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Breakfast at Ospreys’: Malibu Lagoon, 28 Jan. 2024

January 31, 2024

[Text by Chuck Almdale; photos by Ray Juncosa & Chris Tosdevin]

Willet (L 15″) and Marbled Godwit (R 18″) (Chris Tosdevin 1-24-28)
Bill length accounts for most of the size difference, and they don’t seem to be serious competitors for food.

The day started warm – 70°F at 8am – and got warmer. Of course – it’s January! Winter was over weeks ago! [Completely untrue.] The day started and stayed breezy, with gusts up to 17mph according to NOAA.

The best sighting of the day was our wintering Osprey. It had been absent in the early morning, but as we were making our way beachward from the meeting area, it flew by, scanning the channels for a breakfast fish.

Osprey 1 (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

It spotted one and plunged, but came up empty-taloned. It rose, flew around so more, then dove again. This time it didn’t immediately leap up out of the water. [Captioned comments below are by photographer Ray Juncosa.]

Osprey 2. “In the soup, dragged down by what turned out to be a fish as big as the bird’s body.” (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

In fact, it seemed to be having a tough time just keeping its head above water.

Osprey 3. “Trying mightily to get airborne.” (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

Finally it was able to rise out of the water, hoisting a large mullet. They can lift up to 90% of their own weight. An adult Osprey weighs about 3 lbs., and I suspect this fish weighed pretty close to that. The bird looks much larger, of course, with that wingspan of 58-72,” but it’s built mostly of air. That fish is solid meat.

Osprey 4. “Finally clear of the water. Maybe even needing the tail outspread for lift…as airliners do to put down their flaps for landing.” (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

The Osprey is taking very deep wing strokes. It continues working hard to gain altitude.

Osprey 5 (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

The Great Blue Heron below made an attempt to scare the Osprey off its fish and gain a free meal for itself. It failed as the Osprey headed for the beach and the sea beyond to gain some more altitude away from the thieves in the lagoon.

Osprey & Great Blue Heron 6 (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

Off it goes. We weren’t sure where it was heading, but I suggested that it would circle back and head for the cypress trees or its favorite electric pole at the corner of Malibu Colony where the Mockingbird used to sit and sing.

Osprey 7 (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

Soon it returned from seaward and landed on the pole. It seemed like 20 minutes passed before the doomed fish ran out of energy, ceased struggling, and died.

Osprey 8 “Whoa! The fish was still alive!” (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

The mullet finally became still. Meanwhile the Osprey stayed on the alert for interlopers. It had been spotted by crows.

Osprey 9 “Scanning and on alert for the four crows wanting to set up their harassment scheme.  After about five or ten minutes the crows abandoned the scene, probably knowing they could get enough scraps later.” (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)
Osprey 10 “Finally subdued.” (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

When one foot is hanging onto your fish, and the wind is gusting, and thieves are lurking, it can be hard to manipulate your meal into eating position and maintain your balance on the other. This next photo gives you the best comparison of bird to fish body size.

Osprey 11 “A leg to stand on and a giant mullet on the other.” (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

It now seems safe to eat breakfast. Head first, of course.

Osprey 12 (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

Very little is wasted. Note the talons. They’re why a fish, once caught, rarely escapes.

Osprey 13 (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

The discards consist of the gills and those stiff fins and tail.

Osprey 14. “We think that the gills were stiff and inedible and, therefore, specifically picked out to drop to the ground.” (Ray Juncosa 1-28-24)

On our way back from the beach, we ran into our “Parents & Kids Trip” leaders with a group of 19 girl scouts and parents, all watching the Osprey working its way through the fish. Including those 19, we had a total of 48 birders, probably a record.

We had a total of 57 species of birds, which is a hair over our average of 55.6 for 26 years worth of January censuses. Here are some of the more interesting sightings.

Three males, front to back: Northern Shoveler, Green-winged Teal, Gadwall (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

Their bodies and bills appear differently-sized, bu they’re both Least Sandpipers.

Least Sandpipers (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

Royal Terns, three views. The black eye stands out from the black fringe behind it. Bill is thicker and less curved than that of the confusingly similar Elegant Tern, and has a slight gonydeal “bump” on the lower mandible, absent on the Elegant.

