Friday, December 21, 2018

December 2018

The month of December was memorable for the first Rosy-finches in Arizona since 2000. I was worried that I was going to miss out as most of the local birders headed to see them as soon as they were found, while I was tied to my desk during Finals Week. Luckily Chuck was going back for another look and I went with him and John Coons to see the birds on Friday December 14th. We had our first glimpse of the flock of about 80 birds at 8:30, and had to wait until 10:00 before they returned to feed for about half an hour. They disappeared for about an hour before giving us our closest views - some within 6 feet. The flock consisted of 2 Black-crowneds with the rest Blacks.

The next day I headed towards Tucson where I was to pick up my son from the airport. I spent Saturday night in Casa Grande, and spent 3 hours on Sunday December 16th on the Santa Cruz Flats. Luck was very much with me and I added 5 species for the year in that time. My first stop was at Sunland Gin and Pearce where dozens of Black Vultures and Crested Caracaras had been seen recently. I only had 3 and 1 respectively, but that was good enough for my year list. I then drove down Greene Reservoir Road where I had flushed a Prairie Falcon which was perched close to the road, and then shortly afterwards had a Ferruginous Hawk fly by. That was 4 year-bird raptors in about half an hour! A stop at the sod farm, a place where I had not always been lucky, yielded 56 Mountain Plovers actively feeding on the brightest green. On Monday December 17th my son and I went to Reid Park where we ran into a Cassin's Kingbird on route to a stake-out spot for a Greater Pewee that my son noticed in the pines near the playground.

The following day my son noticed a Brown Creeper on my feeder, my first in Arizona for 2019. This bird, and a sometimes a second one, were daily visitors after that.

On my only California trip earlier in the month I went to Shoreline Park - to add Barrow's Goldeneye to my Santa Clara list - and walked the dyke between Salt Pond A1 and Charleston Slough where over 5000 Northern Shovelers were the highlight. The following day, Saturday December 8th my wife and I walked around he Santa Clara Water District where I again failed to find the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker or Scaly-breasted Munias. I did see a female Purple Finch drinking from a puddle; my only year bird that weekend.


November 2018

The month of November included what has become a regular trip to the northwest to see my son (22nd-24th), with Northwestern Crows and Trumpeter Swans easy to find along the highways. There were no owls this year, but Stanley Park, Vancouver yielded large numbers of Barrow's Goldeneye and three Harlequin Ducks, while a Long-tailed Duck flew past us at Zuanich Point in Bellingham. I also added Golden-crowned Kinglet and Swamp Sparrow for the year.

I did not get to bird too much on a couple of trips to San Jose, but I did chase after an American Golden Plover that had been seen at Alviso EEC entrance road on November 10th. There was a crowd of birders there when we arrived -including Sergio and Garrett, many having searched for the bird for quite some time. I was in luck and someone spotted the bird back towards Spreckles Pond and I added what was possibly a lifer to my list. A Ruddy Turnstone that had also been around eluded everyone that day. Later in the month, on the 21st, Sergio and I spent a morning at Laguna where we had almost given up scanning for Mountain Bluebirds only to find them right along the road itself, and at the water district where Sergio took me straight to the Red-breasted Sapsucker's tree. This was the first time I had seen this species in two years.

Closer to home I did a trip down to Sedona on November 3rd to add some year birds to my Coconino list, and as well as finding Gila Woodpecker, Northern cardinal, Bridled Titmouse and my jinx bird Canyon Towhee, I found a female Williamson's Sapsucker in a juniper in the Brewer Road neighborhood. Two weeks later I headed out on a successful chase, first to Ashurst Lake to add Red-breasted Merganser for the year, and to Mormon Lake to add Ross's Goose to my county year list.

October 2018

My first real chance to bird in the month of October was around Lake Tahoe on October 12th. My wife and I went to Taylor Creek to see the salmon run - no black bears - and saw a local specialty, White-headed Woodpeckers as well as high elevation birds such as Red-breasted and Pygmy Nuthatches and Mountain Chickadees. Efforts to find Sooty Grouse or Mountain Quail were again to no avail, and we also dipped on Black-billed Magpie. On the 13th we took a cruise on the lake on a paddle steamer and found the lake to be lacking in birds. Vegetation and fish are well below the surface and only in one cove did we find a few birds such as Pied-billed Grebe.

