New Hampshire Birds of 2023 - Summary and Bird of the Year Awards!

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Steve Mirick

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Jan 5, 2024, 1:20:28 PM1/5/24
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Approximately 321 Species of birds were reported to eBird in New
Hampshire during 2023 (if you exclude about 7 species of exotics). This
is down roughly 4 species from last year and closer to the average since
2010 of about 310 to 330 species. The only new species added to the
overall State List was Vermilion Flycatcher.  Last year only 1 new
species was added as well so new species to the list are slowing down a
bit.  The total for the State List now stands at roughly 419 species.

I had the highest personal number of species in the State this year with
287 which is way down from my big year last year which was 308.  This
year's total is much closer to my average.  I "lost" a species for my
State list somehow...not sure which one!  But I added ONE new species to
my overall list when I discovered the Virginia's Warbler in Hampton.  My
overall personal New Hampshire list is now still at #399!

Top Counties & County Birders Around the State
----------------------------------------------------------------
Rockingham County - 302 species (Steve Mirick with 271 species)
Strafford County - 233 species (Alan Murray with 196 species)
Grafton - 223 species (Wayne Scott with 201 species)
Hillsborough - 222 species (Nora Hanke with 187 species)
Cheshire County - 218 species (Wendy Ward with 196 species)
Merrimack - 215 species (Pam Hunt with 197 species)
Carroll - 213 species (Ken Klapper with 189 species)
Coos - 202 species (Lori Charron with 173 species)
Sullivan - 198 species (Jen Armstrong with 175 species)
Belknap - 194 species (Rob Woodward with 164 species)

BIRD OF THE YEAR AWARDS (my humble opinions!)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Overall Bird of the Year - Vermilion Flycatcher.  One of the most
infamous birds of the year as well!  This has to get the award since it
was the first State record, but sadly, the correct ID wasn't uncovered
until later in the day when photos showed the true ID. There are only
about 5 other records for New England in eBird for this southwestern
flycatcher. It showed up in Rochester on the odd date of July 13th and
was photographed by Alan Murray and James Gosling and seen also by James
and Katherine Smith, but sadly, it was a "One-day Wonder" and was gone
the next day.  :-(

First Runner-up Bird of the Year - Virginia's Warbler.  Found by Steve
Mirick on 12/5/23 in Hampton, it was seen daily and stuck around for
over 3 weeks.  This is only the 2nd documented record for the State, but
it's the first one seen by MANY birders.  Only about 5 other New England
records.

Second Runner-up Bird of the Year - MacGillivray's Warblers.  TWO of
them!  I give equal weight to both of these records which constitute the
3rd and 4th records for New Hampshire.  Both very rare, but also more
rare considering how far inland they were since most records come from
the coast.  The first one discovered by Dylan Jackson up in Charlestown
on 11/25, it was elusive and hard to see, but recorded by several
birders.  The second bird was discovered by Chris McPherson on 12/23,
but was seen (but mostly heard) through at least 12/29.

Third Runner-up Bird of the Year - Say's Phoebe.  Found by Ruth Smith on
5/15.  She got the word out quickly and lots of birders got to enjoy it
for this ONE DAY.  It was gone the next.  Only the 2nd State record.

Rarest Birds Continuing from 2022 - Mountain Bluebird in Newington,
Western Tanager in Greenland, and Pink-footed Goose in Durham!

Rarest Ocean Bird found Inland - This one has to go the famous adult
Black-legged Kittiwake(s).  Although this may involve more than one bird
and be part of a larger incursion of Black-legged Kittiwakes, it's
interesting to ponder whether all 3 represent the same bird. First an
adult bird photographed by Elaine Marie in Piermont on 5/5.  Then the
famous bird found by Jen Esten on Pleasant Lake in New London on 6/11
and which stuck around and was seen by MANY birders up until at least
7/13!  Then finally a bird seen in Hancock on 8/10.  Kittiwakes are
exceptionally rare away from the immediate shoreline.  Honorable mention
goes to a Leach's Storm-Petrel photographed by Cathy Eastburn in Orford
on 9/16.

Rarest Summer Bird in the Winter - A Cape May Warbler hung on into
January of 2023 at least in Auburn at a feeder.

Most long-staying Rarity of the year - King Eider.  The female King
Eider which was first found at Odiorne Point SP on 5/22/22 by Brett
Hillman has not left!  It stayed all summer during 2022 and then through
ALL of last year! It appears that the bird is still there right now
after 19 months!!