Royal Terns (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

This Heermann’s Gull with it’s unblemished white head and black-tipped red bill is about ready to fly south to breed in the Sea of Cortez.

Heermann’s Gull adult (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

You rarely get this close a look at the Ring-billed to easily see the pale eye and the vertical black ring.

Ring-billed Gull adult in winter (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

The Herring Gull also has a light eye and pale gray back, but has pink legs, black primaries with white “windows,” a thick yellow bill, streaking on the head, neck and (often) upper breast, and is the same size as the Western Gull. The somewhat similar California Gull is 4″ shorter, has a dark eye, a red and black gonydeal spot and when adult has greenish yellow legs.

Herring Gull with four (maybe more, count ’em again) Ruddy Turnstones (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

Most of the Glaucous-winged Gulls we get in SoCal are first-winter or second-winter (like the bird below) birds. “Glaucous” means “waxy” and – in my opinion – refers to the overall oddly gray plumage of the first winter birds. It really does look like its been rubbed all over with pale candle wax. Their legs are always pink and they never have black in their primaries. The one below has worn secondary feathers, giving it a bit of a “shredded” look.

Glaucous-winged Gull (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

Last but not least, one of our most common winter passerines, a Yellow-rumped (Audubon’s) Warbler, which strikes me as exceptionally brightly plumaged for the middle of winter. The yellow plumage is well in, but the black breast has a way to go.

Yellow-rumped Warbler (Chris Tosdevin 1-28-24)

Malibu Lagoon on eBird as of 2-01-24: 7447 lists, 319 species
Most recent species added: Red-breasted Nuthatch (31 October 2023, Kyle Te Poel).

Many, many thanks to photographers: Ray Juncosa, Chris Tosdevin

Upcoming SMBAS scheduled field trips; no reservations or covid card necessary unless specifically mentioned:

  • Madrona Marsh Sat Feb 10, 8:30 am.
  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun. Feb 25, 8:30 (adults) & 10 am (parents & kids)
  • Sepulveda Basin Sat. Mar 9, 8:00 am
  • These and any other trips we announce for the foreseeable future will depend upon expected status of the Covid/flu/etc. pandemic at trip time. Any trip announced may be canceled shortly before trip date if it seems necessary. By now any other comments should be superfluous.
  • Link to Programs & Field Trip schedule.

The next SMBAS Zoom program: “Aeroacoustics Lab at UCR” with Dr. Chris J. Clark, Evening Meeting, Tuesday, Feb 6, 2023, 7:30 p.m.

The SMBAS 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk restarted almost a year ago on April 23. Reservations for groups (scouts, etc.) necessary, call Jean (213-522-0062); not necessary for families.

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon
More recent aerial photo

Prior checklists:
2023: Jan-June, July-Dec
2021: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec2022: Jan-June, July-Dec
2020: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec  2019: Jan-June, July-Dec  
2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec  2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July-Dec 2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, remain available—despite numerous complaints—on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.

Many thanks to Femi Faminu, Chris Lord, Marie Nosurname, Chris Tosdevin and others for their contributions to this month’s checklist.