Back home the following weekend, I went with Tom and Kathryn on October 20th and found things much more quiet than on my September visit. The highlight was a group of gulls, with 4 obvious Ring-billeds, 2 Franklins (my first of the year) and a large brown immature gull. We spent a couple of hours looking at the gulls and their relative sizes trying for better looks at the large gull. We left having penciled this in as a Herring Gull, got excited when Lauren replied to a first photo saying it could be an Iceland, but after others went out the following morning to find the bird more cooperative and posing for better photos, it was decided that it was a small-billed Herring Gull.

I returned to San Jose the following weekend and on the 26th I went to Alviso chasing some rare birds. Ina a remarkable half hour I quickly found the Pacific Golden Plover - only my second ever - and the Ruff. The latter was much more cooperative than it had been for em in either of the previous two years, and I saw this bird again on subsequent trips. I then found the bird that I took to be the immature Pectoral Sandpiper, but my photo of the bird turned out to be a Least Sandpiper and was rejected by the local eBird authority; but my bird was larger than the peeps around it and I suspect I took a picture of the wrong bird using my point-and-shoot camera! I then saw a Stilt Sandpiper in the Spreckles pond and even posted for the first time to the list serve. However my description on eBird was insufficient for the local eBird authority and this was later rejected, although another birder had confirmed my sighting.

September 2018

The month of September

Friday, August 17, 2018

August 2018

I returned to San Jose on Thursday July 26th.

Pelagic Cormorant

Pigeon Guillemot
Fischer's Lovebird


Faversham, Rainham, Hanningfield and Leicester

On July

Little Owl
Black-winged Stilt
Peregrine

Ruddy Turnstones



Great Yarmouth and Canterbury

On July 8th my brother drove my mother and I to Great Yarmouth where we stayed for three days before taking the train home.

Black-legged Kittiwake

Rose-ringed Parakeet
Brown Rat

First Days in the UK

I arrived at Gatwick on June 20th

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

San Jose in May and early June

I returned to San Jose for an extended period on May 14th, and on a walk along the creek found that Forster's and Caspian Terns were in, and the Pied-billed Grebes had young.

Forster's Tern
Pied-billed Grebe


I spent time chasing after year bids and had my FOY Lazuli Bunting on Tuesday May 15th, Vaux's Swift on Friday 18th, a Pacific-slope Flycatcher on Wednesday 23rd and a Warbling Vireo on Thursday 24th. My wife and I went to Stanford on Saturday May 19th and stopped at Arastradero for a hike where we ran into a (Western) Northern Pacific Rattlesnake.

On Thursday 31st May I went to Ulistac where a number of interesting birds had been reported.I ran into Sergio and Garrett while there and they found a hooded Oriole for me (by sound). I also saw a new county bird - an Olive-sided Flycatcher - while there. On a very hot Saturday June 2nd my wife and I headed to Sanborn County Park where I added two more year birds - Cassin's Vireo and Western Tanager.

Moss Landing in April and May

On Saturday April 21st my wife and I made our first trip of the year to the coast, and we spent a couple of hours along Jetty Road and the Beach at Moss Landing. We saw all the things we had expected to except Brown Pelicans. The only loon was a Pacific Loon. A surprise was a single Brant near the gulls in the harbour.


We returned when our son was visiting on Saturday May 26th, and this time the Brown Pelicans were back. There were a few Heerman's Gulls on the pier across the harbor, and both Common and Red-throated Loons (but no Pacific.)

Red-throated Loon
Surf Scoter

Santa Teresa County Park

On Friday April 20th I went to the far side of Santa Teresa County Park, by Calero Reservoir following a number of excited posts on the listserve regarding a Calliope Hummingbird.

When I arrived there were a couple of people who had seen the bird, and others looking. In the first hour the bird did not return but I had seen a Rufous Hummingbird go by. I was reminded that Grasshopper Warblers were along the fence line at the top of the slope and I was able to add that species, as well as (a singing) Horned Lark and some Lark Sparrows to my list. Coming back down I ran into a couple from San Francisco and eventually the Calliope Hummingbird came along and gave us close views. That gave me a total of five new county birds for the morning, and took me over the magic 200.