Most common Rarity of the year - Ash-throated Flycatcher.  Part of a
regional influx of this western species, NH hosted 3 separate
individuals this year!  First, one found by Alan Murray in Rochester. 
Next, 16-year old Ethan Ring found one in Greenland. And finally, I
found one while trying to get a positive ID on the Virginia's Warbler on
the first day it appeared!

Biggest Rare Bird MIS-identifications of the Year -  These happen to all
of us.  I got the award last year!  I'll keep the names off, but the
following rarities were initially identified as something much more
common for NH:  Vermilion Flycatcher identified as Scarlet Tanager,
Franklin's Gull identified as Laughing Gull, MacGillivray's Warbler
identified as Mourning Warbler.  Fortunately, photographs can make a big
difference!

Biggest Rare Bird NON-identification of the Year - Golden-crowned
Sparrow!  A sparrow was photographed on 11/13/23 in Hopkinton at the Elm
Brook Recreation Area and was left unidentified by Donna Ellis in
eBird.  Cameron Johnson somehow came across this report and saw the
photo and realized the true ID.  This is only the 2nd Golden-crowned
Sparrow report in eBird for NH (3rd overall).

Best coastal birding hotspot of the year in December - Bicentennial
Park.  Visited by dozens of birders, this amazing patch of trees hosted
the Virginia's Warbler, but also 3 Orange-crowned Warblers and an
Ash-throated Flycatcher!

Most Common Rare Bird of the Year - Mountain Bluebird.  TWO individuals
were seen in NH in 2023.  One was the continuing bird from Newington,
which was found in December 2022 and stuck around into March!  And a 2nd
Mountain Bluebird was discovered in Peterborough in February and was
seen by many!  These constitute the 3rd and 4th State records for this
species.

Most Frustrating Rare Bird of the Year - Chuck-will's Widow on Star
Island that flew over, but could not be relocated.  Where did it go! 
Also, Worm-eating Warbler seen at Odiorne by my wife (and Becky and
Ethan), but not by me!  Searched for hours, but could not relocate. 
Where did it go!

Rarest Birds for Which I couldn't Find an Award Category For - Varied
Thrush in Bath, Yellow-throated Warbler in Keene, Summer Tanager in Rye,
Prothonotary Warbler in Rye, Golden-winged Warbler in Rye, Bullock's
Oriole in Newington, Black-necked Stilt in Hampton, Townsend's Solitaire
in Peterborough, Franklin's Gull in Ossipee, TWO Red-eyed Vireos in the
Lakes Region in less than a week.  My apologies for any birds I didn't
include.

Biggest loss to the New Hampshire Birding Community - Bob Crowley. His
smile and great sense of humor will be missed!

Thanks to everyone for their help and cooperation and sharing to make
this another wonderful year!!!!  Let's have another great year in 2024!

Steve Mirick
Bradford, MA

Elaine Faletra

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Jan 5, 2024, 8:19:26 PM1/5/24
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Thank you Steve! Really appreciate your 2023 summary. So many great stories associated with so many great bird sightings too!!

Elaine Faletra
Warren NH
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Bob Schultz

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Jan 5, 2024, 8:38:42 PM1/5/24
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What a WONDERFUL year in review of 2023!

Phyllis Yaffie

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Jan 5, 2024, 11:09:10 PM1/5/24
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Yes? Thank you Steve. Great reading and fun to remember!

On Fri, Jan 5, 2024 at 8:19 PM Elaine Faletra <elaine....@gmail.com> wrote:

Lori Charron

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Jan 6, 2024, 5:29:34 AM1/6/24
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Thank you Steve!
Sent from my iPad

> On Jan 5, 2024, at 1:20 PM, Steve Mirick <smi...@comcast.net> wrote:
>
> Approximately 321 Species of birds were reported to eBird in New Hampshire during 2023 (if you exclude about 7 species of exotics). This is down roughly 4 species from last year and closer to the average since 2010 of about 310 to 330 species. The only new species added to the overall State List was Vermilion Flycatcher. Last year only 1 new species was added as well so new species to the list are slowing down a bit. The total for the State List now stands at roughly 419 species.
Message has been deleted

Steve Mirick

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Jan 2, 2025, 1:14:37 PM1/2/25
to NHBirds
Approximately 328 Species of birds were reported to eBird in New
Hampshire during 2024. This is roughly 8 species more than last year and
on the high end of the average since 2010 of about 310 to 330 species.
One new species was added to the overall State List which was Bridled
Tern. The total for the State List now stands at roughly 420 species.

