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Birders,

Today while birding in the far north, I encountered an incredible
flock of Redpolls pulling seeds from a roadside snowbank. I spent
several hours studying and photographing the birds at close range, and
found at least 2 birds that had many of the suitable characteristics
for the "Hornemann's" subspecies of Hoary Redpoll (the largest and
palest of the Redpolls).

They were visibly larger than their counterparts, very pale, and very
lightly streaked for female-type birds. Photos of these two candidates
(and others from today) can be seen here:

http://www.blog.peregrineprints.com/2011/02/hornemanns-photos.html


The location was East of the town of Matheson. Travel east about 50km
to Hwy 672. Turn right (south) and travel maybe 1-3km (sorry I forgot
to measure) until you reach a snow-plowed clearing on the right side
of the road (west). I don't know the circumstances, but there was a
considerable amount of seeds stuck in these plowed snowbanks, and I
parked my car close and waited for the birds to return. They were
rarely gone for more than 10 minutes, but never came all at once.
(flocks of 10-75 at a time). Both subspecies of Common Redpoll were
numerous, (maybe 100 total)  and there was roughly 20-25 Hoary
Redpolls (most of the "southern" subspecies) present throughout the
day. It is a lot more fun to study the confusing intermediate birds
when some painfully obvious Hoaries were present! A Lynx was also
seen, maybe 15km south of here.


Good Birding!

Brandon

www.PeregrinePrints.com

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