from around the World

Crossley ID Guide -- For identifying the birds of North America

Use of Original Photos

The photographs in this post are free to be used by anyone as long as the photo credit is left on the photographs.

Equipment

Amazon Affiliate links provided to books and equipment for your convenience.

Thank You!

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The last time I was by hive was almost a year ago, I'm back today to see how it's going and you continue to post very detailed bird images.

If it wasn't for all the changes I'm finding on the platform I'd say time hasn't passed.!

Greetings my friend!

It is very good to have you back on HIVE!!

Have a great week!!
Hive On,
Mike

Thank you my friend!!

thank you very much for sharing the project, have a good day and a great mood

thank you very much for the post, have a good day and a great mood

Easily one of my favorite birds. They have so much personality and are very photogenic.

Beautiful birds, they are like beautiful flowers, from hundreds of beautiful flowers it is impossible to determine the best variety. All are beautiful.