Spring Birds and Flowers Brighten Up City Hall Park
From my window on Broadway I can easily see the rows of multicolored tulips and the pink flowers on the cherry trees across the street.
But I have to go into the park and scout around to find out what types of wild birds are hanging out there.
The first one I saw was an Eastern Towhee, a type of large sparrow, digging in the dirt looking for bugs to eat. These birds mostly spend the winter farther south on the east coast and then come north for breeding season. I once saw a couple nesting in low bushes in Battery Park, so possibly they will be able to find a protected spot nearby to make a nest. I didn’t hear it make its call, but it is supposed to sound like “Drink your tea”.
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Male Eastern Towhee - the female has a brown head. |
In the same area of the park there were a couple of White-throated Sparrows calling to each other from different trees. Their song is commonly described by birders as “Oh sweet Canada, Canada, Canada”. Some of them spend the winter in the city, but they sing the most in the spring when it is time to mate. And they generally do that further north, often in Canada.
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This White-throated Sparrow had very bright yellow spots above its eyes. |
Down on the ground a Hermit Thrush was busy catching bugs in the grass. These birds pass through New York in the spring to pick up some food during their northward migration, but they don’t nest here. We see them again in the late fall on their way back south.
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Hermit Thrushes have distinctive rusty-orange tail feathers. |
There was also an Ovenbird, a type of warbler, foraging in the grass. These birds are smaller than the Hermit Thrushes, but have some similar striping on their chests. However, it is their heads that have an orange tinge, not their tails. They don’t usually breed in the city, though they might nest fairly close, building the dome-shaped nests that explain their name.
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Ovenbirds are known for calling out “teacher, teacher”. |
Then a Palm Warbler showed up next to the Ovenbird. Palm Warblers stop by during their spring and fall migration. Mostly they breed further north or in Canada. They forage on the ground for insects, and have rusty red caps of their heads.
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Palm Warblers bob their tails as they walk around. |
A larger bird flashed by and when it landed in a tree off in the distance, I saw that it was a Northern Flicker, a type of woodpecker. Some of the ones you see in New York actually stay around for the winter, while others are migratory and only pass through on their way to breed up north. They make nest in holes in trees, and I once saw one nesting in Central Park. They have unusual foraging habits for woodpeckers - they like to eat ants they find on the ground.
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Male Northern Flickers have a black mustache.
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Up in the northeast area of the park I found a group of tiny Ruby-crowned Kinglets flitting madly around in the tops of the trees, chasing little bugs. Most of the kinglets are just passing through the city during their migration, though a few might spend the winter here. It is the males that have the ruby feathers on their crowns, but they are rarely visible.
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Ruby-crowned Kinglets prefer conifer trees. |
I'm looking forward to seeing what other birds show up as the spring migration season goes on.