On Saturday April 21st, my wife and I took a late afternoon hike at the Coyote Valley Open Space Reserve. It wasn't particularly birdy but we saw a Western Kingbird as we started off from the car park, and a couple of cooperative Rock Wrens when we returned. We saw a Ring-necked Snake and a Western Black-headed Snake on the 4-mile loop.

Rock Wren
Western Kingbird

Monday, June 4, 2018

Tucson trip


I had to present at an after school workshop on Friday April 6th, and so I drove down on Thursday evening and spent a long morning out and about. The first stop was (of course) Paton's where the Violet-crowned and Broad-billed Hummingbirds did not disappoint, and had luck with many summer birds - Black-headed Grosbeaks, Bullock's Orioles, Plumbeous Vireos, Lucy's Warblers, Green-tailed Towhees and other things that would make their way towards Flagstaff soon,


Green-tailed Towhee

I continued around the loop and stopped at Santa Gertrudis Lane on the look out for Rufous-backed Robins and Ruddy-Ground Doves along the De Anza Trail. But I wasn't quite sure exactly where to look and dipped on both. It was also getting hot, and I passed on stopping to try for the Rose-throated Becard, which is notoriously tough.

On Saturday April 7th I started the day at Madera Canyon, taking my favorite hike from Proctor Road to the Kubo and back. I found the usual birds in the usual places - Bell's Vireos at Proctor, Wild Turkeys at the Lodge - and an Arizona Woodpecker just along the road - and a Rivoli's Hummingbird at the Kubo. I didn't have time to head to the Carrie Nation trail because I had tickets for the opera in Phoenix, and it was really too hot on my short stop at Sweetwater.

Flagstaff in March and April

Arizona's dry winter meant that we continued to get unusual birds in the area. On March 5th I got to see the Vermilion Flycatcher at Frances Short Pond, but I dipped on the Louisiana Waterthrush that BB and Kathie found at the Walnut Canyon Ponds on April 1st, and which stayed around until the 4th. I looked for it on the 4th without luck, but did see yet another Vermilion Flycatcher, and a Neotropic Cormorant.

Vermilion Flycatcher
Of course many summer birds were arriving and I saw Painted Redstarts at Cave Springs on March 31st, and Red-faced Warblers on April 28th among many others.

Portland, Oregon

My wife and I headed to see friends in Portland for the first weekend of my Spring Break. This was my first time in Oregon and I was able to start a state list with 41 birds over the weekend. Of course new places means different birds, and a whole flock of cackling Geese was new for me. Also Nell and Dennis had both Black-capped and Chestnut-backed Chickadees in their yard. But the real highlight was a Varied Thrush on the lawn with the robins.

Varied Thrush

San Jose in March

After returning to San Jose on February 17th we decided to try for a Short-eared Owl that had been reported at Palm Avenue on and off through the previous week. Arriving there not long before sunset we found a crowd there, including Bill who had run the owl class I had attended the previous year. A number of Northern Harriers kept us interested flying low to the ground, but after a while someone called the bird and we had good, but short views of the owl.

A bad thing then happened when Bill got over-excited and charged onto private land to get a better look, only to be met by the 'angry' and disappointed land owner. Bill's careless error was magnified when he was shamed for his behavior by someone on the list serve that evening...

I returned to San Jose two weeks later and hooked up with Sergio for a trip to Ulistac. I added Wilson's Snipe as a county bird, and saw my first Orange-crowned and Townsend's Warblers of the year, and my first Lincoln and Fox Sparrow's of the year.

The following day my wife and I went to the EEC at Alviso and found a Barn Owl in the nest box.

Black-crowned Night Herons
Burrowing Owls
California Towhee

San Luis and Merced

I ran into a lady while birding at Almaden Lake Park on January 19th and she told me all about the San Luis and Merced National Wildlife Refuges just beyond Los Banos. On Friday February 16th my wife and I drove out to San Luis where I saw my first Snow Goose of the year, and while driving a road trail we saw a Ring-necked Pheasant. But San Luis was very dry and the 'lake' outside the visitor center a dry bed of grass and reeds. San Luis was a little disappointing but we did see some Tule Elk.

Tule Elk

We then made our way to Merced, the jewel in the crown, to see thousands of Sand Hill Cranes and both Snow and Ross's Geese. We stayed until dusk when many birds were coming in for the night. We had seen this kind of thing once before with cranes at the Bosque del Apache, but this was better with large numbers of these three species, and also many ducks, pelicans and snipe. The only disappointment was my failure to find any Tundra Swans which had been seen at both places the week before.

