We’re in the early stages of winter and I’m in the doldrums! It’s pretty much the same old birds showing up in the yard, although I am getting some good photos. I’ve made a couple of excursions in the past couple of weeks, Fir Island and the Samish Flats and have virtually nothing show for the trips. As I write (2:30pm, Monday, December 1), we’re getting a relatively heavy (Texas-style) rain here in Anacortes.
Yesterday I had a surprise visit from an apparent first year White-crowned sparrow, a species I don’t generally have visit the yard in the winter.


This is the only fresh face in a yard composed mostly of chickadees and Dark-eyed (Oregon) juncos.
Earlier this fall I had, on two occasions, what I thought was a Dark-eyed (Slate-colored) junco. The first of these photos was taken on 10/08 and the second on 10/28. These two images don’t appear to be of the same bird.


I have two unusual birds, identifiable from the rest of their species, currently in the yard. The first, one I’ve written about before, is a male Spotted towhee with a misaligned beak… much like that of a crossbill. When I first noticed the deformity well over a year ago I thought the bird might not be long for this world, but it lives on and seems healthy. It’s one of my best ‘customers’ and steadily accepts whole peanut kernels to take into the bushes to eat.


The second bird readily identifiable from the rest of its species is a male Dark-eyed (Oregon) junco with slightly leucistic tendencies. I have difficulty photographing this bird because it has become somewhat used to my presence and will come right beside me for food I place on a rock less than two feet from my knee. That’s much too close for my 500mm lens! You can see the white feathers around the base of the bird’s beak and also white feathers that help define the bird’s mantle from its back.

I did have a little excitement on November 30. The birds rather quickly disappeared from the yard but not in the panic an accipiter usually induces. As I wondered about the change I saw a raptor (probably an accipiter) soar from the top of one of my 150+ foot tall fir trees and glide across the neighbor’s landscape. And it was carrying something… probably a hapless bird it had caught well up in one of the fir trees.
I should have mentioned in my original posting, but didn’t, that there has been a leucistic Song sparrow in Washington Park (Anacortes) for at least three winters now. The bird moved about 300 yards from its original location to its current location during that time. It apparently successfully mated in the spring of 2025 as I twice observed it disposing of fecal sacs on limbs.