Good peristaltic function
Shed Quarters
An *ordinary* pine siskin
Snowbirds and raspberry finch
Outside the front door this evening
Askance or a once-over?
Not long up, wet, and waiting a turn at the feeder
Out the front door a few minutes ago
Goldfinches in the snow storm
Cousins
New-word Day
Quasi-Full Moon
100%
The shes are more interesting than the hes
Regular at the suet
A poem, no doubt
Important advice, portent, or incantation
Hospital
Lovely night for a walk
The clothesline
Purple finch doing her prairie dog pose
In committee
Wouldn't face it
The neighbours' back gallery
Crow
Nuthatch outside the window
Moss spore capsules
This is a picture of a Golden-crowned kinglet
Didn't get any bird pictures
Just past full, the moon over neighbours' yards
I'm more the bah-humbug sort of person
Evening grosbeak
Raspberry finch
Moon just showing through
High noise; blowy skies
That moon tonight
Oh yeah, a white-throated sparrow
Wet, wind-blown flicker, licking out her tongue
Moon by request
Morning visitors, evening grosbeaks
What December looks like
Cheap trick
Twenty-six percent illuminated
Minnie at the kitchen table
Late winter, 2005
1/200 • f/2.8 • 150.0 mm • ISO 640 •
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OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
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Green-morph pine siskin


We get lots of pine siskins at our feeders each winter. In terms of being colourful, they are a poor cousin to the goldfinches they often accompany.
But the past few days we've been seeing a more brightly coloured pine siskin, this fellow. Unlike his siskin-friends, he is brighter in his yellow, and has a greenish cast over his back. I guessed he is what birders call a "Green-morph pine siskin." (And now my border friends have corroborated my guess.)
Apparently, for some decades, many North American birders were misidentifying Green-morph pine siskins as Eurasian siskins. Here, in the most easterly part of Canada, an occasional Eurasian siskin is blown in by odd storms. Maybe one day one will come to our feeder, too.
But the past few days we've been seeing a more brightly coloured pine siskin, this fellow. Unlike his siskin-friends, he is brighter in his yellow, and has a greenish cast over his back. I guessed he is what birders call a "Green-morph pine siskin." (And now my border friends have corroborated my guess.)
Apparently, for some decades, many North American birders were misidentifying Green-morph pine siskins as Eurasian siskins. Here, in the most easterly part of Canada, an occasional Eurasian siskin is blown in by odd storms. Maybe one day one will come to our feeder, too.
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I expect the *Eurasian* siskin is a common visitor in your area.
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