Subject: [Tweeters] Evening Grosbeaks
Date: Apr 11 10:03:46 2012
From: Michael Hobbs - BirdMarymoor at frontier.com


There?s an Evening Grosbeak calling from a tree in my front yard right now! (It took me way too long to recognize the call).

My somewhat limited records show that most of my King County sightings have been in May and in Sept/Oct., so it?s a little surprising to find them out and about this early in April.

Birds of Washington (Wahl, Tweit, Mlodinow) is not particularly helpful in answering your question, Suzanne. They indicate the species to be resident in the state year round, but they show peak occurrence that matches my data.

Reading the rest of the summary, EVGR is highly unpredictable in their movements, can show up anywhere (except the greater Columbia Basin area, where they are rare to absent), and they drop down out of the high elevations in winter. They can be in huge flocks or small groups. Numbers vary widely and unpredictably.

My guess is that the birds will find suitable places to winter, choosing spots with the best food availability (locations varying year to year according to weather and seed crop). In spring, as the mountains thaw out, there is a flurry of activity as they move from winter locations to summer locations, typically higher up. Thus, there are more widespread sightings in May. In fall, as the mountains begin to get snowed in, the birds again range widely searching for the best places to spend the winter. As they visit everywhere in their search for winter homes, there are more widespread sightings in Sept/Oct. It?s unclear how large an area these exploratory excursions can reach, but I would expect they move about on a regional scale, not limited to short movements within Washington.

== Michael Hobbs
== Kirkland, WA
== http://www.marymoor.org/birding.htm
== http://www.marymoor.org/BirdBlog.htm
== birdmarymoor at frontier.com

From: Goodwin
Sent: Wednesday, April 11, 2012 8:20 AM
To: tweeters at u.washington.edu
Subject: [Tweeters] Evening Grosbeaks

Hello Tweeters,

We had 3 evening grosbeaks arrive at our feeder on 4/9/12. This is on Kent East Hill. The earliest sighting before was in May. I assume they are migrating. Does anyone know where they are likely to have migrated from?

Suzanne



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
_______________________________________________
Tweeters mailing list
Tweeters at u.washington.edu
http://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters