We’re nearing the end of July (2025) and but for the last few days I’ve been spending what probably averages an hour or two photographing birds in the yard. I personally am thankful for the cooler weather but the sun we’ve had most afternoons is not helpful for my photography. Much of my attention for the past couple of months is not in new arrivals but in the young birds that were the product of this year’s breeding efforts.
For a couple of months I was overwhelmed by Pine siskins but they seem now to have dispersed. The dominant species now is House sparrows which were raised by some of my neighbors but which come to my yard for food and water!
On the afternoon of July 25, 2025, I spent a couple of hours in the yard and took over 250 photographs. I had three significant sightings. The first was two Red crossbills, one of which was a juvenile and the other perhaps a not-so-bright female parent.


The next bird of special interest was an Orange-crowned warbler, the first warbler species I’ve seen since early June. The warbler spent significant time exploring the yard and giving me many opportunities for photographs.


The third species of interest was a female Black-headed grosbeak. I had seen a male on a few rare occasions in the prior week or so but this was the first female. Unfortunately I could only get a’record’ photo of the bird before she left the yard, but I did see later that she had returned. (She also returned the following day (7/26) but again I was unable to get a photograph.
Earlier I mentioned the young birds that have held my interest for the past several weeks. Here are a few of them…
California quail…

Dark-eyed (Oregon) junco...

Spotted towhee (from 7/19)…

Bewick’s wren (from 7/19)

Brown-headed cowbird…

American robin…

House sparrow…

European starling…

Other young that fledged earlier include both Black-capped and Chestnut-backed chickadees, Red-breasted nuthatches, Northern flickers, Downy woodpeckers, American robins and Bushtits, most of which I photographed earlier in the season.


