The species lists below is irregularly re-sequenced to agree with the California Bird Records Committee Official California Checklist. If part of the chart’s right side is hidden, there’s a slider button inconveniently located at the bottom of the list. The numbers 1-9 left of the species names are keyed to the nine categories of birds at the bottom.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 2023-248/279/2410/2211/2612/241/28
Temperature69-7356-7462-7062-6853-6453-64
Tide Lo/Hi HeightH+3.68H+3.77L+3.34H+6.53H+6.20H+5.06
 Tide Time083207391029074006441008
1Canada Goose    218
1Cinnamon Teal   313
1Northern Shoveler  1 1310
1Gadwall454023302754
1American Wigeon   514 
1Mallard2012 987
1Green-winged Teal 1 31817
1Lesser Scaup   1  
1Surf Scoter  15834
1Bufflehead   51812
1Red-breasted Merganser   2054
1Ruddy Duck  12223730
2Pied-billed Grebe214622
2Horned Grebe    1 
2Eared Grebe    11
2Western Grebe  28131814
7Feral Pigeon343444
7Mourning Dove251   
8Anna’s Hummingbird 22 2 
8Allen’s Hummingbird 14135
2Sora 1    
2American Coot649157230280148
5Black Oystercatcher    1 
5Black-bellied Plover39827975245
5Killdeer136152018
5Semipalmated Plover73    
5Snowy Plover1322181  
5Whimbrel383223484
5Long-billed Curlew43    
5Marbled Godwit148455115
5Short-billed Dowitcher12    
5Red-necked Phalarope2     
5Spotted Sandpiper33    
5Willet9295612223
5Ruddy Turnstone24101105
5Sanderling2322769107
5Least Sandpiper8186352816
5Western Sandpiper315    
6Bonaparte’s Gull    3 
6Heermann’s Gull905155712212
6Ring-billed Gull  4423425
6Western Gull856545686430
6Herring Gull1  112
7Lesser Black-backed Gull    1 
6California Gull377220425270
6Glaucous-winged Gull   153
6Caspian Tern1     
6Forster’s Tern 1    
6Elegant Tern402421  
6Royal Tern10451273
2Pacific Loon   1 1
2Common Loon  1   
2Black-vented Shearwater 2028   
2Brandt’s Cormorant   1  
2Pelagic Cormorant 12 51
2Double-crested Cormorant233048374718
2Brown Pelican562712267226
3Black-crowned Night-Heron52  11
3Snowy Egret85220187
3Green Heron131   
3Great Egret5 642 
3Great Blue Heron532421
4Turkey Vulture  122 
4Osprey111211
4Red-shouldered Hawk 1  1 
4Red-tailed Hawk112  1
8Belted Kingfisher 21 11
8Downy Woodpecker    1 
8Nuttall’s Woodpecker 1  1 
8Hairy Woodpecker    1 
8Northern Flicker (Red-shafted)  1   
4American Kestrel 1    
4Peregrine Falcon   1  
8Nanday Parakeet  2   
9Black Phoebe244241
9Say’s Phoebe   1  
9California Scrub-Jay 2  12
9American Crow96443510
9Common Raven12  1 
9Oak Titmouse 31 1 
9Northern Rough-winged Swallow 2    
9Barn Swallow354    
9Bushtit 82250 12
9Wrentit141431
9Ruby-crowned Kinglet   1  
9Blue-gray Gnatcatcher   2  
9House Wren 2232 
9Marsh Wren   1  
9Bewick’s Wren 1 1  
9European Starling 151222282
9Hermit Thrush     1
9House Finch5656912
9Lesser Goldfinch   2 6
9Dark-eyed Junco    2 
9White-crowned Sparrow  10202715
9Savannah Sparrow 1    
9Song Sparrow4556710
9California Towhee 31211
9Red-winged Blackbird 715 162
9Great-tailed Grackle1120 1 
9Orange-crowned Warbler 12  2
9Common Yellowthroat 24855
9Yellow Warbler1     
9Yellow-rumped Warbler (Audubon’s)  51266
9Townsend’s Warbler  1   
9Wilson’s Warbler 1    
9Western Tanager 1    
9Black-headed Grosbeak 1    
Totals by TypeAugSepOctNovDecJan
1Waterfowl655351134155149
2Water Birds – Other87129280314426211
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis24131128239
4Quail & Raptors244542
5Shorebirds145299265139162103
6Gulls & Terns230152118416562345
7Doves594444
8Other Non-Passerines0610196
9Passerines598215414611988
 Totals Birds61774789711871464917
        
 Total SpeciesAugSepOctNovDecJan
1Waterfowl234101110
2Water Birds – Other478788
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis544343
4Quail & Raptors243332
5Shorebirds15149998
6Gulls & Terns766897
7Doves222111
8Other Non-Passerines045162
9Passerines92317181716
Totals Species – 108466758606857

Ancient Murrelet at Dana Point, CA | Video

January 30, 2024

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

This video showed up today on OrangeCountyBirding@groups.io chatline. It’s actually two short videos back-to-back of the Ancient Murrelet that’s been hanging around offshore. These very cute 10″ football-shaped birds, a member of the Alcidae (auks**, murres & puffins) family, nest in Alaska, particular in the Aleutian archipelago, plus the shores of southern and peninsular Alaska. They’re rare winterers south of San Luis Obispo County and mostly well off-shore, so spotting one near-shore in Orange County is a pretty big deal (in the rarefied atmosphere of the birding community). In the winter they eat mostly crustaceans and (probably) small fish.