There were LOTS of good birds during 2024!  But only one new bird for
me.  The Bridled Tern brought me to 400 species....briefly....as the AOS
Checklist Committee keeps lumping species and I lose them as fast as I
get them!!  The loss of Hoary Redpoll as a distinct species has brought
me back down to 399.  :-(  Maybe this year!

Robyn Prieto took the prize for the best "Big Year" with a
record-setting 316 species recorded in NH this year. Congratulations Robyn!

Top Counties & County Birders Around the State
----------------------------------------------------------------
Overall State of New Hampshire - 328 species (Robyn Prieto with 316 species)
Rockingham County - 305 species (Steve Mirick with 273 species)
Strafford County - 233 species (Robyn Prieto with 200 species)
Hillsborough - 222 species (Nora Hanke with 194 species)
Grafton - 220 species (Wayne Scott with 205 species)
Cheshire County - 217 species (Nate Marchessault with 191 species)
Merrimack - 212 species (Pam Hunt with 193 species)
Carroll - 201 species (Ken Klapper with 162 species)
Coos - 201 species (Lori Charron with 174 species)
Belknap - 197 species (Rob Woodward with 174 species)
Sullivan - 194 species (Jen Armstrong with 185 species)

Overall Bird of the Year - BRIDLED TERN found by several Tern Biologists
on White and Seavey Islands on July 9, 2024.  This bird (fortunately)
stuck around on the island and hung out with the huge number of nesting
Common and Roseate Terns until at least August 4th.  Despite its
regularity, it was a very difficult bird for birders to chase after as
the island is difficult to access and it stayed in a hard to view
portion of the island and most people who saw it were from small private
boats.  Bridled Terns are a tropical, pelagic species and are typically
found in the Caribbean with major breeding sites in the Bahama Islands
and Greater Antilles.  This is a first State record.

There are lots of runner-ups.  Other rarities for the year (in no
particular order) included:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loggerhead Shrike - One (or TWO!?).  First an individual found by Iain
MacLeod on 4/15 in Laconia (and seen by many!).  Then a 2nd (or maybe
the same?) found much further away up in Dummer by Lori Charron.  This
species has been on the decline for decades in the northeastern United
States and is now very rare.  There are very few records over the last
40 years.

Chestnut-collared Longspur - A stunning male in FULL BREEDING PLUMAGE
found by Donna Keller on 5/19 in Keene.  Only the 3rd State record, and
by far, the nicest looking!  :-)

Northern Hawk Owl - Spectacular owl first reported through Lori Charron
and Aubrie Giroux on 2/12 in Pittsburg.  This beautiful northern owl
rarely ventures south into the United States, but when it does, it
creates quite a stir!  Although present for about 3 weeks, it was in a
very difficult to access location.....and a long drive for most of us!

Spotted Towhee - One in Franconia first reported on 1/14.  Thanks to
Ginny Jeffryes for getting the word out on this bird and allowing
birders to visit; however, I don't believe it was always cooperative! 
Seen through 1/20.  5th State record.

Cave Swallow - 7 total migrating birds seen by Steve & Jane Mirick in
Hampton on 11/9.  Part of a regional influx this fall. There are lots of
prior reports for this charismatic swallow from the southwest in NH, but
not in recent years.

Black-necked Stilt - Beautiful bird found by Brett Hillman in Rye on May
4th.  Only stayed for one day, but t was seen by many.  Only the 4th
State record and the first "chaseable" bird.

White-winged Dove - Photographed at a private feeder in Gilford by Ken
Lindberg and Jude Schultz on 8/17.  Fifth State record.

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck - An incredible flock of 22 birds found on
June 10th in Epping.  This is an enormous flock for this species, which
is becoming more and more regular in the northeastern United States. 
This is the 4th State record.

Cerulean Warbler - Territorial male found in Hinsdale on 5/13 by Robyn
Prieto.  This is an historical site for this declining species.  Let's
hope they nest and continue to return here!

