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calbirder
Friday 3rd December 2004, 07:08
I live in the Sacramento area near woods. We dont seem to get any migratory birds at all. Is this normal? I get some small birds, hawks, and others that stay the whole year, but most leave. IS this also normal, for scrub jays, magpies, and woodpeckers to leave a fairly mediocre climate? Thanks in advance for your help.
Chris D
Friday 3rd December 2004, 18:19
Hey, You might get "Altitude" migrants---Juncos coming down from the mountains to the valley for the winter. As for winter, the valley fills with many kinds of waterfowl and birds of prey. Some of the latter could be hunting outside your window and be "Migrants". You have a shot at 6 Hummer species. All migrate. Some Anna's are local,,,,others from elsewhere. And lastly, watch your freshly leafing trees in April and May for NeoTropical migrants like warblers and tanagers. It'll happen. I'm no ornithologist by any means but I do like to write on my calendar the first date that the Sand Hills fly north and south, when different hummers show, white crowned sparrows (always come in the same week in October), and others. Good luck........Chris
calbirder
Saturday 4th December 2004, 21:23
Hey, You might get "Altitude" migrants---Juncos coming down from the mountains to the valley for the winter. As for winter, the valley fills with many kinds of waterfowl and birds of prey. Some of the latter could be hunting outside your window and be "Migrants". You have a shot at 6 Hummer species. All migrate. Some Anna's are local,,,,others from elsewhere. And lastly, watch your freshly leafing trees in April and May for NeoTropical migrants like warblers and tanagers. It'll happen. I'm no ornithologist by any means but I do like to write on my calendar the first date that the Sand Hills fly north and south, when different hummers show, white crowned sparrows (always come in the same week in October), and others. Good luck........Chris
Thanks for that info....The neotropical migrants only stay for a short time?
Chris D
Saturday 4th December 2004, 23:24
Sure,,,,,,,,, maybe a minute or 2. Maybe days. Perhaps an orange crowned warbler might nest. Or perhaps swallows or swifts. True, your yard might not be the Maine woods in May, but you'd be amazed at just what changes take place throughout the year. A Western Kingbird might stay and nest because of the bugs. Lewis's Woodpeckers might invade for the winter. I can honestly say that the more I've learned on my own, kinda studying one area, the better birder I've become. Sure, I've got a long way to go. Keep a list and write on the calendar. When you need a fix of cool warblers and Western Tangers, just head up the hill in June. Compare the leafing-out willows at 6000 feet and all the insects they attract to the natural landscape around Sacto. That's why they're nesting up top. You never know though. Some might frequent your place before and after............Chris
wings
Friday 18th February 2005, 02:09
I live in the Sacramento area near woods. We dont seem to get any migratory birds at all. Is this normal? I get some small birds, hawks, and others that stay the whole year, but most leave. IS this also normal, for scrub jays, magpies, and woodpeckers to leave a fairly mediocre climate? Thanks in advance for your help.
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Wow! Sacto NWR, Gray Lodge, The Butte Sink, Colusa NWR represent one of the greatest concentration of migrating waterfowl in the U.S. And all near your area.
Unless, of course, you are thinking of passerines and raptors but not waterfowl.
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