Unidentified Flying Dinosaur: My Little Chickadee, plus Bonus Water Bird

Juanita Bay was one of the first parks I ever went to when I moved to Seattle, and remains among my favorites. It’s got some really bonza birding opportunities. We see something good almost every time we’re there.

Back in early July, we took a walk there near sunset, and came across a little chickadee having its dinner. I was amused by all the pollen it knocked loose – you can see it kicking up clouds in this video. Chickadee don’t care!

Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to identify the exact species of chickadee we’re watching.

Too easy? Here’s another that will probably be too easy, but it’s a sweet little waterbird that was there when we went back later in July, when the lilies were blooming. You can see them in the background here:

Image shows a water bird standing on a log. It's somewhat smaller than a mallard, and has a white streak just behind the tip of its bill. In the foreground are shore grasses and some yellow flowers. In the background can bee seen water, and a few blooming water lilies.
UFD I

(There’s bonus mystery flora in the foreground, for them as wants it.)

The bird was rather a distance out, and with all the plants in the way, it was hard to get my poor point-and-shoot to understand what it was supposed to shoot. But we clicked eventually, and it grabbed me a very nice pic:

Image is a closer view. Bird has a brown-striped head that's brownish-gray at the sides and has a brown stripe through the eye. It has a stout brown body with a very short tail.
UFD II

Isn’t it sweet?

I’m afraid I haven’t got many challenging UFDs, so perhaps it’s time you sent me some. Any unusual UFDs in your photo collections? You can send them to dhunterauthor at gmail. Just be sure to put UFD in the subject line.

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Unidentified Flying Dinosaur: My Little Chickadee, plus Bonus Water Bird
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11 thoughts on “Unidentified Flying Dinosaur: My Little Chickadee, plus Bonus Water Bird

  1. 5

    I agree with “black capped chickadee” since the chestnut backed have…wait for it…chestnut backs.

    Don’t know about the duck. Other than that it’s a duck. Possibly immature, probably female. Bill is somewhat distinctive. That’ll take more digging. I suspect it might be a species more commonly seen in marine environments.

  2. 6

    The bill on that duck looks rather like one of the divers. Nothing in North America shows quite that face pattern, and the bird looks awfully young. I’m thinking it’s still in it’s natal down, at least partially, and I don’t know where that particular guide is right now.

  3. 8

    Well, I’m stumped. Might be an immature male something rather than a female. Dana, if you are reading, do you remember any other ducks of about the same size that day? Probably with very different coloration?

  4. rq
    9

    Black-capped chickadee. And yeah, chickadees are pretty bad-ass, surviving minus 20 and 30 degree winters and everything.
    As for the duck, next time give it a shout and tell it to turn around so you can take a picture of its back. That would be helpful.
    As it is, the closest guesses I have are (a) female black duck, (b) female garganey or just plain ol’ (c) yer ordinary female mallard. The other duckie post seems to be mallard-dominated, so I’m leaning towards this option.

  5. 10

    Having seen a great many female mallards, I don’t think so. The white patches on the face are wrong, as is the shape of the bill. It also looks smaller. It’s some sort of diving duck. We don’t have garganeys here.

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