• Marsh Wren

    Marsh Wren
    Picture

    Species: Marsh Wren
    Most recent capture date: 11/14/2021
    Age: less than seven months old

    ​Notes: This species is common in wetlands in our area, but since our banding station isn’t in a wetland (except sometimes when it rains a lot…), we rarely catch them. This is just the 14th Marsh Wren we have caught in the last ten years. I have most often experienced Marsh Wrens as an emphatic angry sound coming from inside a dense clump of reeds. It’s a pity that they like to hide, because they are gorgeous: that loudly striped tail, the dramatic black-and-white mini-cape.

  • Ruby-crowned Kinglet

    Ruby-crowned Kinglet
    Picture

    Species: Ruby-crowned Kinglet
    Most recent capture date: 1/01/2022
    Earliest capture date: 11/20/2021
    Age: at least seven months old
    Sex: male

    Notes: Our first capture of 2022!

  • Dark-eyed (Oregon) Junco

    Dark-eyed (Oregon) Junco
    Picture

    Species: Dark-eyed Junco (Oregon form)
    Most recent capture date: 10/23/21
    Age: Less than eight months old
    ​Sex: Male

    Notes: Juncos use their tails to signal to each other, both in territorial disputes and when courting. Research has shown that females prefer males with more white in their tails, and that tail white is associated with dominance.

  • Fox Sparrow

    Fox Sparrow
    Picture

    Species: Fox Sparrow
    Most recent capture date: 10/17/21

  • Ruby-crowned Kinglet

    Ruby-crowned Kinglet
    Picture

    Species: Ruby-crowned Kinglet
    Most recent capture date: 10/17/21
    Sex: Female

    Notes: It’s a pity that serious scientists like us don’t use terms like “borb,” because this bird clearly is one.

  • Townsend’s Warbler

    Townsend’s Warbler
    Picture

    Species: Townsend’s Warbler
    Most recent capture date: 10/16/2021
    Age: at least one year old
    Sex: Female

    Notes: A once-a-year kind of treat for us, this particular Townsend’s Warbler flew in with a friend: a younger female Townsend’s. After banding them, we released them together so they could continue to keep each other company.

  • Black Phoebe

    Black Phoebe
    Picture

    Species: Black Phoebe
    Most recent capture date: 10/13/21
    Age: less than 7 months old

    Notes: Black Phoebes like to flycatch around our nets, and often perch on the net poles. We catch them less often than you would think – these are savvy aerialists.

  • California Towhee

    California Towhee
    Picture

    Species: California Towhee
    Most recent capture date: 10/13/2021
    Earliest capture date: 1/13/2019
    Age: three years old

    Notes: California Towhees are subtly gorgeous birds up close, and also some of the feistiest birds we regularly band.

  • Hermit Thrush

    Hermit Thrush
    Picture

    Species: Hermit Thrush
    Most recent capture date: 10/13/21
    Age: Less than 7 months old
    Notes: This bird has a slightly malformed bill that makes them appear to be smiling mischievously. They were in good health so the bill does not seem to be negatively impacting them. If we see this bird again, we’ll recognize them without even needing to read the band number.

  • Sorry for the delay!

    Sorry for the delay!
    Picture

    I apologize for the break in posting here! Your friendly neighborhood ornithologist broke their ankle on a hike and has been distracted by having what seems like the contents of an entire aisle of the hardware store surgically attached to their fibula. Please accept this photo of sunrise through the mist nets in recompense, and be assured that regular posting here has now resumed.