Dr. Joel Weintraub, who posted this video, also has a bunch of videos pertaining to birding, binoculars, telescopes, plus censusing and Ellis Island. If you feel you knowledge of these areas needs brushing up, check them out at: https://www.youtube.com/@JDWTalks

Wikipedia has a reasonably good write-up on Ancient Murrelets, which are “ancient” because of the gray shawl-like coloring of their back (think: Whistler’s mother) and the white streaks (mostly in breeding) on their head and nape.

**Auk: The word “auk” /ɔːk/ is derived from Icelandic álka and Norwegian alka or alke from Old Norse ālka from Proto-Germanic *. I can’t find any sources that say (or admit) that the word was originally onomatopoetic for its vocalizations.

Ankasa National Reserve in Western Ghana | Femi Faminu video

January 29, 2024

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Femi Faminu, who frequently birds with (and without) us at Malibu Lagoon, is back in the West following barely a week of birds and food, plus food and birds, in western Ghana. The African rain forests are so jam-packed with species, genera and entire families of birds utterly foreign to American birders [imagine that, foreign birds in Ghana] that making several trips is a reasonable approach.

Ghana is about the size of Oregon but with eight times the human population. It is well known among birders as a great place to bird, with Atlantic seashore, the southern edge of the Sahara and forest reserves in between, and it is perhaps the best place in the world to find one of the two Picathartidae species, the White-necked Rockfowl. [Spoiler alert: It is neither rock nor fowl.] But it also hosts three other very small and limited-range bird families. Femi managed to see both species [aka all the species] in one of these families on this trip, and I have never (and probably will never) see either. [I’ll let her guess which family.] Ghana has over 770 species of birds; for comparison, California has 685 including birds than blew in once, decades ago, never to be seen again.

So…birding is good in Ghana. Good place to eat, too, by the looks of it. And lots of interesting insects.

Femi’s film also features a potto, an arborial primate in the Lorisidae family, and a kusimanse, related to the mongoose.

At the end of the video is her phylogenetically-sequenced trip lists which includes 246 species, 138 non-passerines and 106 passerines. Ten cuckoos, seven hornbills, eleven kingfishers anyone? Fourteen greenbuls? The mind boggles. Her all-too-brief YouTube photo & video film is as enjoyable as always.

If you go here https://www.youtube.com/@femif9792 you can see her other films.

Yellow-billed Loon in San Pedro IBR Rehab

January 28, 2024

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Kimball Garrett posted this link on LACoBirds@groups.io, our county bird chat-line. A Yellow-billed Loon – rare in SoCal waters – got tangled in fishing line down near Los Angeles Harbor, and the fine folk at International Bird Rescue in San Pedro came to the rescue. Most people reading this have never seen this species, I’ll bet, which doesn’t much care for waters south of Seattle. At 34″ long it’s a bloody big loon.

Link to IBR blog on the incident.

Bette Davis Picnic Park and Glendale Narrows Riverwalk | Trip Report 13 Jan 2024

January 16, 2024

[Text by Chuck Almdale, photos by Chris Tosdevin]

Fasten your seatbelts; it’s going to be a bumpy night.”

