Birds
Stebbins Gulch
![](https://holdenfg.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/iStock-907869140-e1646775620123-1920x623.jpg)
Looking for something in particular? Click here to search.
![Winter Wren](https://holdenfg.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/jan-meeus-HinbnU-aykE-unsplash-640x427.jpg)
Troglodytes troglodytes
Winter Wren
Winter wrens were first described in 1758 by Carolus Linnaeus a Swedish botanist, physician and zoologist. It is the only wren to be found outside the Americas, occurring also in... more
![Dark-eyed Junco](https://holdenfg.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/mark-olsen-8EYm1qcAniY-unsplash-scaled-1-640x427.jpg)
Junco hyemalis
Dark-eyed Junco
Voice: Song: Musical long dry trill Call: Chip note in series Dark-eyed juncos are thought of as the “snowbirds” of the temperate zone. Over most of the eastern United States... more
![Cerulean Warbler](https://holdenfg.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Cerulean_Warbler_male_34226093063-scaled-1-640x469.jpg)
Dendroica cerulea
Cerulean Warbler
Voice: Buzzy notes ending in a higher pitched trill, “zee zee zee zizizizi eee.” The Cerulean Warbler gets its name from the vivid blue coloration of the male warbler’s back... more
![Blue-headed Vireo](https://holdenfg.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Vireo_solitarius_by_Melissa_McMasters-640x427.jpg)
Vireo solitarius
Blue-headed Vireo
Voice: Males: song can be rendered as “here I am, where are you, over here.” It is a bit slower than a Red-eyed Vireo. Blue–headed vireos are the only vireo that makes use of mixed forests, where conifers and deciduous trees grow... more