On February 23, 2026, I briefly hosted what shouldn’t have been a rare visitor… a male Varied thrush. It was the first I had seen since all the madrone berries in the yard were consumed last fall. These thrushes should have made more or less daily appearances during the winter months when snows at higher elevations blanket their food supplies. I assume that our meager and inconsistent snowfall was to blame. At any rate, I was very glad for the visit and the opportunity to photograph the visitor!

Since the last week in February I’ve had increased Anna’s hummingbird activity in the yard and several have opted to bathe in the watercourse, the temperature of which whose must be in the mid-40s!

I’m expecting my first Rufous hummingbird within a matter of days. In checking my records for the past several years, I note the earliest arrival here was March 3 in 2021.
I’ve had a Bewick’s wren in the yard on a daily basis. It has accessed all three types of feeders I have and on three occasions very unexpectedly took food from a cup I was holding in my hand! The bird is difficult to photograph because it almost never stops moving! On February 3, I managed to obtain several good photographs.


I’ve also had an occasional sighting of a Pacific wren, but it’s even more difficult to photograph.
The same day (3/3/2026) I had what I’m calling my first spring migrant… a female Yellow-rumped warbler. It was only in the yard briefly and passed on the water features, but I managed several photos. In past years the Yellow-rumped warblers have been some of the first spring warbler arrivals.

Spring has almost arrived! I’m intending to spend significant time in the yard photographing spring migrants in April, and especially May. In past years I’ve had difficulty posting to my blog due to my time in the yard and processing an excessive number of photos. I think my number of daily photos has exceeded 600 on two occasions, and those occasions would have been in the spring!