Greater White-fronted Geese
Ross's and Snow Geese
Sandhill Cranes

A real bonus at Merced was a Great Horned Owl on a telephone pole in bright sunshine as we drove a road trail there.

Great-horned Owl
On Saturday February 17th we headed home via the main street in Los Banos where Cattle Egrets have a favorite spot.

Saturday, January 13, 2018

San Jose weekends in late January and early February


I was back in San Jose for the weekends of January 19-21 and February 3-5, but for the most part did not venture far. A Wood Duck in Parkway Lakes on the 20th was a nice surprise, and we chased and found a Lewis's Woodpecker at Chesboro on the same day. A Ross's Goose at the pond on Bailey Avenue was a county bird for me.

On February 3rd I went to a new spot, the Oka Ponds in Los Gatos Creek Park where close-by roosting gulls had been identified the previous day and made me confident that I could find a couple of good species among the regulars. A White-fronted Goose was a bonus there. Alas I did not find the American Dipper further down the creek near downtown Los Gatos,
American Pipit
Bewick's Wren
Song Sparrow
Greater White-fronted Goose

Friday, January 12, 2018

San Jose - first of the year

I was back in San Jose ahead of the start of Spring semester, and . spent time adding some easy California birds to my year list. I was also aware of getting close to 200 species for Santa Clara county. On the morning of Thursday January 11th I spent some time at Santa Teresa County Park, Laguna Avenue and the Coyote Valley Open Space Preserve.

Pine Siskins had not been in Bay Area for the winter of 2016-17, but I had seen reports of this species in December. It did not take long for me to find a group bathing in a puddle by the Golf Course - together with some Western Bluebirds and an American Goldfinch

Pine Siskins

On Laguna Avenue I thought I had another county bird when I saw a large falcon on a wire. However this was not the wished-for, reported Prairie Falcon but instead a Peregrine.


Peregrine

In the afternoon I took a walk along the Parkway Lakes adding a few more simple species. The following day I went to Rancho San Antonio with Garrett and Sergio where a Sharp-shinned Hawk, and a friendly, calling Hutton's Vireo were the highlights.

My wife and I headed out to Shoreline on Saturday January 13th to add some shorebirds to my year's list. I had trouble identifying a Dunlin - and needed the help of an eBird reviewer. For some reason this species doesn't stay in my head as being a possible and is often overlooked.


Dunlin

We stopped off at a stake-out for Phainopepla on the way back, and headed to Palm Avenue for a stakeout Vermilion Flycatcher on Sunday morning. I had tried for the latter on Thursday but a Cooper's Hawk in the area did not help my cause.

Cooper's Hawk

Thursday, January 11, 2018

Bald Eagle Count

On Tuesday January 8th I did my usual Bald Eagle count and had three birds - two adults and a juvenile. One of the adults was in the same tree as on the CBC. The other was not far away. This was the first time I had seen the young bird this winter.

I had hope to get some year birds, but the Northern Pintail and Common Goldeneye from the CBC were gone and the wind was strong at Walnut Canyon that all the birds were hunkered down. My only year bird was a Western Bluebird by the clubhouse.

Two days in Phoenix

On Friday January 5th I took my son down to Phoenix so he could head back to Bellingham. We stopped at Encanto Park where the Rosy-faced  Lovebirds were not in their usual spot, and then at the Phoenix Zoo where we saw many Common Gallinules without need to go to the usual spot in Papago Park. The following day I went to the Gilbert Water Ranch and found the Northern Parula that had been reported at the same spot for a few days.

Thursday, January 4, 2018

First Days of the Year in Flagstaff

I started the year watching my feeders which I had stocked up the night before, and then ticked off some more species with a drive across town. I added a few more birds in the next couple of days.

There was then a remarkable find. On January 3rd Jason had decided to hike our snow free mountains looking for birds that would not normally be around, and ran into a group of 12-15 Pine Grosbeaks just a short hike up the Mount Humphreys Trail from Snowbowl. The following morning I chased the bird - running into Vic, Brooks, Kathryn etc. - and finding the birds at the very same spot. I also added Clark's Nutcracker and Red-breasted Nuthatch to my year list much earlier than I normally do. The Pone Grosbeaks were a state bird for me; I'd only seen these previously on Sax-Zim Bog.

