RSS icon Home icon
  • Learn your boreal birds – boreal chickadee

    Posted on March 21st, 2010 bmcallister 2 comments Add a comment >>

    BorealChickadee23

    Now I’m sure many readers are familiar with our year-round Adirondack resident black-capped chickadee. They’re the clever acrobats of the woods who seem to eat birdfeeders clean all winter long. But if you venture off the beaten pathways a bit and find a remote red spruce, tamarack, and balsam fir forest you might come upon black-caps’ close cousin the boreal chickadee.

    Chances are you will hear a boreal chickadee before you see it. The songs are similar to black-caps but more nasal and scratchy in quality. I hear “sicka-day-day” instead of the lighter chicka-dee-dee of black caps.

    So once you’ve honed in on the call notes you now have to find the bird. …and the trick to finding boreal chickadees is to look deep into the conifer trees, specifically near the trunk of the tree. For some reason boreals spend a lot of their foraging time near the trunk. Are there more insects found there? Are they better protected from predators deeper in the boughs of the trees? Heck if I know! But about 8 times out of ten you’ll find them there.

    So this one tip should help you focus your search when you come upon an active group of chickadees in a conifer forest. Certainly look at all the chickadees but then go further and look at those birds found on the inner branches of trees.

    Where the black-capped shows black color on its head and throat, you will find that’s been replaced with a chestnut-brown color for the boreal cap, and a softer gray nape, or back of the head.

    Most striking to me are the soft, brown or peach-colored flanks on the sides of boreals. To me that stands out as a field mark that is very different from black caps.

    As its name tells us, this year-round resident bird is a true boreal species seeking the dense confier forests throughout the Adirondacks. Likewise, this is a bird high on the lists of many birdwatchers seeking a view of it through their binoculars or camera!

    One of my favorite spots to look for boreal chickadees is along the snowmobile and mountain bike trails at Bloomingdale Bog where I access the trails from County Rt 55 near the hamlet of Bloomingdale, NY.

    Good birding!

    Photo credit: Boreal Chickadee – Wikipedia

     

    2 responses to “Learn your boreal birds – boreal chickadee” RSS icon

    • Great site! Thanks Brian.

    • Brian, thanks for the post. One of my goals is to learn to differentiate a boreal from a black-cap, in sound as well as appearance. One late-winter day I came across a flock of chickadees a little below Lake Tear of the Clouds. I’m betting there were some boreals in that flock, but I didn’t have the knowledge to tell. I have seen gray jays, another boreal species, a few times in the winter near the summit of Marcy. One ate out of my hand.


    Leave a reply