Seen This Week: Birds!

Black-capped chickadee on a cattail in the wind, Maumee Bay State Park, 7 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

9 May 2026

Happy World Migratory Bird Day!

Here are just a few of the birds Charity Kheshgi and I saw this week in Ohio. More to come in the days ahead! It’s time to get outdoors.

p.s. The black-capped chickadee is non-migratory but he still counts. 😉

Blackburnian warbler, Magee Marsh, 8 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)
Northern parula, Magee Marsh, 8 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)
Rose-breasted grosbeak eating cottonwood seed pods, Magee Marsh, 7 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)
Golden-winged warbler, Bradley Woods Reservation, Westlake,OH, 8 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

Why Are Baby Sandhill Cranes Called Colts?

Sandhill crane parent with two colts, Magee Marsh, 7 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

8 May 2026

Sandhill cranes (Antigone canadensis) hatched a few weeks ago at Magee Marsh in northwestern Ohio. We found two colts following their parents on Thursday 7 May.

Sandhill colt watches its parent find food, Magee Marsh, 7 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

“Colts?” They’re called colts because they’re born with long, strong legs and able to walk within 24 hours of hatching.

Two sandhill crane colts following a parent, Magee Marsh, 7 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

Watch how one walks in this slow motion video from Jocelyn Anderson.

video embedded from Jocelyn Anderson Photography on YouTube

Black-Necked Stilts: Off the Map for More Than 20 Years

Black-necked stilt, Marin County, CA (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

7 May 2026

Black-necked stilts (Himantopus mexicanus) are delicate-looking shorebirds that, according to official range maps, are absent in eastern North America other than the Atlantic coast. However, they are so raucous that it’s hard not to notice them at Howard Marsh in Curtice, Ohio.

Black-necked stilts at Howard Marsh, Ohio, 6 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi) (Lesser yellowlegs in the background)

The stilts first showed up in northwestern Ohio in 2004 and have returned annually for more than 20 years. Since they were already in the area, they immediately found Howard Marsh Metropark as soon as it was completed in 2018.

Their official range map says they aren’t here, but eBird sightings for the past 10 years say otherwise.

Black-necked stilt range map from Wikimedia vs. eBird sightings May-Jul 2016-2026

The Wikimedia map agrees with Cornell Lab’s All About Birds

Not only are they present, they are nesting. This one is incubating at Howard Marsh.

Black-necked stilt nesting at Howard Marsh, Lucas County, Ohio (digiscoped by Kate St. John)

How do they hide their eggs on such a brown substrate? The eggs are dark olive with mottled black markings.

Black-necked stilt eggs (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

They must be doing well because they keep coming back. Like American white pelicans, black-necked stilts have made a new home in northwestern Ohio.

Black-necked stilt at Howard Marsh, Ohio, 7 May 2026 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

Carla Molts A Feather

Molted feathers at the Pitt peregrine nest, 28 April 2026 (photo from the National Aviary falconcam at the Univ of Pittsburgh)

6 May 2026

Early last week many of us noticed a long feather at the nest. Where did it come from? Not from prey. On Tuesday 27 April, Carla preened vigorously and pulled it away from her wing.

Video segment from the National Aviary falconcam at the Univ of Pittsburgh, 27 April 2026, 5:00pm

24 hours later the discarded feather was near the chicks as Carla fed them. A smaller feather was visible as well (photo at top with arrows). Carla is molting but Ecco is not.

Male and female peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus) that are resident in the mid-latitudes molt at slightly different times. Females molt their primary wing feathers while they’re incubating eggs and brooding young (March-May) because their mates are doing all the hard flying to provide food. The males molt their primaries in July after teaching the young to hunt.

Read more about molting at Time to Molt written in July 2022. Peregrine falcons are the last bird in the article.

p.s. Peregrine molt information can be found at:

Going Early to Magee Marsh

Hooded warbler in southwestern Pennsylvania (photo by Steve Gosser)

5 May 2026

Today we’re on our way to Magee Marsh, Ohio where we’ll be birding early before The Biggest Week in American Birding begins 8-17 May 2026. It truly is the “Biggest Week” as it draws 80,000 to 90,000 visitors to the area each year.

