Favorite Bird Pics of February ’24

Pair of Wood Ducks checking out a potential nesting box

Brown-headed Nuthatch working on a new home

Great Blue Herons and Mallards Ducks–I think these mallards hired the herons as sentinels. The herons never moved the whole two hours I was there while the mallards slept or paddled around.

Hermit Thrush–I’ve seen and heard these birds quite a bit this winter. They will migrate north in the spring, so listen for them while you can.

Belted kingfisher (female)

Golden-crowned Kinglet–These little guys spend their summers nesting and breeding the high elevation spruce-fir forests of Appalachian North Carolina. They grace us here in the Piedmont with their presence during the winter months.

Red-shouldered Hawks–He brought her a snake but she didn’t seem interested.

Eastern Bluebird (male)

Pileated Woodpecker

Cedar Waxwing

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

Red-headed Woodpecker

Pine Warbler

“Look at the birds of the air: they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your Heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they?” (Jesus; Matthew 6:26)

Birds of December ’23

Blue-headed Vireo (took this in November, but overlooked it and I don’t get many pictures of this one).

Red-headed Woodpecker

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

Carolina Wren

Northern Flicker (male)

Red-headed Woodpecker (juvenile)

Red-shouldered Hawk

Hairy Woodpecker

Northern Flicker (female) Can you tell I like woodpeckers?

Golden-crowned Kinglet

Dark-eyed Junco

Eastern Bluebird (male)

Belted Kingfisher

White-throated Sparrow

Great Blue Heron

Red-tailed Hawk

River Otter (not a bird, obviously; but I enjoyed seeing them).

Happy New Year!

Birds of November ’23

American Robin in cedar tree

Ruby-Crowned Kinglet

Wood Duck (young)

Hairy Woodpecker

Cedar Waxwing

Four Cedar Waxwings

Killdeer (and his reflection)

Hermit Thrush

Red-tailed Hawk (and his kill)

Northern Flicker (male)


Double-crested Cormorants

(Another) Ruby-crowned Kinglet

Goldfinch (seems to be talking to himself)

Eastern Phoebe

American Robins and Cedar Waxwings talking it over

“Let everything that has breath praise the LORD. Praise the LORD.” Psalm 150:6

October ’23 Birds

“seeing that bird, which might take off at any second, has taught me to sit still, to relish the moment.”
― Julia Zarankin, Field Notes from an Unintentional Birder: A Memoir

American Redstart (male)

American Redstart (female)

Northern Parula

Pine Warbler

Hairy Woodpecker

Blue Jay

Red-Headed Woodpecker

Red-Headed Woodpecker (juvenile)

Red-Bellied Woodpecker (male)

Palm Warbler

Red-shouldered Hawk

Trio of Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers

Cedar Waxwing

Golden-crowned Kinglet

Yellow-rumped warbler (female)

Unidentified Ducks (Hope to figure this out soon!)

Sharp-shinned Hawk

Bird Photos September ’23

Yellow-billed Cuckoo

Eastern Towhee (male) and hungry chick

Eastern Towhees (father and chick)

Baby Wood Duck

White-breasted Nuthatch

Yellow Warbler

Chestnut-sided warbler

Ruby-throated hummingbird (and his amazing tongue!)

Brown-headed Nuthatch

Cape May Warbler

Pileated Woodpecker

Not a bird but a little extra–Zebra Longwing Butterfly

Bird Pictures for August ’23

Prothonotary Warbler eating a juicy caterpillar for lunch!

Summer Tanager (female) eating a bee.

Green Heron looking for lunch.

Common Yellowthroat

Indigo Bunting

Blue Grosbeak (male)

Blue Grosbeak (female)

Belted Kingfishers (male above and female below)

Pileated Woodpecker (male)

Young Wood Ducks. Male on Left and Female on Right.

