Lillian Q. Stokes's Blog, page 5
March 6, 2024
Hummingbirds are Coming!!



March 2, 2024
NEW! THE STOKES GUIDE TO FINCHES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA, PREORDER NOW!

THE STOKES GUIDE TO FINCHES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA By Lillian Stokes and Matthew A. Young
PREORDER NOW, CLICK HERE!
Learn all you need to know about identifying and attracting finches with this comprehensive, gloriously colorful new STOKES guide. (Pub. date 9/17/24)
With The Stokes Guide to Finches of the United States and Canada, you can gain expert knowledge on these beautiful birds and bring them into your own yard. This fully illustrated guide tells you all you need to know about attracting, identifying, observing, and protecting finches. This book includes:
- Complete life histories including breeding behavior, food, habitat, range, migration, and conservation.
- Detailed identification information with beautiful photos of males, females, immatures, breeding and winter plumages, subspecies, songs, and calls.
- A special section on endangered Hawaiian honeycreeper finches, plus other rare and vagrant finches
- How to attract and garden for finches with the right feeders, seed, and plantings
- The most complete and up-to-date range maps, including maps of core occurrence and irruption ranges for all red crossbill call types, which have never before been published in a book
- Scientific studies on finch migrations and conservation
- More than 345 stunning full-color photographs and over 50 range maps covering 43 species
- Spectrograms of crossbills calls and innovative charts of their food preferences
- Engaging creative essays, unique to any guide, introducing each main breeding
ADVANCE REVIEWS!
“This finch guide, the latest in the remarkably long series of Stokes books for birders, breaks new ground in how seamlessly it melds field guide expectations with cutting edge ornithology, all focused on a charismatic group of birds. Brilliantly conceived, magnificently illustrated, and full of information that any birder would devour, it would not surprise me if this unique guide earns the rank of top bird book of 2024. My opinion.”
John Kricher, author of Peterson Reference Guide to Bird Behavior and The New Neotropical Companion.
" WOW! This gorgeously illustrated, rigorously researched, beautifully written field guide is ground-breaking! This is THE most comprehensive and engrossing book I have ever read on these fascinating, flashy, important birds. It really knocks my sox off! No nature lover should be without it.”
Sy Montgomery, author of Birdology and The Hummingbirds’ Gift
“The Stokes Guide to Finches of the United States and Canada resets the bar as a template for future avian monographs and it compiles for the ages a tour de force of what is known about finches and Hawaiian honeycreepers. The authors’ linguistic mastery, creative formatting of comprehensive text, engaging use of high-quality color graphics and photographs, and thoughtfully chosen anecdotal imagery make this book both a pleasure to read and a delightful compendium of information about these handsome, often song-worthy, and frequently itinerant passerines. Lillian Stokes and Matt Young have made a spectacular contribution to North American ornithology.”
Wayne R. Petersen, Massachusetts Audubon Director Important Bird Area (IBA) Program
“From backyard feeders to remote wilderness peaks, finches are among the most fascinating birds in every setting, the more we learn about them, the more remarkable they become. In this new volume — detailed, accurate, and beautifully illustrated, like every Stokes guide — Lillian Stokes, a gifted communicator about the natural world, joins forces with finch expert Matthew Young to provide an essential reference for everyone curious about birds.”Kenn Kaufman, author of The Birds That Audubon Missed
“More than just a Guide to Finches, this cutting-edge book provides guidance for better living through birds. This book is so magical, I spent an entire morning savoring the read, experiencing and reliving the sheer joy of the finches I've encountered in my years of noticing them. To me, this book embodies so much hope and joy, but along with those emotions, a bridge between our personal well-being and bird identification- something so important in truly getting to know the birds. Also striking is that this book is for everyone - from novice to expert, bundled in an incredible layout of sections and a gallery of images that are dynamic and engaging. Well done!!” Holly Merker, co-author of Ornitherapy for Your Mind Body and Soul, and founder of the Mindful Birding Network
“Birds of a feather? Perhaps more of a seed-seeking beak shape or propensity to show up here, there, and then disappear, marks the birds in this wonderfully unique guide. As many of us spend our winters waiting on evening grosbeaks to finally show up, Lillian Stokes and Matt Young illuminate the familiar backyard residents, rare endemics and irruptive visitors that bird adorers will come to know better. Although some of the rarer species passing through might only give quick glimpses, the artfully novel Quick Takes in the Stokes Guide to Finches will make the watching worth the waiting!”
J Drew Lanham is an ornithologist-birder, award-winning writer-conservationist, and author of Sparrow Envy - A Field Guide to Birds and Lesser Beasts.
"Everything a finch guide should have and so much more! Great photos and useful ID tips, in-depth information, nuanced range maps, tips for feeding them safely, and important information about conservation. I particularly love that they included the Hawaiian honeycreepers to spotlight their plight. And Lillian Stokes’s and Matt Young’s accounts of personal encounters with finches enlighten and inspire. A fun, in-depth dive into a wonderful family."
Laura Erickson, author and producer of the "For the Birds" podcast and blog
Who knew that the finches, that most-familiar group of backyard feeder birds, hid such mystery and exciting discovery among their noisy, colorful flocks? Lillian Stokes and Matt Young are the perfect knowledgeable guides and their wonderfully informative book lays bare many of the secrets that finches have long kept.
Scott Weidensaul, author of A World on the Wing.
February 28, 2024
Special Little Owl