Pine Grosbeaks

Brooks and Carrie had found a Rose-breasted Grosbeak, my Arizona nemesis bird at the Cameron Trading Post on December and others had continued reporting it into January. On January 7th I went to Cameron and had no luck; perhaps I should have stayed longer, but I left home with a plan and drove back via the Wupatki loop. There were literally hundreds of Sage Thrashers along the road, with at least 50 at the visitor center mixed in were a few robins.



The Rose-breasted Grosbeak continued after that with Anne reporting the bird on January 14th, and Chuck on the 23rd. So I returned on January 27th, this time with a patient 2-hour vigil in the chilly courtyard. the bird had gone, and was not reported again. I am jinxed.

Monday, January 1, 2018

The Year Ahead

I will again spend a combined 2 months in California, will have a trip to the UK in the summer and am again likely to go to Chicago for a few days in August and to Bellingham in November. Based on this I will set my North American goal at 350 species, although I have not reached this in the past two years of similar travel. I will set targets of 200 for both Arizona and California, with 150 in Coconino and 175 for Santa Clara.

Lifers will be hard to come by. My best bets remain Mountain Quail and Bell’s Sparrow in California.

I have provisionally registered for a trip to Panama after Christmas in 2018 on which lifers galore can be expected in 2018 and in 2019.

My 2017 Birding Year

I ended the year with 535 species which exceeded my initial goal of 400 species and a later one of 500 species that I had given myself once it was clear that I would spend some days in the UK, Malaysia and Australia. I saw 322 in North America missing the optimistic 350 target I had given myself.  I had 230 species in Arizona and 203 in California, ahead of the 225 and 175 I had set for myself. At the county level I saw 164 species in Coconino and 180 in Santa Clara, exceeding the 150 targets for each place. 

I saw 3 lifers in in North America in 2017, Emperor Goose, Red-masked Parakeet and Louisiana Waterthrush, plus an uncertain number in Malaysia. I need to find my Excel file and make a proper determination. Common Crane was a fourth ABA bird.  I added 5 species to my Arizona list with Trumpeter Swan, Brown Thrasher, Red Knot as well as the crane and the waterthrush. And I added 8 species to my Coconino list.
My bird of the year was the Rufous-backed Dwarf Kingfisher that I saw in Ulu Langat, Malaysia. The Snowy Owl and Short-eared Owls seen on a family trip to the Pacific Northwest were my favorites in North America. My year end totals are as follows: 
Life List

ABA List
578
Arizona List
405
Coconino County List
290
Yard List 
97

My 163 species in Coconino had me in 23rd spot, and my 180 in Santa Clara had me in 25th. But these are a function of the number of people eBirding as much as anything else.

My 2017 Bird List

January 1st
American Crow
Turkey Vulture
American Robin
Cedar Waxwing
Hermit Thrush
Yellow-rumped Warbler
California Scrub-Jay
Golden-crowned Sparrow
Anna's Hummingbird
Acorn Woodpecker
Northern Flicker
American Coot
Ring-necked Duck
Bufflehead
Red-tailed Hawk
Black Phoebe
Bushtit
Wrentit
Western Bluebird
Song Sparrow
California Towhee
Brewer's Blackbird
House Finch
Lesser Goldfinch
Canada Goose
Mourning Dove
White-crowned Sparrow
Northern Mockingbird
Mallard
Cooper's Hawk
European Starling
Feral Pigeon
California Gull
Ring-billed Gull
Bufflehead
Greater Scaup
Willet
Common Goldeneye
Snowy Egret
Least Sandpiper
Lesser Scaup
Eared Grebe
Herring Gull
Ruddy Duck
Horned Grebe
American Avocet
Great Egret

January 2nd
White-tailed Kite
Northern Shoveler
Belted Kingfisher
Pied-billed Grebe
Great Blue Heron
Double-crested Cormorant
Green Heron
Common Yellowthroat
Canvasback
Northern Harrier
Virginia Rail
Western Grebe
Black-crowned Night-Heron
Red-breasted Merganser
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Nuttall's Woodpecker
Gray Flycatcher
Dark-eyed Junco
House Sparrow