South Polar Skua - A NH Audubon boat trip on 9/3 was a tremendous
success as it found a South Polar Skua sitting on the water and allowed
for great views and only the 2nd confirmed record for NH with the first
record being almost exactly 6 years earlier, also on a NH Audubon trip. 
And as if that wasn't enough, the boat found ANOTHER South Polar Skua
(different plumage) only about 20 minutes later in Massachusetts waters!

Long-tailed Jaeger - The NH Audubon trip wasn't satisfied with "just" a
South Polar Skua, so it was fantastic to get a Long-tailed Jaeger as
well!  Although there are more records for this species, it is still a
very rare species in NH waters and the first record since 2011!

Purple Gallinule - A bizarre record was reported by Elaine Gauthier of a
Purple Gallinule walking through her back yard in Franklin. With
photos!  5th State record for this strange southern species which could
show up anywhere!

Black Skimmer - One out on Star Island on 9/28.  The first record for
the island; however, there are numerous records from the mainland. 
Mostly following hurricanes.

Yellow-headed Blackbird - One bird found by Kurk Dorsey in Durham on
10/20.  Seen by a lucky few!

American White Pelican - Not sure if there were one or two of these! 
But one was first seen by Cameron Johnson on 8/29.  And not seen again. 
Then another (or the same?) bird was found on 8/4 by Tony Vazzano! 
Fortunately, this bird stuck around (off and on) for a few days. 
Perhaps 10 records or so for NH.

Long-eared Owl - Ethan Ring found not one, but TWO different roosting
Long-eared Owls during 2024.   One on 4/7 in Newton, and the other on
11/11 in Newington!   It took me 40 years to find my first for NH and
now this 16/17 year old birder has found two before his 18th birthday! 
Note.....we try to keep roost sites secret for the most part as this
species is vulnerable to getting killed by predation if flushed.

Yellow-throated Warbler - One at feeder in Exeter through January and
February.  Now becoming more regular in winter, this bird was
none-the-less fairly cooperative and was seen by dozens of birders
during its stay!

Prothonotary Warbler - One found by Paul Lacourse in Exeter for a 1-day
wonder.  Seen by many.  Perhaps 10 or so records for NH.

Bullock's Oriole - Bullock's Orioles are rare in NH, but a nice adult
male is even more unusual!  This adult male was first reported by home
owners in Hooksett and word got out on 11/15 and is still being seen as
far as I know.  Of some interest, a few birders were able to record the
bird from both sides of the street and record it for both Merrimack
County (Hooksett) and Hillsborough County (Manchester)!

Varied Thrush - Not one, but TWO this year!  One found by Rich Frechette
on 1/19 and seen by many....apparently not terribly healthy.  And
another found in Hanover by Joseph Ransdell-Green on 4/11.


Rarities that continued over from 2023!
-----------------------------------------------------
Painted Bunting - Adult male continued throughout the winter in
Manchester.  Long-distance views due to crowded neighborhood, but still
a cool bird!  Last reported on 4/9!

Ash-throated Flycatcher - Possibly the same bird from Bicentennial Park
in December, this bird appeared on 1/6 at the Hampton WTP, but likely
perished in a heavy snow fall that night.

MacGillivray's Warbler - Bird in Hollis last year, continued and was
last reported on 1/6.


Some significant new record late dates for birds included:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wilson's Warbler - Survived into January 6th at Hampton WTP. Previous
record late date for NH was 12/17/83 in Exeter.

Orchard Oriole - Female at Goss Farm in Rye.  Last spotted on 11/1.
Previous record late date for NH was 9/22 in Chester.

Summer Tanager - Female at feeder in Derry.  Last reported on 12/17. 
Previous record late date for NH was 10/9 in Rye.


I'd like to apologize in advance for any possible errors and omissions
in my list!  I'm just having some fun on a windy and cold January 2nd! 

Patricia Wood

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Jan 2, 2025, 2:45:02 PM1/2/25
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Thank you, Steve, for recapping! What a great year!
Happy Birding in 2025!
Patti Wood
Exeter/Lempster

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Lori Charron

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Jan 2, 2025, 4:17:16 PM1/2/25
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Thank you Steve! Some great birds in 2024!
Happy New Year!
Lori
Sent from my iPad

> On Jan 2, 2025, at 1:14 PM, 'Steve Mirick' via NHBirds <nhb...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>
> Approximately 328 Species of birds were reported to eBird in New Hampshire during 2024. This is roughly 8 species more than last year and on the high end of the average since 2010 of about 310 to 330 species. One new species was added to the overall State List which was Bridled Tern. The total for the State List now stands at roughly 420 species.
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Randy Langer

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Jan 2, 2025, 4:57:58 PM1/2/25
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Steve Mirick

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Jan 2, 2026, 11:24:27 AM (9 days ago) Jan 2
to NHBirds
Approximately 326 Species of birds were reported to eBird in New
Hampshire during 2025. This is 2 species less than were reported last
year and on the high end of the average since 2010 of about 310 to 330
species. One new species was added to the overall State List which was
Common Cuckoo. The total for the State List now stands at roughly 422
species.

