Hermit thrush
Hermit thrush at the pond, Dec 1, 2022, Rondeau Provincial Park.
A late season visit, hopefully it is somewhere warmer that our yard.
A weather bomb is coming tonight, heavy rain then a flash freeze with temperatures dropping form 4C to - 10C, 41F to 14F, in two hours, followed by heavy snow and big winds.
Right now it looks like we will be on the leeward - sheltered, side from these big waves.
Catharus guttatus.
A more hardy bird than the other brown-backed thrushes, the Hermit migrates north earlier in spring and lingers later in fall than the others; it is the only one likely to be seen in winter in North America. If startled from the ground in the forest interior it often perches low and stares at the observer, flicking its wings nervously and slowly raising and lowering its tail. In summer, its clear, pensive song is heard in forests of the mountains and the north.
source - Audubon-org
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