January 3rd
American Kestrel
Logerhead Shrike
Say's Phoebe
Western Meadowlark
Yellow-billed Magpie
Red-winged Blackbird
California Quail
Tricolored Blackbird
Eurasian Collared Dove
Barn Swallow
Violet-green Swallow
Tree Swallow
Purple Finch
Burrowing Owl
Cackling Goose
Snow Goose

January 4th

Common Raven
Ferruginous Hawk
White-fronted Goose
Wood Duck
Red-shouldered Hawk
Oak Titmouse
Steller's Jay
Townsend's Warbler
White-breasted Nuthatch
Common Merganser
Ruby-crowned Kinglet

January 5th
Black-necked Stilt
Savannah Sparrow
Semi-palmated Plover
Killdeer
Long-billed Dowitcher
Dunlin
American Pipit
Green-winged Teal
Mew Gull
American Wigeon
Cinnamon Teal
Peregrine Falcon
American White Pelican

January 6th
Spotted Towhee
Wild Turkey
American Goldfinch

January 7th
Clark's Grebe

January 10th
Pygmy Nuthatch
Great-tailed Grackle
Greater Roadrunner

January 11th
Pine Siskin
Hairy Woodpecker
Northern Pintail
Hooded Merganser
Bald Eagle
Pinyon Jay
Mountain Bluebird

January 14th
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
Long-tailed Duck
Trumpeter Swan
Long-billed Curlew
White-faced Ibis
Abert's Towhee
Gambel's Quail
Black-tailed Gnatcatcher
Sagebrush Sparrow
LeConte's Thrasher
Neotropic Cormorant
Verdin
Inca Dove
Gila Woodpecker
Rosy-faced Lovebird
Common Gallinule

January 15th
Brown Thrasher
Chipping Sparrow
Lark Sparrow
Phainopepla
Yellow-eyed Junco
Mexican Jay
Lincoln's Sparrow
Bridled Titmouse
Arizona Woodpecker
Hepatic Tanager
Magnificent Hummingbird
Vermilion Flycatcher
Redhead
Cactus Wren

January 16th
Marsh Wren
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Sora
Orange-crowned Warbler
Lark Bunting
Brown-headed Cowbird
Harris's Hawk
Crested Caracara
Horned Lark
Brewer's Sparrow
Curve-billed Thrasher

January 22nd
Brown Creeper
Mountain Chickadee
Lewis's Woodpecker

January 28th
Glaucous-winged Gull
Emperor Goose
Western Gull
Surf Scoter
Brown Pelican
Sanderling
Greater Yellowlegs
Western Sandpiper
Marbled Godwit
Ridgway's Rail
Golden Eagle

January 29th

Chestnut-backed Chickadee
Pacific Loon
Bewick's Wren

February 4th
Osprey
Barrow's Goldeneye

February 8th
Woodhouse's Scrub Jay
Red-naped Sapsucker
Common Black Hawk

February 11th
Summer Tanager

February 16th

Ladder-backed Woodpecker
Hammond's Flycatcher

February 18th

Band-tailed Pigeon

February 19th
White-throated Swift

February 26th
Rock Wren
Canyon Wren
Northern Cardinal

March 2nd
Townsend's Solitaire

March 4th
Prairie Falcon

March 7th
Rough-legged Hawk

March 11th
Brandt's cormorant
Pelagic Cormorant
Red-masked Parakeet
Black Oystercatcher

March 14th
Downy Woodpecker

March 16th

Bonaparte's Gull
Forster's tern

March 18th

Whimbrel
Black Turnstone
Common Loon
Snowy Plover
Pigeon Guillemot

March 26th
Painted Redstart

April 1st
Yellow-throated Warbler

April 6th
House Wren
Virginia's Warbler

April 8th
Bullock's Oriole
Swainson's Hawk
Rufous-crowned Sparrow

April 9th

Warbling Vireo
Ash-throated Flycatcher

April 12th
Yellow-headed Blackbird

April 15th
Franklin's Gull

April 16th
Black-chinned Hummingbird
Western Kingbird
Plumbeous Vireo
Yellow Warbler

