Yellow-headed Blackbird Scoter - Image courtesy of wikimedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

While we didn't find any super rarities in the first month of 2026, we did come across some very interesting birds. A White-winged Scoter at the Woodland Bottoms and a couple Yellow-headed Blackbirds on the Kalama waterfront were the only species found that were less than annual, but each has numerous records of occurrence.

We also had a few species seen that are not typically viewed as winter species. First was a Sora found at Canal Road that liked a spot out in the open and was seen repeatedly and by a number of birders. While most individuals of this species migrate farther south in the winter there have been winter records in the past. Many of these records are from birders who comment that the bird was silent. As they can be quite skulky and more  frequently heard than seen, is it possible that there are more wintering individuals than we believe?

A species that seems to have an odd pattern of being present in western Washington winters is Barn Swallow. After their nesting season they seem to be entirely gone by late September.  Increasingly over the years they reappear in small numbers around the first of December and continue to be found until late January. then rarely spotted again until late March when they begin to arrive in bigger numbers. If these are indeed birds trying to overwinter, where do they go in the windows of time they are not seen? What explains this pattern if they are not spending the winter?

Always more to learn about birds.

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