The colors on this eBird Hotspot map show why it’s such a popular birding place. The redder the color, the more species seen. The hottest spot of all (center of the map) is Ottawa National Wildlife Refuge in Ottawa County where 305 species have been recorded. Magee Marsh Boardwalk is close behind with 276 species.

screenshot of eBird Hotspots in Northwestern Ohio region as of 5 May 2026

It’s the “Warbler Capital of the World” though only four warbler species breed in Ohio’s marshes: Prothonotary warbler, common yellowthroat, northern yellow warbler (recently split), and occasionally black-and-white warbler.

This year’s Biggest Week’s cover bird is the hooded warbler (Setophaga citrina), a bird so rare at Magee Marsh Boardwalk that if one shows up it causes a stampede.

video embedded from Larry Bond on YouTube

Hooded warblers occur in northwestern Ohio (see my faint orange circle on the map below) but are more readily seen in western Pennsylvania (darker purple). They are rare at the Boardwalk because they prefer thick shrubby areas in forest understory, not open marsh habitat with sparse woodlots.

Hooded warbler eBird sightings in past 10 years as of 3 May 2026

Some formerly rare birds are now more common. Prior to 2010 American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) were very rare flyover birds. Now they are present every year.

American white pelicans flying over Howard Marsh, Ohio, May 2023 (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Their official range map (left) still has them absent east of the Mississippi but observations and breeding records show some in northwestern Ohio. American white pelicans now breed on Turning Point Island in Sandusky Bay and many stop over on their way to their breeding grounds in Canada (righthand map).

American white pelican range map (Wikimedia) vs eBird sightings in past 10 years as of 3 May 2026

The forecast for northwestern Ohio calls for chilly cloudy weather and rain while we’re there. I might need this video “warbler fix” by the time I’m done. (I also posted this video last year.)

video embedded from SK Winnicki on YouTube

Don’t Want That Goldfish Anymore? Don’t Put It Outdoors!

Massive pet goldfish found in the wild at Presque Isle, Erie PA, 2025 (photo of Corey Ketchum/USFWS holding a goldfish found during an electrofishing survey in Presque Isle, PA. Photo by Matt Basista/USFWS)

4 May 2026

This goldfish looks familiar. Someone didn’t want it or couldn’t keep it anymore so they dropped it off in the nearest waterway to let it “swim free.” Big mistake.

The goldfish above was found at Presque Isle State Park but I’ve seen them this big in Schenley Park’s Panther Hollow Lake. Goldfish are in the carp family (Cyprinidae) and live 12-20 years.

Awww, but it was so tiny when I bought it! Not anymore. During their long lifetime goldfish reach 6-10 inches in a tank but grow much bigger outdoors where they can weigh up to 4 pounds!

Your pet store goldfish after two years in the wild: ‘Call me Megalodon.’ [an extinct giant shark]

This goldfish isn’t supposed to be here. But someone released it, thinking they were being kind. Instead, they created an invasive problem that can last decades.

Goldfish grow massive in the wild, where they can turn lakes and waterways into murky messes, steal food from native fish, and wreck water quality.

If you can’t keep your fish, rehome it. Just don’t let it loose.

Facebook Post for Invasive Species Week, 25 Feb 2025 by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Goldfish are invasive in many states including Pennsylvania and Minnesota. This 4+ minute video shows what happens in the wild and provides answers for your unwanted goldfish problem.

video embedded from Minnesota Department of Natural Resources on YouTube

Remember, if you have an unwanted goldfish it is illegal to drop it off outdoors. Rehome it (give it away), take it to a Pet Surrender Event, call a pet or aquarium supply store, or call a Nature Center for advice. Don’t put it outdoors!

p.s. Goldfish create lousy, murky water quality. I’ll bet they are part of the problem at Panther Hollow Lake.

Peregrine Nestlings Growth: Week 1

Carla shelters her chicks at 1 week old, 2 May 2026 (photo from the National Aviary falconcam at the Univ of Pittsburgh)

3 May 2026

Hatch Day at the Pitt peregrine nest was just over a week ago so now’s a good time to see how the chicks have grown.

This slideshow from the National Aviary’s Cathedral of Learning falconcam displays one photo per day from 25 April through 2 May 2026.

There are subtle changes in the day-by-day photos.

At Hatching: 35-40 grams, feeble, damp, pink, sparse down, eyes closed except when begging, open eye is slit-like.

On Hatch Day: The fourth egg hatched on 27 April; the chick was dry within an hour. Five hours later the newest chick (in green circle) was standing up for a feeding with his siblings.