Bette Davis in All About Eve

Nestled between the low mountains of Griffith Park, the eastern San Fernando Valley city-suburbs of Grandview and Glendale, the Los Angeles River, Riverside Drive, Victory Blvd, and – last but not least – the #134 and I-5 freeways, what could be a more quintessentially Los Angeles birding spot than Bette Davis Picnic Area, named for the major film star of not so long ago. The park was a gift to the public, carved out of her property of roughly one square mile. Jutting eastward from the southeast corner of the park is the Glendale Narrows Riverwalk. The narrows refers to the purportedly narrowish bend in the Los Angeles River where the bottom is unpaved, making it popular with diving ducks and wading birds, especially Black-necked Stilts. You can vaguely see it in the Google satellite view above. The paved sidewalk runs alongside the river for about 1.5 miles before the path turns east alongside the Verdugo Wash. [All following quotes are BrainyQuote]

Old age is no place for sissies. — Bette Davis

A small group of intrepid birders – some of us old enough to know full well the truth of the above statement – gathered at the crack-of-dawn 8am starting time. We were almost immediately knocked out of our socks by really loud squawks. We quickly determined that it was a pair of parrots – Lilac-crowned Parrots Amazona finschi – investigating a potential next hole, located at the end of a snaggy trunk in a large sycamore tree. It featured two entrances, one below and to the side of the other. The parrots might have thought this a defect, as eggs have a way of rolling. We noted the way that all Amazona parrots fly – fast wingbeats in a narrow vertical range of motion – and that (generally speaking) parakeets have long pointed tails, parrots have flat blunt tails. This species turned out to be a life bird (countable by rule-conscious listers) for some of us. Awk! Beautiful plumage, eh, eh?

An large equestrian center is connected to the park by a bridge and riders trot by frequently.

If you’ve never been hated by your child, you’ve never been a parent. — Bette Davis

Yellow-rumped Warbler in winter (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

We birded our way through the trees, finding a lot of Yellow-rumped Warblers, then went to the river through one of the many gaps in the fence. Here we found a nice assortment of ducks and two geese, along with a lot of Black-necked Stilts, herons and egrets and a few passerines in the trash-laden river islets.

Bufflehead male, between dives (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)
Ring-necked Duck male, infamous for its rarely-glimpsed neck ring, also between dives (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)
American Wigeons, a dabbling, diving food-thief, unlike many members of their genus Anas (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

Sex is God’s joke on human beings. — Bette Davis

Common Yellowthroat male in his preferred reedy habitat (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)
Only three of the hundreds of Black-necked Stilts (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

We passed a lot of Black-necked Stilts. The list below records only 100, but off in the distance at both ends of the walk we could see many, many more.

Along the chain-link fence line, we ran across several of a lesser-seen sparrow species, feeding on grass seeds. In alternate plumage their caps are rustier and their supercilium whiter.

Chipping Sparrow; at 5 1/2 ” one of our smallest sparrows (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

On our way back to the cars, we spotted this raptor, well hidden in a tree in a home’s front yard across the street. Chris snapped this photo while it was in the process of dropping onto a hapless mammal on the lawn.

Juvenile Cooper’s Hawk, also about to dive. You can just barely see the rounded end of the tail, one of the better field marks for this tricky species. (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

We hopped in our cars and drove the immense distance of nearly 1/4 mile over to the southeast corner of the park, across Victory and to the south end of Garden St. This is the major access point to the Riverwalk. As small as the portion of the picnic park located here is, it had even more birds than the larger section we’d just left. House Sparrows are typically the opposite of a big deal to birders, and I doubt that 1% of field trips reports anywhere, ever, bother including a photo of one, but this bird was doing something interesting.

Male House Sparrow, home-hunting or food-foraging? (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

We had four species of woodpecker in this section: Acorn, Nuttall’s, Northern Flicker and Downy, the smallest of our American woodpeckers. At 6 1/2″, it’s not much larger than the diminutive Chipping Sparrow we’d just seen.

Downy Woodpecker male (red nape) (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

The best way to separate them from the very similar Hairy Woodpecker is the tiny bill, noticeably shorter than the front-to-back width of the head. The Hairy’s bill is about the same length as its head, front-to-back.

Downy Woodpecker (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

As you can see from the photo above, Downy Woodpeckers are lighter-than-air, like tiny feathered dirigibles, and could walk upside down on your ceiling if they had a mind to. Well…maybe not. Maybe it’s those clawed toes.

