This is such a great video. It must’ve taken a long time to put together all of those different birds. Great job as always. Also regarding your comment at 26:20 on getting owls to your birdfeeder, just how wild of a set up would you need to attract them? A smaller scale version of the goat on the chain from Jurassic Park? Perhaps a charcuterie of rodent carcasses. Doubt the wife would let me do that. Haha!
Haha! 🤣 that’s what I was imaging. Although they do sometimes perch on people’s smart bird feeders at night which is pretty cool. Particularly screech owls
WOW, that was really great. It was so comprehensive! Thanks so much. I especially liked it because I am a back yard birder. Normally I see the usual suspects and have not seen anything new around here for a while. But like last season I saw my Lifer Eastern Blue bird - once and haven't see it since. I also saw a Lifer White Throated Sparrow, Carolina Wren and Lifer Brown Thrasher two years ago! I was so excited when I was able to identify them. The Thrashers is here every year and the White Throated Sparrow as back this year. I've only seen a Goldfinch once in 15 years. As far as I know there are no feeders in my immediate neighborhood or I might be seeing more species I don't feed the birds, but I water them every day. Anyway. Thanks for this - is was really excellent!
Great job editing this. Am I the only one who has trained golden crowned sparrows to hand feed? I can barely even find film on them unless they're solo. I have about 50 out of the hundred sparrows I feed daily and house sparrows DO NOT want smoke by them, golden crowned 👑 is a very fitting name for more reasons than one. They're chill with other birds especially juncos and other sparrows but they're anti house sparrow because they know they're aggresive so they beat them at their own game, I love watching a chunky golden crowned full blown roadrunner sprint towards house sparrows and they scatter. 😂
Good morning to you from Hong Kong 🇭🇰 SAR. It’s so interesting to see such a variety of sparrows there are in the United States 🇺🇸, with different plumages, sounds they make, as well as diversified ranges throughout the US. In In Hong Kong 🇭🇰 SAR, and in other parts of the world, the Eurasian Tree Sparrows, are the most common sparrows known worldwide, though I’m sure there may be other species of sparrows in other parts of the world……….🧐🧐🧐🧐🤔🤔🤔🤔
Im watching my feeder and this video. It’s a lot to take in. The cardinals outnumber all the others by about 5:1. I’ll come back and finish this later.
Though the Black-capped Chickadees are common through the United States, whereas in Asia (Japan 🇯🇵and Hong Kong 🇭🇰), there is this Tit bird species which has lately been clumped together by the IUCN - Cinerious Tit, Japanese Tit, Great Tit, Oriental Tit, and the Asian Tit. However, having said that, my latest online discovery in the last two weeks seems to indicate that the IUCN has “distinctly” re-separated these birds into each of their own subspecies categories……🤔🤔🤔🧐🧐🧐…..so confusing…….🤪🤪🤪 Speaking of Tit birds, in Japan 🇯🇵, there is one unique Tit species called, Varied Tit. About the Woodpecker species, there is a Browm-capped Pygmy Woodpecker found in Nepal 🇳🇵 and Sri Lanka 🇱🇰. Some taxonomic authorities continue to place this species in the genus DENDROCOPOS or PICOIDES.
Learn bird songs and calls: th-cam.com/play/PLflNUezclylCuJrSsjyMCqh1faHa9KH_D.html&si=7Pff_VT3o-Ue5Mk6
0:00 Intro
2:17 Sparrow
6:19 Chickadees and Titmice
8:10 Nuthatches and Treecreepers
9:32 Wrens and Gnatcatchers
11:16 Thrushes and Mimids
14:07 Warblers
16:54 Vireos
17:41 Finches
20:47 Woodpeckers
24:03 Doves and Pigeons
26:13 Owls
27:56 Hawks
29:38 Blackbirds and Orioles
32:26 Hummingbirds
33:58 Corvids
35:52 Waxwings
36:31 Flycatchers
38:07 Buntings and Grosbeaks
40:18 Tanagers
41:10 Swallows and Swifts
42:41 Kinglets
43:38 Starlings
44:32 Cuckoos
44:58 Nightjars
45:48 Waterfowl and Shorebirds
47:12 Final Thoughts
I think we will have thousands of new birders because of this video. What an informative video for beginner birders! Great effort guys!! Cheers
that flycatcher was beautiful
What a helpful guide ! Fun too.entertaining and educational
We love the Cardinal. Especially when it snows,they show up so pretty. Your video helped me identify the dark eyed Junco. Thanks. Great video!