February 26, 2024
Cardinal thinking of spring

February 14, 2024
Great Backyard Bird Count Feb. 16-19th

A global event, The Great Backyard Bird Count is coming your way Feb. 16-19th. It's easy, all you have to do is count the birds at your favorite locations. In as little as 15 minutes notice the birds around you. Identify them, count them, and submit them to help scientists better understand and protect birds around the world. If you already use eBird or Merlin, your submissions over the 4 days count towards GBBC. Learn more here,https://www.birdcount.org/
February 13, 2024
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY
February 2, 2024
Happy Groundhog Day! Early Spring Predicted!

Here is a poem from Phil's website in 2007
El Nino has caused high winds, heavy snow, ice and freezing temperatures in the west.
Here in the East with much mild winter weather we have been blessed.
Global warming has caused a great debate.
This mild winter makes it seem just great.
On this Groundhog Day we think of one thing.
Will we have winter or will we have spring?
On Gobbler's Knob I see no shadow today.
I predict that early spring is on the way.
In 1887, a spirited group of groundhog hunters from Punxsutawney dubbed themselves "The Punxsutawney Groundhog Club." One member of the club was an editor of Punxsutawney's newspaper. Using his editorial clout, he proclaimed Punxsutawney Phil, the local groundhog, to be the one and only official weather prognosticating groundhog. He issued this proclamation on, appropriately enough, Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil's fame began to spread, and newspapers from around the globe began to report Punxsutawney Phil's Groundhog Day predictions. Today, 20,000 fans come to Punxsutawney on Groundhog Day to experience this unique—and fun—tradition.
Happy Groundhog day. Hope Phil's prediction comes true.
January 24, 2024
Evening Grosbeaks Need Your Help They Are in Decline!

January 3, 2024
Golden-winged Warbler ABA bird of the year!

The American Birding Association just announced its bird of the year is a Golden-winged Warbler,"Gorgeous, threatened, prone to producing interesting hybrid combinations with Blue-winged Warblers: the Golden-winged Warbler is a birder favorite, whether encountered as an expected breeder, an uncommon migrant, or an electrifying vagrant. Golden-winged Warbler is also the first warbler selected as the ABA Bird of the Year."
November 6, 2023
Palm Warbler Migration Now!


In addition to many sparrows such as White-throated, White-crowned, Song, Chipping, Swamp, and Lincoln's Sparrows we had migrating through New England, there are some Palm Warblers, top photo above. These late migrating, beautiful warblers have yellow breasts and deep yellow undertail coverts. They constantly wag their tail up and down, a nice giveaway to their identification. These bright "yellow" Palms are the eastern subspecies of Palm Warbler (Dendroica palmarum hypochrysea) and breed from central Quebec east. They winter along the Gulf Coast, from LA to northern FL.
The "western" subspecies of Palm Warbler (Dendroica palmarum palmarum) breeds from Ontario west, across to parts of the Yukon and ne. British Columbia and winters in the Southeast, down through south FL. Some may also winter on the West Coast. This subspecies has very little yellow on the breast but still has bright yellow undertail coverts. There is a breeding zone south of James Bay where they intergrade. This gives you some idea of why Palm Warblers may look different, depending on which area of the country you are in.
Enjoy watching the Palm Warblers forage near the ground in goldenrods along the edges of fields in migration.
For more on the subspecies of Palm Warbler as well as how to identify fall warblers, see The Stokes Field Guide to the Birds of North America, the best-selling photographic field guide available.
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