Image: The Ultimate Bird Drawing Throwdown Showdown Graphic featuring images of David Sibley and H. Jon Benjamin

Join BirdNote tomorrow, November 30th!

Illustrator David Sibley and actor H. Jon Benjamin will face off in the bird illustration battle of the century during BirdNote's Year-end Celebration and Auction!

RESERVE YOUR SPOT

Shows With Contributions by Conor Gearin

A Tufted Titmouse looks to its left, showing soft gray feathers and white throat and belly, while standing on a slender branch.

Titmice Lead the Way

In winter, many songbirds join flocks made up of multiple species that travel around looking for food, benefitting from safety in numbers. But a bird flock that doesn't move in the same direction soon scatters to the wind. It turns out that the Tufted Titmouse, a small gray songbird, is…
Red-winged Blackbird faces to viewer's left, its black plumage shining in sunlight and its beak open while singing

Learning to Sing from a Blackbird

Many years ago, when writer and musician Ray Young Bear was training his singing voice, he took a kind of vocal lesson from the blackbirds. “They have the most complicated song in the world — high pitches and low notes, and then it smooths out, then it kicks up again,” he said. “I would…
A bird clings to the bark of a tree while holding an insect in its beak.

Nuthatches Sweeping the Nest

White-breasted Nuthatches aren’t the toughest birds on the block — but when it comes to their nests, they know how to put up defenses. Squirrels could easily duck inside a nest cavity and gobble up the eggs. That’s why you might see nuthatches sweeping around their nest hole with a beetle…
Closeup view of a Tree Swallow looking to its right, with white breast and throat, iridescent blue turquoise head and shoulders.

Haley Scott on New York's Indigenous Landscapes

Haley Scott lives in the Bronx, where she helps other people experience the joy of New York’s wildlife as a bird walk leader. But she maintains a connection with another community of birds outside the city, on the Unkechaug Nation’s land, where she visits her dad’s side of the family…
Yellow Northern Cardinal perches on gray wooden fence

Bright Yellow Northern Cardinals

Northern Cardinals are known for their iconic red feathers, yet that scarlet hue is actually derived from yellow pigments in their food. Most cardinals’ bodies transform those yellow pigments into their signature shade of red, but some lack this ability — resulting in a bright yellow bird…
Northern Flicker in flight with a light blue sky in the background

What If You Only Have a Feather?

Sometimes all you need to identify a bird is a single feather. Because collecting bird feathers is prohibited in the U.S. to protect birds from poachers, start by taking a photo with a common object for scale. Then you can use online resources like the iNaturalist app or Featherbase…
One bright blue Indigo Bunting perches while another takes flight

Introducción a la observación de aves: el miedo de empezar

Para quienes desean probar la observación de aves por primera vez, comenzar puede ser abrumador. ¿Deberías aprender el llamado de cada especie, cada sutil patrón de plumas antes de salir a buscar aves? Aunque es bueno prepararse, existe el riesgo de intimidarse, cuando en realidad el…
A White-throated Sparrow stands on brick work in sunlight, its white throat patch and white face stripe gleaming in sunlight

Hear White-throated Sparrows Learning to Sing

The White-throated Sparrow’s melancholy whistle is hauntingly beautiful. But when you hear an adult sparrow performing, just know that the bird wasn’t always an expert singer. In the fall, listen for White-throated Sparrows rehearsing their song. Inexperienced young birds sometimes begin…
Northern Hawk Owl

Identify Bird Sounds on Your Phone

An online tool called BirdNET uses artificial intelligence to identify bird songs and calls. And Cornell’s well-known Merlin Bird ID app now has sound ID, too. It’s as simple as opening the app, choosing “Sound ID,” and hitting record. It can pick out multiple species in the same recording…