This was really helpful. Thank you!
This was super helpful with a very nice presentation and fun to watch!
This was great, really enjoyed seeing all the birds.
Banger of a piece! THANKS!
This is such a great video. It must’ve taken a long time to put together all of those different birds. Great job as always. Also regarding your comment at 26:20 on getting owls to your birdfeeder, just how wild of a set up would you need to attract them? A smaller scale version of the goat on the chain from Jurassic Park? Perhaps a charcuterie of rodent carcasses. Doubt the wife would let me do that. Haha!
Haha! 🤣 that’s what I was imaging. Although they do sometimes perch on people’s smart bird feeders at night which is pretty cool. Particularly screech owls
WOW, that was really great. It was so comprehensive! Thanks so much. I especially liked it because I am a back yard birder. Normally I see the usual suspects and have not seen anything new around here for a while. But like last season I saw my Lifer Eastern Blue bird - once and haven't see it since. I also saw a Lifer White Throated Sparrow, Carolina Wren and Lifer Brown Thrasher two years ago! I was so excited when I was able to identify them. The Thrashers is here every year and the White Throated Sparrow as back this year. I've only seen a Goldfinch once in 15 years. As far as I know there are no feeders in my immediate neighborhood or I might be seeing more species I don't feed the birds, but I water them every day. Anyway. Thanks for this - is was really excellent!
what a great video! Will be helpful to many, I'm sure
Awesome video! Very helpful thanks a lot
Well-made guide!
Thank's! That was great.
Great job editing this. Am I the only one who has trained golden crowned sparrows to hand feed? I can barely even find film on them unless they're solo. I have about 50 out of the hundred sparrows I feed daily and house sparrows DO NOT want smoke by them, golden crowned 👑 is a very fitting name for more reasons than one. They're chill with other birds especially juncos and other sparrows but they're anti house sparrow because they know they're aggresive so they beat them at their own game, I love watching a chunky golden crowned full blown roadrunner sprint towards house sparrows and they scatter. 😂
Good morning to you from Hong Kong 🇭🇰 SAR. It’s so interesting to see such a variety of sparrows there are in the United States 🇺🇸, with different plumages, sounds they make, as well as diversified ranges throughout the US. In
In Hong Kong 🇭🇰 SAR, and in other parts of the world, the Eurasian Tree Sparrows, are the most common sparrows known worldwide, though I’m sure there may be other species of sparrows in other parts of the world……….🧐🧐🧐🧐🤔🤔🤔🤔
Im watching my feeder and this video. It’s a lot to take in. The cardinals outnumber all the others by about 5:1. I’ll come back and finish this later.
Amazing
Though the Black-capped Chickadees are common through the United States, whereas in Asia (Japan 🇯🇵and Hong Kong 🇭🇰), there is this Tit bird species which has lately been clumped together by the IUCN - Cinerious Tit, Japanese Tit, Great Tit, Oriental Tit, and the Asian Tit. However, having said that, my latest online discovery in the last two weeks seems to indicate that the IUCN has “distinctly” re-separated these birds into each of their own subspecies categories……🤔🤔🤔🧐🧐🧐…..so confusing…….🤪🤪🤪
Speaking of Tit birds, in Japan 🇯🇵, there is one unique Tit species called, Varied Tit.
About the Woodpecker species, there is a Browm-capped Pygmy Woodpecker found in Nepal 🇳🇵 and Sri Lanka 🇱🇰. Some taxonomic authorities continue to place this species in the genus DENDROCOPOS or PICOIDES.