The Arizona Woodpecker is a small woodpecker native to southern Arizona and New Mexico and the Sierra Madre Occidental of western Mexico. It is the only brown and white woodpecker instead black and white like almost all the others.
The Abert's Towhee is a large plain sparrow, common in brushy riparian habitats in the Lower Sonoran desert zone and prefers to stay well-hidden under bushes.
The Colima Warbler is a large, robust warbler. It is mainly dark gray and brownish in coloration, with a pale underside. It is a short-distance migrant, summering in northern Mexico and extreme southern Texas, wintering in southwestern Mexico.
The Chimney Swift is a very small bird with a slender body and very long, narrow, curved wings. It typically nests in chimneys which gives the bird its name.
The Cape May Warbler is a mid-sized New World warbler and the only warbler with a tubular tongue adapted to feeding on nectar from flowers.
The Canada Warbler is a small boreal songbird, sometimes called the "Necklaced Warbler" because of the band dark streaks across its chest. It summers in Canada and northeastern United States and winters in northern South America.
The Blue-winged Warbler is a small songbird. Its name refers to the bluish-gray color of the wings that contrast with the bright yellow body of the male.
The Black-throated Gray Warbler is a small warbler having the same plumage color year round. It frequents pine and mixed pine-oak forests west of the Rocky Mountains and spends the winters farther south to Mexico.
The Black-faced Grassquit is a small bird that is recognized as a tanager closely related to Darwin's finches. It occurs in Bahamas Islands, and northwest of Isabela de Sagua, off northern Cuba.
The Hutton's Vireo is a small, stocky, thick-billed vireo of the western United States. It closely resembles the Ruby-crowned Kinglet.
The Gila Woodpecker is a noisy and very conspicuous medium-sized woodpecker of the desert regions of the southwestern United States and western Mexico.
The Hermit Warbler is a small, yellow-faced western warbler of wet conifer forests. It is more easily heard than seen.
398 Fischer Rd, Fort Mill, SC 29715
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(844) 464-6463