Showing posts with label Chipping Sparrow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chipping Sparrow. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Juvenile Chipping Sparrow: New baby bird for our Regina yard

Juvenile Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved.
Juvenile Chipping Sparrow in the garden sprinkler 
We had several new-to-us young birds this summer, including a juvenile Chipping Sparrow with fresh baby bird feathers that differ just enough from the adults' to be confusing.

For example, its trademark red cap had not yet grown in, and its breast was streaked, not pale buffy gray. But the close presence of the adult — who frequently fed it, as well — confirmed that this streaky brown baby bird really was a Chipping Sparrow.

I knew that some Chipping Sparrows stayed for the summer in parts of Regina, Saskatchewan, but this was the first time I've been aware of one nesting near my part of town.

Adult Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved.
Adult Chipping Sparrow © SB
Juvenile Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved.
Juvenile Chipping Sparrow © SB
Adult and Juvenile Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved.
Feeding time for the Chipping Sparrows © SB
Adult and Juvenile Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved.
Dependent and demanding! Chipping Sparrows. © SB
Juvenile Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved.
Brown speckled juvenile Chipping Sparrow   © SB
Adult Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved.
Adult Chipping Sparrow - no, to streaks, and yes, to a red cap. © SB 

What are these: Chipping Sparrows - an adult and a juvenile.  (Bruant familier)
Location: Backyard, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.
Photo dates: July 31 to August 2, 2016.

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Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Chipping Sparrows: Brief Spring Visitors to Regina, SK

I always like seeing the Chipping Sparrows arrive — and I know it's a fallacy created by their bright rust crowns, but to me they are cheery little birds. They never stay long in our yard, though. A few days, usually in early May, and then they're gone.

Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved
Chipping Sparrow, with pale, unmarked chest, eye-stripe and rust head.
(This feeding shelf concept didn't last long, either.) © SB

Chipping Sparrow. Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved
Chipping Sparrow feeding in Regina, SK, backyard  © SB

What are these: Chipping Sparrows
Location: Backyard, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.
Photo dates: May 2, 2016.

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Friday, May 30, 2014

Chipping Sparrows - Micro Migratory Birds

Chipping Sparrow with full red crown   © SB
The spring migratory birds in our Regina, Saskatchewan, backyard include Chipping Sparrows.

I call Chipping Sparrows micro birds. Not only are they tiny, but they look far less than half the size of the resident House Sparrows.

Most of our Chipping visitors have bright rust-red crowns, while a few have a more mottled ruffous appearance.

And their song? It's a sweet, high "chip-chippp!"

Chipping Sparrow with slightly more mottled head.    © SB

What are these? Chipping Sparrows.
Location: Backyard, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.  
Photo date: May 27 and 22, 2014.

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Chipping Sparrow: May Backyard Sparrows, Regina, SK (1)

Several Chipping Sparrows have pecked around our yard in Regina, Saskatchewan, this month, and that's the first backyard Saskatchewan bird for my May list.

Chipping Sparrows, to me, look like American Tree Sparrows — or vice versa. Both have sparrow brown markings and red heads, but while Tree Sparrows have red lines by their eyes, Chipping Sparrows have black lines. (Yes, I know; a proper ornithologist would provide a more detailed, technical explanations and mention details like the Tree Sparrow's half yellow beak, but a proper ornithologist, I am not.)

Chipping Sparrow. Photo © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved.
The Chipping Sparrow, with its red cap. © SB 

The Chipping Sparrow winters in the southern U.S., and summers in the rest of the U.S. and in Canada. Sensible migration!

I was intrigued to learn that some call them the "Hairbird" because of their habit of lining their nests with hair — smart birds! Audubon Birds (the app that's linked to eBird) says horse hair was a former favourite, but as Chipping Sparrows rarely see horses these days, they have been seen to "pluck strands from the coat of a sleeping dog." (I must brush my yellow dog Ginger more; when I brushed her a few days ago, I put her shed hair in a cleft of lilac branches and it soon vanished — though I doubt this lovely redhead took that prize.)


What is this? Chipping Sparrow .
Location: Backyard, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.  
Photo date: May 17, 2013.

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