Last of Fall:
Monarch: 11/9!
Ruby-throated Hummingbird: 10/8
Gray Catbird: 9/28
Hummingbird Moth: 9/26
Bumblebee: 10/28
First of Winter:
FIRST FROST: 10/18
Yellow-rumped Warbler: 10/16
White-throated Sparrow: 10/16
Golden-crowned Kinglet: 10/16
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker: 10/16
Pine Siskin: 10/16
Ruby-crowned Kinglet: 10/27 (lots!)
Cedar Waxwing: 11/1 (sighted in area through July!)
Dark-eyed Junco: 11/2
Are You a Self-Publishing Author?
I'd like to edit your next book! When I'm not birding or blogging, I edit content for some fine folks: self-publishing writers, textbook publishers, and websites, including iVillage and Lifetime TV.
Contact me when you need a developmental editor, copy editor, or proofreader for your website, magazine, book, corporate communications, white paper, academic paper, or self-published masterpiece. Heck, I'll also QA your website and transcribe your podcasts, meetings, interviews, and dictated novel!
Rambling Woods, New York
Scott, North Carolina
Anonymous, USA
Rare Bird Sighting
Confirmed by Cornell, this Oregon-race Dark-eyed Junco was spotted in our yard on February 21, 2008! The Oregon junco is usually found in the western half of the United States.
2 responses so far ↓
1 sandy // Jun 3, 2007 at 11:14 am
They are beautiful. What a great photo!!! Love it..
2 AmyKlarer // Jun 4, 2007 at 12:17 am
Are these babes trying out for the Olympic Synchronized Swimming team? They should definitely be in Beijing for the US in 2008.