This has always been a motto of mine: Attempt the impossible in order to improve your work. — Bette Davis

Just before we got onto the Riverwalk proper, we found some sparrows on the shady ground, pecking away. Among them were several Lark Sparrows, one of our fancier LBJ’s (Little Brown Jobs).

Lark Sparrow (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

In response to a query – “Is it a lark or a sparrow?” – we briefly discussed the presence of the word “lark” in a bird’s name. It means it has white outer tail feathers, as do the mostly Old World family of Larks (Alaudidae). Hence Lark Sparrows, Lark Buntings and Meadowlarks are not Larks, but are respectively members of families Passerellidae, Passerellidae (New World Sparrows) and Icteridae (Blackbirds).

We had the occasional raptor overhead and sitting on the very high electric wire pylons, usually at enormous distance from us. I’d hate to see this Osprey take a dive at a fish in this part of the river. It’s pretty shallow.

Osprey, fish-eater, despite the name. “Os” refers to bones, not fish. (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

We crossed underneath the I-5 or Golden State Freeway. The sound of the cars overhead – and I have omitted until now the fact that it’s actually quite noisy throughout the park due to the adjacent freeways – was like walking through the now-closed tunnels under Niagara Falls (really loud and echoing). In both directions we spotted another Cooper’s Hawk, the first time on one of the overpasses’ supporting cables.

Adult Cooper’s Hawk (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

For a special and final treat we hopped into our cars and drove several miles uphill into Griffith Park to where several rare birds had been spending the winter. Off of Griffith Park Drive, near the golf courses, we parked and walked all of 100 yds. up a curvy dirt trail and spotted the bird below, in a bare tree, catching passing flies in an interesting circular manner.

Thick-billed Kingbird (Chris Tosdevin 1-13-24)

The only place in the U.S. where one might expect to find this species is in southeast Arizona, so it’s well out of its usual range.

We also looked for the Hepatic Tanager which was frequently seen in the same area, but it was elsewhere.

As you’ll see from the list below, we saw 58 species at the picnic park and Riverwalk, a quite respectable number for a small area surrounded by city and road.


Bette Davis Picnic Area, Los Angeles, California, US

Jan 13, 2024 8:00 AM – 10:30 AM

Protocol: Traveling

1.5 mile(s)

Checklist Comments:     Some birds also (but not only) seen at Glendale Narrows Riverwalk.

58 species

Canada Goose  3

Egyptian Goose  1

Gadwall  2  Seen by Chris Tosdevin

American Wigeon  20

Mallard  25

Ring-necked Duck  12

Bufflehead  5

Rock Pigeon (Feral Pigeon)  18

Eurasian Collared-Dove  4

Mourning Dove  6

White-throated Swift  15

Anna’s Hummingbird  3

Allen’s Hummingbird  1

American Coot  25

Black-necked Stilt  100     Many more seen upstream & downstream but not counted.

Killdeer  6

Spotted Sandpiper  2

Greater Yellowlegs  1     With the BN Stilts

Ring-billed Gull  1

Western Gull  5

Double-crested Cormorant  3

Great Egret  2

Great Blue Heron  1

Turkey Vulture  2

Osprey  1

Cooper’s Hawk  2

Red-tailed Hawk  2

Acorn Woodpecker  8

Downy Woodpecker  1

Nuttall’s Woodpecker  1

Northern Flicker  1

Lilac-crowned Parrot  2

Black Phoebe  6

Hutton’s Vireo  1     Seen by Chris Tosdevin

California Scrub-Jay  2

American Crow  6

Common Raven  5

Oak Titmouse  3

Bushtit  6

Wrentit 1  Seen by Chris Tosdevin

Ruby-crowned Kinglet  4

White-breasted Nuthatch  1

European Starling  20

Western Bluebird  4

House Sparrow  5

American Pipit  1

House Finch  8

Lesser Goldfinch 4  Seen by Chris Tosdevin

Chipping Sparrow  6

Lark Sparrow  3

Dark-eyed Junco  6

White-crowned Sparrow  4

California Towhee  1

Brewer’s Blackbird  8

Orange-crowned Warbler 1  Seen by Chris Tosdevin

Common Yellowthroat  3

Yellow-rumped Warbler  20

View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/checklist/S158925929