Archives

Recent Post

Tags

Black-headed Nightingale-Thrush

The Black-headed Nightingale-Thrush is a songbird of Central America and parts of eastern Mexico.  It is usually elusive and heard far more often than seen.

Crissal Thrasher

The Crissal Thrasher is a large, long-tailed birds with a curved bill. It is found in the Southwestern United States to central Mexico.

Scarlet Tanager

The Scarlet Tanager is a medium-sized American songbird with fairly stocky proportions.

Bell’s Sparrow

The Bell's Sparrow is a medium-sized sparrow of the western United States and northwestern Mexico.

Black-cowled Oriole

The Black-cowled Oriole is an attractive black-and-yellow oriole of humid tropical lowlands. It is found in the eastern half of mainland Central America.

Canyon Wren

The Canyon Wren is a small North American songbird and a resident throughout its range and is generally found in arid, rocky cliffs, outcrops, and canyons.

Bicknell’s Thrush

The Bicknell's Thrush is a medium-sized thrush and one of North America's rarest and most localized breeders, it inhabits coniferous mountain tops and disturbed habitats of the Northeast.

Brown Thrasher

The Brown Thrasher is a bird in the family Mimidae. It is abundant throughout the eastern and central United States and southern and central Canada, and it is the only thrasher to live primarily east of the Rockies and central Texas.

Hepatic Tanager

The Hepatic Tanager is a medium-sized American songbird.

Baird’s Sparrow

The Baird’s Sparrows are small, chunky sparrows with a flat head and a heavy bill. It is a migratory bird native to the United States, Canada, and Mexico. 

Bullock’s Oriole

The Bullock's Oriole is a medium-sized songbird with slim but sturdy bodies and medium-long tails. Orioles are related to blackbirds and share their long, thick-based, sharply pointed bills.

Yellow Grosbeak

The Yellow Grosbeak, also known as the Mexican yellow grosbeak, is a medium-sized seed-eating bird in the same family as the Northern Cardinal, "tropical" or "New World" buntings, and "cardinal-grosbeaks" or New World grosbeaks. They are considerably bigger than their North American congeners, the Black-headed Grosbeak and the Rose-breasted Grosbeak.