Carla feeds four chicks, 27 April 2026 (photo from the National Aviary falconcam at the Univ of Pittsburgh)

At 5 days: Weight has doubled since hatch day, sits up, open eye is round. No second down yet.

At 6 days: Second down begins on wings (humeral and alar tracts, dorsal surface of wing).

At 7 Days = 1 week: Second down begins on abdomen and legs (femoral and crural tracts), chicks form a huddle in the nest scrape, can sit up but still wobbly. Sleep in a pile.

Yesterday when the chicks were one week old, one of them opened his wings while sleeping in the pile under Carla’s breast. I’ve marked up this photo to show feather development along his wing.

Carla shelters her chicks at one week old, 2 May 2026 (photo from the National Aviary falconcam at the Univ of Pittsburgh)

See photos of their expected development at: Peregrine chicks week-to-week development in pictures.

Watch the chicks grow on the National Aviary falconcam at the University of Pittsburgh.

Seen This Week: Flowers and a Favorite Cat

Solomon’s seal in bloom at Enlow Fork, 28 April 2026 (photo by Kate St. John)

2 May 2026

Four of us visited Enlow Fork (State Gamelands 302) on 28 April, two days after Wheeling Creek Watershed Conservancy held their Enlow Fork Spring Fling. Many flowers were at their peak but our yo-yo weather caused many others to bloom early and those were past their prime.

Four of the best flowers are pictured here:

Foam flower at Enlow Fork, 28 April 2026 (photo by Kate St. John)
Fire pink, Enlow Fork, 28 April 2026 (photo by Kate St. John)

Bedstraw is also called cleavers because of the tiny hooks on all its leaves and stems. The hooks are so tiny that they never hurt but they do make the plant stick to your hand.

Bedstraw, Enlow Fork, 28 April 2026 (photo by Kate St. John)

A Favorite Cat:

Last weekend we visited my family in southeastern Virginia and saw one of our favorite cats, my sister’s cat Liddy.

Liddy likes to be with people and she likes to sleep. During dinner she wanted to be with us but it was bright and loud and no lap was available so she slept on the back of the sofa.

My sister’s cat, Liddy, is blocking our light and sounds while she sleeps near us, 26 April 2026 (photo by Kate St. John)

To keep out the light and noise she “stands on her head” to block her ears and cover her eyes. Here’s what she looks like when her face is looking up.

My sister’s cat Liddy, 25 April 2026 (photo by Kate St. John)

Mama Possum in Slow Motion

Mother opossum with full pouch (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

1 May 2026

Marsupials are unusual mammals whose young are born in an undeveloped state and complete their development inside their mother’s pouch. Australia has many marsupials including kangaroos and koalas but north of Mexico, North America has only one. The Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana) is the northernmost marsupial in the world.

This week Dana Nesiti saw an opossum crossing a gravel trail and published it in slow motion on Facebook. Notice how “fat” this possum appears to be. She’s a mother carrying her growing young inside her pouch.

    NOTE: If you’re viewing this on mobile and cannot see the video: A Facebook bug prevents displaying of embedded Facebook posts on some mobile devices. Until Meta fixes it click here to see Dana’s post.

When her young get larger they won’t fit in her pouch so she’ll have to carry them on her back. The caption on this Wikimedia photo says she’s carrying nine!

Mother Virginia opossum carrying her young on her back (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

p.s. How did Virginia opossums get so far north? They walked from South America!

Worms that Writhe and Jump? Oh No!

Asian jumping worms on the sidewalk in Oakland, March 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

30 April 2026

We’re used to watching out for pests while turning over the soil but here’s one you may not recognize. Asian jumping worms (Amynthas agrestis) are an invasive species that writhe and jump unlike our relatively placid earthworms. Earthworms benefit the garden but Asian jumping worms ruin the soil. If you have them, get rid of them!

Here’s a quick video from Syracuse, Onondaga County, New York that describes the worms and an easy way to get rid of them.

video embedded from Syracuse.com on YouTube

You can tell when a bird catches a jumping worm because the worm constantly twists and writhes. The worm can even break off its tail and keep on living. Watch a grackle catch one … and most of the worm escapes anyway. Boo!

video embedded from TDtangents on YouTube

Learn more in this vintage article from 2019, including links to Pennsylvania jumping worm news.

p.s. How to get rid of them? Put them in a sealed plastic bag in the sun for at least 10 minutes.