Hi all,
Well Ontario's Ron Pitway has come out with his annual winter finch 
forecast...and it truly is a mixed bag.

Though geared for the Algonquin Park area, it is often useful for Western Lake 
Superior region too.

Sounds like we'll see plenty of redpolls but few White-winged Crossbills or 
Bohemian Waxwings. May get some movement of Pine Siskins and Pine Grosbbeaks

The good news is that Sax-Zim Bog and Duluth area have very good spruce cone 
crops. Bring on winter!

Full report shown below: (or go to the website: 
http://www.jeaniron.ca/2014/forecast14.htm )

RON PITWAY'S WINTER FINCH FORECAST
GENERAL FORECAST: This winter's theme is a "mixed bag" of finch movements. For 
example, some species such as Purple Finch will go south while White-winged 
Crossbills will likely stay in the boreal forest in widely separated areas 
where spruces are laden with cones. Common Redpolls should move into southern 
Canada and the northern states because birch seed crops are thin to average 
across the north.  See individual finch forecasts below for details.


TREE SEED CROPS: Key trees affecting finch movements in the boreal forest are 
spruces, birches and mountain-ashes. Spruce cone crops are variable in Ontario. 
Crops are excellent around southern James Bay and very good to excellent west 
of Lake Superior. Crops are mostly poor elsewhere in the province such as 
Algonquin Park in central Ontario. The heavy spruce cone crop around James Bay 
extends east in a broad deep band across north-central Quebec into the Gaspe 
Peninsula. East of Ontario cone crops are generally poor in the Atlantic 
Provinces, New York State, New Hampshire and other northern New England States. 
West of Ontario cone crops are poor in the boreal forest in Manitoba and 
Saskatchewan but improve westward with average crops in southern Yukon and 
excellent crops in Alaska. Birch seed crops are poor to average in the boreal 
forest. Mountain-ash berry crops are very good to bumper across the boreal 
forest, but crops are low in northeastern Ontario and poor in Newfoundland. 


INDIVIDUAL FINCH FORECASTS: Forecasts apply mainly to Ontario and adjacent 
provinces and states. Three irruptive non-finch passerines whose movements are 
linked to finches are also discussed. There will be local exceptions to 
individual forecasts. You can follow the movements of winter finches this fall 
and winter on eBird.    


PINE GROSBEAK: Pine Grosbeaks should make a small flight into central Ontario 
because mountain-ash berry crops are low in northeastern Ontario. However, 
mountain-ash crops are excellent in north-central Quebec and in northwestern 
Ontario with excellent crops extending west across the boreal forest to Alaska 
so grosbeaks there may not move far from these areas. At feeders they prefer 
sunflower seeds, and also watch for them feeding on European mountain-ash 
berries and ornamental crabapples. 


PURPLE FINCH: Last winter many Purple Finches stayed in the boreal forest 
because of bumper seed crops there. This fall most Purple Finches should 
migrate south of Ontario because many coniferous and deciduous tree seed crops 
are much lower in central and northeastern Ontario. When Purple Finches leave 
Ontario in October and November, they return in mid-April to mid-May to breed. 
At feeders Purples prefer sunflower seeds. Old-timers remember when Purple 
Finches were much commoner than they are today. The principal cause of the 
decline may be the absence of large outbreaks of spruce budworm. 


RED CROSSBILL: Red Crossbills will be scattered in the Northeast this winter 
because cone crops are generally poor. Expect some in Ontario where red and/or 
white pines have locally good cone crops. A few Red Crossbills were reported 
this past summer north of Lake Huron. Red Crossbills comprise at least 10 "call 
types" in North America. However, the types are usually impossible to identify 
without recordings of their flight calls. Matt Young (may6 at cornell.edu) at 
The Cornell Lab of Ornithology will identify types if you send him your 
recordings and this will help with his ongoing research. Matt reports that Type 
10s have been moving around the Great Lakes and Northeast for a few months and 
Pascal Cote of the Tadoussac Bird Observatory in Quebec reports a small 
movement of Type 3s. 


WHITE-WINGED CROSSBILL: This crossbill will be mostly absent this winter from 
central Ontario such as in Algonquin Park because spruce and hemlock cone crops 
are very poor there. White-winged Crossbills move east and west like a pendulum 
across North America searching for bumper cone crops. In the Northeast they 
should winter in numbers around James Bay and east across north/central Quebec 
into the Gaspe Peninsula where spruce crops are heavy. Pascal Cote reports that 
White-winged Crossbills are currently abundant in boreal areas of Quebec such 
as Charlevoix and Chibougamau. They are unlikely to irrupt south in numbers 
because the excellent spruce cone crops in Quebec, northwestern Canada and 
Alaska should keep this crossbill within the boreal forest.