Once again, there were LOTS of great birds during 2025!  Sadly, many of
these were "one-day-wonders" or even "one-observer-wonders" and some
were impossible to chase out on White & Seavey Islands!  As of right
now*** I added no new birds for my NH State List which is stuck at 399.

Being retired, Jane and I got out quite a bit,  and I won the prize for
the best "Big Year" with 284 species recorded in NH, beating Jane who
had 281 species!

Top Counties & County Birders Around the State with a couple of bird
highlights:

Overall State of New Hampshire - 326 species (Steve Mirick with 284 species)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rockingham County - 304 species (Steve Mirick with 266 species) ---
Bridled Tern, Sabine's Gull, Loggerhead Shrike, Bell's Vireo,
White-winged Dove, Black-necked Stilt, American Avocet, Lark Bunting
Strafford County - 231 species (Sam Stoddard with 189 species) ---
Glaucous-winged Gull, MacGillivray's Warbler, Harris's Sparrow
Grafton - 222 species (Wayne Scott with 200 species) --- Purple
Gallinule, Pink-footed Goose
Hillsborough - 220 species (Nora Hanke with 169 species)  --- Townsend's
Solitaire, Swallow-tailed Kite, Long-eared Owl
Cheshire County - 216 species (Wendy Ward with 197 species) --- Rufous
Hummingbird, Swallow-tailed Kite
Merrimack - 212 species (Pam Hunt with 186 species) --- Swallow-tailed
Kite, Western Kingbird, Western Meadowlark*** (?)
Coos - 205 species (Lori Charron with 176 species) --- Trumpeter Swan
Sullivan - 199 species (Jen Armstrong with 183 species) --- White-rumped
Sandpiper
Carroll - 196 species (K Klapper with 156 species) --- Painted Bunting
Belknap - 195 species (Rob Woodward with 149 species) --- Summer Tanager

Top Out-of-State Birder Award - Magill Weber from Maine.  First of all
she found a Harris's Sparrow while trying (unsuccessfully) to see the
MacGillvray's Warbler in Dover
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S209165105).  Then she finds a Loggerhead
Shrike while searching for a Buff-breasted Sandpiper in Exeter!
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S270439041)

Overall Bird of the Year Award - Among all the rarities, the rarest bird
of the year easily was the COMMON CUCKOO found and photographed by
non-eBirder Tori Simpson-Tucker in the South Cemetery in Portsmouth on
November 21st.  Although the word got out very quickly, this bird
(sadly) was not relocated by any members of the birding community
despite people getting out later in the afternoon and an army of birders
combing the cemetery the next morning. Common Cuckoo is a Eurasian
species which rarely crosses the ocean to North America.  This is a
first State record and only the 5th record for the United States and the
3rd record for New England.
https://ebird.org/checklist/S285494928

The Most Uncooperative Mega-Rarity Award - 5-way tie.  Common Cuckoo
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S285494928), Glaucous-winged Gull
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S215221121), Trumpeter Swan
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S285059785), Purple Gallinule
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S284686770), and American Avocet
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S273435484).  I believe all of these birds
were seen by a single observer and never seen again!!!  But at least
there were some nice photos!!!  :-)

The Most Difficult to Chase Mega-Rarity Award - Three-way tie out at
White and Seavey Islands at the Isles of Shoals!  The incredible return
of the Bridled Tern for another summer
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S257929638) was joined by a few other megas
including a Sabine's Gull on June 8th
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S248369222) and a Royal Tern on June 11th
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S249662641)!  Wish it was easier to get out
there!

