
A common backyard bird for me, the California Towhee is a year round resident and a bird that has some interesting and unusual behavior.
Seeing two species of towhee in a day is not unusual in northern California, but it is unusual for my yard. In fact, today’s Spotted Towhee was the first I have ever seen here in 8 years at this house! Any day with a yard bird is a good one, but what excites me is seeing the pattern of yard bird arrivals and their relative abundance which is is pretty interesting and confusing at my location. I am a stone’s throw away from the ocean, in a small town surrounded by agriculture, chaparral, grassland and forest. Being on the California coast makes for great birding, but unusual birding. Believe it or not I have seen 15 species of warblers in my yard, most of them lost “vagrants” from the east of the continent. But even more unbelievable is that Spotted Towhee probably breeds within a mile of my place, but it took 8 years to see one! In that time eastern Tennessee Warblers have visited me on at least three occasions. This is all to do with how migratory the species are. Although only a mile from Spotted Towhee country, these birds here appear to be solidly resident and unlikely to move and wind up in unusual habitats like a back yard. Curiously Spotted Towhees are highly migratory in the eastern part of their range, but not here in California. They are also vocally different, and visually different too. I do not think this Spotted Towhee came from the more migratory eastern populations, but if some of you see something helpful in making this identification do let me know.
Vagrants on the other hand have messed up “guidance systems” and they congregate along the coast, it seems that many do have some sense not to go off into the ocean thinking they are heading in the right direction. This is why the rarities show up more frequently here at my coastal location than residents, or even regular migrants. My 15 species of warbler do not include Hermit, MacGillvray’s or Black-throated Grey – three species that breed in and migrate through the county! There is little good productive habitat for migrant warblers along the coast, experienced birds and adult locals likely move inland through nicer Douglas Fir or live oak forest rather than here where it is more shrubby, or where we have patches of willow thickets and scrub. Bird banders have found that inexperienced birds tend to be the ones which use poorer quality coastal habitats, and this applies to east, west and Great Lakes coasts! Eventually I will get a Hermit Warbler here, it is a matter of time, but before that happens I bet another Blackpoll or Tennessee warbler or two will show up.
Back to the towhees. It was neat to see the two species side by side. Molecular work now confirms that these two birds are not closely related at all, they both are larger and long tailed sparrows but that is where similarities end. Something I had not noticed before was that the Spotted Towhee does a proper sparrow “hop” when it moves. The California Towhee on the other hand instead moves in a shuffling walk, not a noticeable gait like a Brewer’s Blackbird, but definitely not a hop. The very different shape was apparent as well with the California looking large bodied and small headed, while the Spotted had a relatively large and domed head. Pretty neat to watch these birds, neither of them rare, but enjoyable and a lot of questions came to mind. So if Spotted Towhee is possible, could the holy grail of backyard birds here be possible? The Wrentit? We shall see. Good birding, Alvaro.

The Spotted Towhee (Rufous-sided Towhee) was the first bird that got me really interested in birding. It was the most beautiful bird I had ever seen with it’s red eyes and Rufous sides with black and white wings. I saw it the first time in the 80′s at Lucia, south of Big Sir while on a camping trip. I will forever have a special place in my heart for this bird.
We now live in the central part of the U.S. and have the Eastern Towhee. I don’t find it to be as beautiful as the Spotted Towhee but I do find it to be more elusive. We know they are less than 1/8 of a mile from the house but have yet to see one in our yard. With a yardbird count of 127 I am totally surprised. It took about 5 years for a couple of White-crowned Sparrows to visit though they too are about the same distance away as the Eastern Towhee.
This winter was particularly warm so we didn’t have many days with more than 20 species. That’s about the norm for our yard. We have 5 seed feeders, 2 suet feeders, two house feeders, 3 peanut feeders and one platform feeder. We also put seeds on the ground for the sparrows, Indigo Buntings and our resident Eastern Chipmunk and Eastern Cottontail Rabbit. Though much of this food is eaten by squirrels, Gray and Fox.