There was a Boreal Chickadee at Diamond Lake in south Minneapolis in
January of 1983. The bird was first reported to the Minneapolis Rare Bird
Alert by Marv Borrell, a birder who lived along the lake. I saw the bird
on Jan. 3, 8 and 11, twice with other birders. On 3 January I saw the bird
To answer to the question posed below, I checked old issues of The Jack-Pine
Warbler, and, no, there was no irruption of Boreal Chickadees in MI in winter
1966-67. That still leaves open the question of WI, and one might reasonably
suggest that Boreal Chickadees are more likely to irrupt
As noted by several people already, a Boreal Chickadee record that far south
would certainly be unusual, but not unprecedented. There was a substantial
irruption into southern and western Minnesota in the winter of 1966-67 with
birds seen in the Twin Cities and as far southwest as Yellow
Ramsey County
HouseofBirds on Instagram
-Original Message-
From: Minnesota Birds On Behalf Of Kara Snow
Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2021 10:00 AM
To: MOU-NET@LISTS.UMN.EDU
Subject: [External] Re: [mou-net] Boreal Chickadee
***External Sender - Please Exercise Caution***
It would be cool
It would be cool as heck. Maybe someone can relocate.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Feb 25, 2021, at 9:47 AM, Gregg Severson wrote:
>
> Farther east, Boreal Chickadees can be found somewhat south of their normal
> range as a rarity on a somewhat regular basis. For example, looking at
> eBird
Farther east, Boreal Chickadees can be found somewhat south of their normal
range as a rarity on a somewhat regular basis. For example, looking at
eBird data, Massachusetts had had a Boreal Chickadee in 3 out if the last
four years. In 2019 there was one in New Jersey. In 2011, there was one
in
Here’s what I have as identifying characteristics:
Dark brown-ish cap on head, rather than black
Light, yellow-ish coloring under wings
Buzzy, “bluh-bluh-bluh-bluh” sort of call that I’d not heard before, mixed with
more standard, but also more nasal “chick-a-dee-dee” calls
I’ve never seen one
Hmm.
That's highly unlikely given their rande and habitat preferences.
Perhaps a wheezy BCCH?
On Wed, Feb 24, 2021 at 3:26 PM Peter Marchetto <
16c902fbf97a-dmarc-requ...@lists.umn.edu> wrote:
> Heard and saw at least one boreal chickadee in the NE corner of Pioneer
> Park, Chatsworth St N,
Heard and saw at least one boreal chickadee in the NE corner of Pioneer Park,
Chatsworth St N, Roseville (Ramsey County).
Festina lente.
Make haste, slowly.
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During the
Greetings from the North,
It is a beautiful sunny morning here in the Cook area and it even started out
with temps above zero. I am sure I am not the only one up here happy about
that. Our February has been very cold. I took a ride earlier this morning to
try and find Spruce Grouse but found
Erika and I also photographed a Boreal Chickadee at the Admiral Feeder in
the Bog. I have posted two photos on my blog
http://dantallmansbirdblog.blogspot.com
these photos are OK, although I had to work with low light and a nervous
bird.
dan
--
Dan or Erika Tallman
Northfield, Minnesota
, Larry Sirvio lmsir...@comcast.net wrote:
From: Larry Sirvio lmsir...@comcast.net
Subject: Re: [mou-net] Boreal chickadee photo on Recently Seen
To: MOU-NET@LISTS.UMN.EDU
Date: Wednesday, July 6, 2011, 9:24 AM
Rather than removing such an interesting pic why not just rename it?
I doubt many have
In addition to the brown caps, note the aberrant bill lengths of both Dave
Batchelor's photo from Meeker County and the bird on the Cornell website.
Cornell:http://www.birds.cornell.edu/crows/brown-headed%20chickadee.htm
MOU:http://moumn.org/cgi-bin/recent.pl
Paul
Paul
I have previously posted two photos of a luecistic Black-capped Chickadee
at
https://picasaweb.google.com/danerika/Titmice
This was a juvenile bird that molted into a normal adult plumage.
dan
On Wed, Jul 6, 2011 at 10:39 AM, Paul Budde paul.bu...@aonbenfield.comwrote:
In addition to the
Before it is removed from Recently Seen, the photo of an aberrant Black-capped
Chickadee is worthy of study. It is quite easy to see how a brief view of such
an individual could result in it being incorrectly identified as a Boreal
Chickadee. It's really a cool photo.
Late posting- Last week I heard a different chickadee sound and checked it
out- the boreal chickadee was feeding on the branches of a balsam tree.
Location: Clearwater Road about half way along from the Gunflint Trail. I am
hoping I can lure it to my suet feeders - about a 1/2 mile as a
Found a Boreal Chickadee near Zion Harbor Road in Cass County today. New
county bird for me!
Also saw my FOY Rough-legged Hawk flying north along County 8.
Best,
Andrew Birch
Hackensack, MN 56452
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2 Boreal Chickadee were observed 9-Sep along the East shoreline of Loon
Lake (St. Louis Co.) in the area where the Indian Sioux River widens
into Loon Lake.
Roger Schroeder
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Correction: 2 Boreal Chickadee were observed 4-Sep. Thanks for the
catch, Bill
Roger Schroeder
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