On a cold winters day a ruffed grouse finds the hot spot where thermal activity below the surface has melted the snow above. Yellowstone National Park, WY.
Hope the pickings were good.
The Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology describes the Townsend’s Solitaire as “A long-tailed gray bird of the high western mountains, the Townsend’s Solitaire descends in the winter to lower elevations where it feeds almost exclusively on juniper berries. ”
That pretty much sums up our experience with these birds. We see them only in winter and always in, around and defending their patch of Juniper berries.
Although described as grey they are much more than that and deserving of the spotlight on a stage all their own.
A Spotted Towhee perched in the now leafless late fall forest.
Looking a bit less like a funky chicken that he did a few weeks back. https://naturehasnoboss.com/2016/11/22/spotted-towhee-2/
In fact he looks downright stately.
We would like to thank this handsome gentleman for dropping in on the party we had the other day. While we were sitting quietly on a creek bank waiting for an American Dipper to move into camera range this guy unexpectedly plopped into the water right in front of us. He swam around for a few minutes and then made his way over to the other ducks on the creek for a little networking and snacks. Clear Creek in Denver, CO.
Cedar Waxwings picking over the same patch of dried berries that the Robins found appealing in yesterdays post. We only see the Waxwings for a week each year and only in the fall. This year they were right on schedule and arrived sometime during the last week of November and had departed by last weekends walk through the woods.

The local ponds are chock full of common Goldeneye in the winter but a Barrows Goldeneye is a rare visitor. Photographed along Clear Creek in Denver, CO.
You must be logged in to post a comment.