Mama Wood Ducks and offspring

Juvenile male Ruby-throated Hummingbird (showing off his red)

Ruby-throated Hummingbird (female)

Eastern Kingbird

“At whatever moment you read these words, day or night, there are birds aloft in the skies of the Western Hemisphere, migrating.” Scott Weidensaul in Living on the Wind Across the Hemisphere with Migratory Birds

Bird Photos for July ’23

Yellow-billed Cuckoo. I have heard this bird several times at different parks, but didn’t have much hope in seeing it. They stay high in the trees, so I was delighted when this one had his lunch in a tree low enough where I could watch him. These cuckoos come to the Carolinas in April for breeding and stay through October. They spend their winters in South America.

Eastern Kingbird. These birds are part of the group known as the flycatchers. They can be seen around different bodies of water, and they also come to the Carolinas in April and leave in October; making their winter home in South America.

Mourning Doves. These doves don’t migrate. I have them in my yard all year round. I recently ran across an article titled “How to Attract Mourning Doves to Your Yard”. I felt no need to read it.

White-eyed Vireo. This vireo is fairly common in the Carolinas and you will usually hear them even if you never see them. I had walked past a heavy thicket, ready to go home when I heard this one singing. Fortunately, he decided to make an appearance and I was able to get several shots. The white-eyed vireos winter along the Southern coast of the U.S. as well as the coasts of Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America.

Red-Bellied Woodpecker. This woodpecker lives here year round. They don’t come to my feeders as often as the downy woodpeckers, but they do show up and often bring their young to show them where the snack bar is located.

Ruby-Throated Hummingbird, male fledgling. A male fledgling is the best (probably the only way for me) way I can know for sure that the hummingbirds have had their babies; if not in my yard, then close by. These young males are just starting to flex their red throats, but by next year will look the one below.

Ruby-throated Hummingbird, adult male. Ruby-throated hummingbirds are the only hummingbird that comes to breed in the eastern part of the U.S. The males are the first to arrive in April. They leave in October to cross the Gulf of Mexico to spend their winters in Mexico.

House Finch–parent and fledgling. The House Finch, though they only came to the Carolinas in the 1960’s, are quite common and can strip a cylinder of sunflower seeds in record time. I had noticed they seemed noisier than usual lately, and when I saw these two, I understood. I’ve been hearing the fledglings (for the most part). They’re in the trees and the feeders and chirp their heads off until a parent finally feeds them.

Bird Photos of June ’23

All photos were taken in the state of North Carolina in June 2023.

Orchard Oriole

Prothonotary Warbler

Juvenile Red-Shouldered Hawk

Juvenile Red-Shouldered Hawk

Indigo Bunting

Summer Tanager (male)

Summer Tanager (female)

Pair of Mallards (Doing their balancing act)

Papa Red-bellied Woodpecker feeding Juvenile

Common Yellow-Throat Warbler

Pair of Belted Kingfishers

Killdeer

Great Blue Heron

Northern Cardinal (juvenile)

American Goldfinch (male)

All things bright and beautiful,

All creatures great and small,

All things wise and wonderful,

The Lord God made them all.” Cecil Frances Alexander

Bird Photos from May ’23

Male Wood Duck and Solitary Sandpiper

Blue Grosbeak

Cedar Waxwing

White-eyed Vireo

Mallard Family

Wood Duck Pair

Barred Owl

Cooper’s Hawk

Great Crested Flycatcher

Male Ruby-throated Hummingbird

Eastern Towhee

Red-shouldered Hawk chicks

Pine Warbler

Mother Downy Woodpecker feeding fledgling

Great Blue Heron

Bird Photos from April’23

Common Yellow-Throat Warbler

White-eyed Vireo

Wood Duck Pair

Eastern Phoebe

Mother Wood Duck and ducklings

White-throated Sparrow

Canada Goose family

Green Heron

Pair of Red-Headed Woodpeckers

Belted Kingfisher

Northern Rough-Winged Swallow

Great Blue Heron

Are not two little sparrows sold for a copper coin? And yet not one of them falls to the ground apart from your Father’s will. Matthew 10:29