Most Common Rare Bird Award - Swallow-tailed Kite (4 widely separate
locations from 3 different counties.  Cheshire, Hillsborough,
Merrimack).  2nd place goes to White-faced Ibis with numerous sightings
along the coast this spring (with record numbers of Glossy Ibis) from
Hampton to Rye and inland to Stratham.  There were several reports of 2
at once and likely 3 different individuals represented.
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S230094791)

The "Lightning Strikes Twice (or 3 times!) Award - Incredibly, a
Townsend's Solitaire was seen again on Pack Monadnock!   This is now the
3rd time that a Townsend's Solitaire has been photographed from the hawk
watch at the summit in 2017, 2023, and 2025.  This year's bird was seen
on November 18th and was nicely photographed by Nora Hanke. 
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S285108438)

The Birding Experience of the Year Award - Drifting through a flock of
nearly 15,000 breeding plumage Red Phalaropes and 50 Humpback Whales in
glassy seas on NH Audubon Spring Pelagic on May 27th.
(https://www.flickr.com/photos/stevemirick/54553078197/ and
https://ebird.org/tripreport/377420).  Or how about the memorable
Seacoast Chapter Field Trip during the Spring Fallout of 2025!!!
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S239642607)

Late Bird of the Year Awards - The Least Flycatcher on 11/29 established
a new record late date for NH (https://ebird.org/checklist/S286891446). 
A November Baird's Sandpiper and mid-December Rufous Hummingbird were
close to record late dates.  The hummingbird even survived two sub-zero
mornings and was last reported on December 14th.

The Comeback Rarity of the Year Award - Mississippi Kites rebounded in
2025 (after a disastrous nesting year in 2024) with two brand new nest
sites and fledging one young in each nest.  Don't count them out yet!!! 
This incredibly rare satellite population has been tenuously hanging on
since at least 2008! (https://ebird.org/checklist/S271635209)

Best Bird Feeder Birds Awards - From various parts of the State, a few
nice birds came in to feeders and enjoyed by the homeowners. These
include a Summer Tanager (https://ebird.org/checklist/S232981572) , a
Western Tanager (https://ebird.org/checklist/S246311253), and a Painted
Bunting (https://ebird.org/checklist/S252538001)!  And the Summer
Tanager in Derry from 2024 survived into 2025 and was last seen on
January 6th establishing a new record late date
(https://ebird.org/checklist/S208254675).

***The Most Enigmatic ID of the Year Award - Eastern/Western
Meadowlark.  The identification is (as I type this) currently being
debated for a bird (irregularly) coming to a feeder in Northfield. THE
David Sibley has weighed in and gave a lengthy discussion on why he
thought it was an Eastern Meadowlark, but then he reversed and gave a
lengthy discussion on why he thought it was a Western Meadowlark!!!  If
David Sibley can't tell, then how can I say for sure what it
is??????!!!!!  I saw and photographed the bird but got poor views and
photos.  If it gets accepted as a Western Meadowlark, can I put it down
as my 400th?!?!?!  :-)

Some other Megas which deserve mention include:
---------------------------------------------------------------------
MacGillivray's Warbler - Amazing find by Cameron Johnson in a bleak,
wintry, field on January 12th. https://ebird.org/checklist/S209036111
Bell's Vireo - Only the 3rd or 4th State record.  Found by Brett Hillman
at Odiorne on November 3rd. https://ebird.org/checklist/S282728976
Black-necked Stilt - TWO birds found south of Odiorne on June 9th by
Stuart Varney for "one-day-wonder". https://ebird.org/checklist/S248565450
Lark Bunting - Fantastic find and ID by Debbie Lyons of Seacoast Science
Center at Odiorne on June 5th. https://ebird.org/checklist/S247015398
Worm-eating Warbler - Beauty found by Jim Sparrell at Odiorne on May
4th.  https://ebird.org/checklist/S233206098
Pink-footed Goose - Another "one-day-wonder" on Krif Road in Keene on
March 14th.  https://ebird.org/checklist/S218425124
Cave Swallow - A good Cave Swallow year in New England.  The first one
found in NH by Dylan Jackson for his life bird!
https://ebird.org/checklist/S283513736
White-winged Dove - Sadly, out on Star Island.  Found by Stuart Varney
on September 29th.  https://ebird.org/checklist/S276339464
LeConte's Sparrow - My only mega find of the year.  :-(  I think I'm
losing my "edge"!  This was a confusing juvenile I found on a field
trip.  https://ebird.org/checklist/S277281544

I'd like to apologize in advance for any (likely some) errors and
omissions in my list!


Steve Mirick
Bradford, MA
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