COMMON REDPOLL: Expect a moderate to good flight south this fall and winter 
because birch seed crops are variably poor to average in the boreal forest. At 
bird feeders redpolls prefer nyger seeds in silo feeders. Watch for "Greater" 
Common Redpolls (subspecies rostrata) from Baffin Island and Greenland in 
flocks of "Southern" Common Redpolls (nominate subspecies flammea). Greaters 
are larger, browner, longer tailed, and bigger billed in direct comparison with 
"Southerns". For photos of "Greater" Common Redpolls see links #5 and 6 below. 
Watch for redpolls in weedy fields.


HOARY REDPOLL: Watch for Hoaries this winter mixed in with flocks of Common 
Redpolls. The "Southern" Hoary Redpoll (nominate subspecies exilipes) which 
breeds south to northern Ontario is the usual subspecies encountered. It is 
rare but regular in redpoll flocks. "Hornemann's" Hoary Redpoll (subspecies 
hornemanni) was once considered a great rarity south of the tundra, but it has 
been documented with photos in recent years with four records accepted to date 
by the Ontario Bird Records Committee. For photos of Hornemann's see link #6 
below.


PINE SISKIN: Siskins were observed in numbers this summer around southern James 
Bay and in southern Yukon. They will move east and west this fall searching for 
areas with excellent spruce cone crops. Siskins should winter in Alaska and 
north-central Quebec where spruce crops are excellent. However, those that fail 
to find adequate cone crops will probably wander south where they will frequent 
bird feeders with nyger seeds in silo feeders. Siskins are often detected by 
their wheezy clee-ip call, which is the best way to identify them in flight.


EVENING GROSBEAK: Very small numbers of Evening Grosbeaks should move south 
this winter into southern Ontario and the Northeast because tree seed crops are 
generally poor farther north. This past summer, Tyler Hoar reports the lowest 
number of Evening Grosbeaks that he has seen around Lake Superior and in 
Quebec's Laurentians in four years. Breeding populations are now much reduced 
from the population peak during the 1940s to 1980s linked to large outbreaks of 
spruce budworm. The feeders at the Visitor Centre in Algonquin Park should have 
some grosbeaks this winter. At feeders Evening Grosbeaks prefer black oil 
sunflower seeds.


THREE IRRUPTIVE PASSERINES: Movements of the following three passerines are 
often linked to the boreal finches.


BLUE JAY: Expect a good to heavy flight (many more than last year) moving 
westward along the north shorelines of Lakes Ontario and Erie because the 
acorn, beechnut, hazelnut and soft mast crops averaged low in northeastern, 
central and eastern Ontario. However, acorn crops were much higher in the 
Carolinian Zone south of Toronto. Expect fewer Blue Jays at feeders in Ontario 
this winter because many jays will migrate out of the province this fall.


RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH: This nuthatch is a conifer seed specialist when it 
winters in the boreal forest. Cone crop failures cause irruptions. It began 
wandering southward in mid-summer indicating that boreal finches would also 
move this fall and winter. Many but not all Red-breasted Nuthatches should move 
south this fall because white spruce cone crops are generally low to average 
(some bumper crops) across much of the boreal forest. At bird feeders 
Red-breasted Nuthatches prefer black oil sunflower seeds, chopped peanuts and 
suet.


BOHEMIAN WAXWING: Most Bohemians should stay in the north this winter because 
the mountain-ash berry crop is generally very good to excellent across most of 
the boreal forest except in northeastern Ontario. When Bohemians move south 
they are attracted to berries on European Mountain-ash, small ornamental 
crabapples and buckthorn berries. With the recent breeding range expansion east 
across northern Quebec and the annual abundance of buckthorn berries in settled 
areas, Bohemians now occur every winter in varying numbers in southern Ontario, 
southern Quebec and New York State. 


Sparky Stensaas
2515 Garthus Road
Wrenshall MN 55797
218.341.3350
sparkystens...@hotmail.com

www.ThePhotoNaturalist.com
www.KollathStensaas.com
www.SaxZim.org                                    
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