Subject: [Tweeters] Swainson's Thrush Arrival in Western Washington
Date: Apr 12 00:31:53 2012
From: Wayne Weber - contopus at telus.net


Tweeters,



Brad Waggoner is bang-on in describing the pattern of Swainson's Thrush
arrival in western Washington. I have kept track of spring arrival dates
(and fall departure dates) of birds around Vancouver, BC since the late
1960s, and our arrival dates agree strongly with those in western
Washington.



Every year, few if any Swainson's Thrushes arrive before early May. However,
there are enough records in mid- to late April to indicate that, some years,
there are a few birds that arrive in advance of the main influx, perhaps as
a "spring overshoot" during a period of warm temperatures and southerly
winds. Out of 32 years with arrival dates, 10 were in April, and 22 in May.



The mean arrival date for Swainson's Thrushes at Vancouver is May 6; the
earliest ever, April 16; and the latest ever, May 20.



Brad is also correct that Swainson's Thrushes virtually NEVER sing when they
first arrive. They are often on their territories for 2 weeks or more before
they start to sing, and it is rare to hear one singing before mid-May. This
habit of a delayed start to singing is also found in other "brown thrushes"
such as Hermit Thrush and Veery, and is in contrast with most songbirds,
which even sing on migration before they reach their breeding grounds. The
brown "Catharus" thrushes don't do that.



I will differ with Brad on one point; I've never heard a Song Sparrow make a
call anything like the "whit" note of a Swainson's Thrush. However, I will
point out that most birders are not skilled at identifying birds by songs
and calls (I don't mean to include Brad!), and I have heard birders swear
that they were hearing singing Swainson's Thrushes, only to find on
investigating that it was some other species. If you report a Swainson's
Thrush in April, it would be best if you saw the bird, and saw it well--
and even then, it's easy to confuse a quickly-seen Hermit Thrush with a
Swainson's Thrush. And if you do report a Swainson's Thrush in April,
expect to be questioned-- it's unusual!



Wayne C. Weber

Delta, BC

contopus at telus.net







From: tweeters-bounces at mailman1.u.washington.edu
[mailto:tweeters-bounces at mailman1.u.washington.edu] On Behalf Of Brad
Waggoner
Sent: April-11-12 7:47 PM
To: tweeters
Subject: [Tweeters] Swainson's Thrush Arrival in Western Washington



Hi All,

Just a word of note as far as to the arrival of Swainson's Thrushes here in
Western Washington. As one that attempts to keep bird records here in the
state of Washington, any Swainson's Thrush reported before the 3rd week in
April would need to be fully documented for it to make a state record. I
would personally probably make that even later in the month just based on my
experience. They just do not arrive in our area really until the first of
May.

What I have noticed is that Song Sparrows do an absolutely perfect
Swainson's Thrush-like call note. Whether this is a note uttered prior to
the start of a song or is just a one note call, I can't say for sure. I just
know that I have been fooled many times by this imitation.

Another thing I have noticed is that if I am lucky enough to detect or see a
Swainson's Thrush in the early days of May, they have not been singing.
Uttering their call notes, perhaps, but not singing. I normally don't hear
them until mid May or after when they are establishing territories.

Just my two cents worth...............

Cheers and good birding,
Brad Waggoner
Bainbridge Island
mailto:wagtail at sounddsl.com