April 22nd
Caspian Tern
Cliff Swallow

April 27th
Solitary Sandpiper

April 28th
Wilson's Phalarope
Red-necked Phalarope
Spotted Sandpiper

April 30th
Dusky Flycatcher

May 4th
Black-headed Grosbeak

May 6th
Cattle Egret
Common Crane
Broad-tailed Hummingbird
Vesper Sparrow

May 7th
Purple Martin
Grace's Warbler

May 9th
Wilson's Warbler
Lazuli Bunting

May 14th
Common Swift
Eurasian Magpie
Carrion Crow
Lesser Black-backed Gull
Common Wood-Pigeon
Eurasian Jackdaw
Eurasian Blue Tit
Eurasian Blackbird

May 15th
White Wagtail
European Robin

May 16th
Greylag Goose
Tufted Duck
Eurasian Moorhen
Great Tit
Eurasian Wren
Common Chiffchaff
Eurasian Reed-Warbler
Eurasian Blackcap
Common Chaffinch

May 18th
Ring-necked Pheasant
Little Egret
Northern Lapwing
Ruddy Turnstone
Black-headed Gull
Common Tern

May 20th
Common Buzzard
Eurasian Coot
Song Thrush
European Goldfinch
Dunnock

May 22nd
Great-spotted Woodpecker
Eurasian Green Woodpecker
Eurasian Jay

May 26th
Great Cormorant

May 28th
Great Crested Grebe
Eurasian Hobby

May 29th
Grey Heron
Greenfinch

May 31st
Mute Swan
Egyptian Goose
Common Pochard

June 1st
Common Shelduck
Little Grebe
Eurasian Marsh-Harrier
Pied Avocet
Eurasian Oystercatcher
Common Redshank
Eurasian Skylark
Cetti's Warbler
Sedge Warbler
Common Grasshopper-Warbler
Greater Whitethroat
Redd Bunting
Eurasian Linnet

June 3rd
Rook
Red-crested Pochard
Stock Dove
Long-tailed Tit
Black-tailed Godwit
Lesser Whitethroat

June 13th
Mediterranean Gull

June 14th
Bank Swallow (Sand Martin)
Common House Martin

June 19th
White-winged Dove

June 22nd
Gilded Flicker

June 25th
Western Wood_Pewee
Cordilleran Flycatcher

July 2nd
Spotted Dove
White-throated Kingfisher
Black-naped Oriole
House Crow
Pacific Swallow
Oriental Magpie-Robin
Common Myna
Javan Myna
Eurasian Tree Sparrow

July 3rd
Zebra Dove
Asian Koel
House Swift
Yellow-vented Bulbul
Asian Glossy Starling

July 4th
Greater Coucal
Raffle's Malkoha
Red-billed Malkoha
Square-tailed Drongo Cuckoo
Grey-rumped Treeswift
Rufous-backed Dwarf Kingfisher
Sooty Barbet
Gold-whiskered Barbet
Crimson-winged Woodpecker
Rufous Woodpecker
Buff-rumped Woodpecker
Maroon Woodpecker
Black-and-Red Broadbill
Large Woodshrike
Common Iora
Scarlet Minivet
Lesser Cuckooshrike
Dark-throated Oriole
Greater Racket-tailed Drongo
Malaysian Pied-Fantail
Grey-headed Canary Flycatcher
Velvet-fronted Nuthatch
Black-headed Bulbul
Stripe-throated Bulbul
Red-eyed Bulbul
Spectacled Bulbul
Common Tailorbird
Rufous-tailed Tailorbird
Rufescent Prinia
Oriental White-eye
Pin-striped Tit-Babblet
Horsfield's Babbler
Lesser Green Leafbird
Crimson-breasted Flowerpecker
Yellow-vented Flowerpecker
Plain-throated Sunbird
Long-billed Spiderhunter
Purple-naped Spiderhunter
White-rumped Munia
Black-winged Flycatcher-shrike
Blue-winged Leafbird
Ruby-cheeked Sunbird
Blue-throated Bee-eater
Spectacled Spiderhunter

July 5th
Striated Heron

July 6th
Masked Lapwing
Little Corella
Pied Currawong
Maned Duck
Pacific Black Duck
Little Pied Cormorant
Little Black Cormorant
Australian Ibis
Dusky Moorhen
Crested Pigeon
Noisy Miner
Blue-faced Honeyeater
Gray Butcherbird
Willie-wagtail
Magpie-lark
Torresian Crow
Welcome Swallow
Tree Martin
Rainbow Lorikeet
Australian Magpie
White-eyed Duck

July 7th
Silver Gull
Australian Brushturkey
Laughing Kookaburra
Pied Butcherbird
Australasian Swamphen
Galah
Australasian Grebe
Sulphur-crested Cockatoo
Australian King-Parrot
Pale-headed Rosella
Variegated Fairywren
Lewin's Honeyeater
Eastern Whipbird
Gray Fantail
Silver-eye
Red-browed Firetail

July 8th
Australasian Figbird
Bush Thick-knee
Cotton Pygmy-Goose
Gray Teal
Australasia Darter
Australian Pelican
Intermediate Egret
Straw-necked Ibis
Whistling Kite
White-bellied Sea-Eagle
Comb-crested Jacana
Great Crested Tern
Topknot Pigeon
Azure Kingfisher
Rainbow Bee-eater
Scaly-breasted Lorikeet
Scarlet Myzomela
Brown Honeyeater
Striated Pardalote
Black-faced Cuckooshrike
Rufous Whistler
Spangled Drongo
Fairy Martin
Mistletoebird

July 9th
White-faced Heron
Gray Goshawk
Bell Miner
White-naped Honeyeater
Spotted Pardalote
White-browed Scrubwren
Brown Thornbill
Gray Shrikethrush
Golden Whistler
Rose Robin
Eastern Yellow Robin
Black Kite
Australasian Pipit
Pink-eared Duck
Royal Spoonbill
Pied Stilt
Red-kneed Dotterel
Black-fronted Dotterel
Little Friarbird

July 11th
Brown Goshawk
Superb Fairywren
Australian Reed-Warbler
Australian Kite
Red-backed Fairywren
White-breasted Woodswallow
Double-barred Finch
Chestnut-breasted Munia

July 12th
Purple Heron
Crested Serpent-Eagle
Great Myna

July 16th
Black-shouldered Kite

July 19th
Western Screech-Owl
Great Horned Owl

July 21st
Barn Owl
Common Poorwill

July 22nd
Vaux's Swift

July 23rd
Cassin's Vireo
Pacific Wren

July 24th
Hooded Oriole

July 29th
Common Murre
Heerman's Gull

August 5th
Short-billed Dowitcher

August 9th
Least Tern

August 10th
Lesser Yellowlegs

August 13th
Elegant Tern

August 16th
Least Flycatcher
Eastern Kingbird
Black-capped Chickadee
Northern Waterthrush
Common Grackle

August 18th
Semipalmated Sandpiper
Chimney Swift
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Blue Jay
Baltimore Oriole

August 24th
Northern Pygmy Owl
Olive-sided Flycatcher

August 26th
Cassin's Kingbird
Nashville Warbler
Rufous Hummingbird

August 27th
MacGillivray's Warbler
Stilt Sandpiper

September 2nd
Western Tanager

September 4th
Baird's Sandpiper

September 10th
Common Ground-Dove
Broad-billed Hummingbird
Violet-crowned Hummingbird
Lucy's Warbler
Black-bellied Whistling Duck
Red Knot

September 16th
Willow Flycatcher
Pacific-slope Flycatcher

September 23rd
Wilson's Snipe

October 1st
Fox Sparrow

October 13th
Black-billed Magpie

October 14th
Clark's Nutcracker
Red-breasted Nuthatch
White-headed Woodpecker

October 17th
Louisiana Waterthrush

October 22nd
Cassin's Finch

October 27th
Hutton's Vireo

November 3rd

Harris's Sparrow

November 4th
Rufous-backed Robin
Chestnut-sided Warbler
Evening Grosbeak

November 5th
Red Crossbill
White-winged Scoter

November 11th
Royal Tern

November 12th
Yellow-crowned Night -Heron
Swamp Sparrow

November 18th
Chestnut-collared Longspur
Grasshopper Sparrow
Crissal Thrasher

November 23rd
Northwestern Crow
Snowy Owl
Brant
Black Scoter

November 25th
Varied Thrush
Short-eared Owl
Northern Shrike

November 26th
Golden-crowned Kinglet
Red-necked Grebe

December 4th
American Dipper
American Bittern
Juniper Titmouse
Canyon Towhee

December 11th
Blue-winged Teal

December 17th
Black-throated Sparrow
Rufous-crowned Sparrow