Wednesday, February 25, 2026

A Book of the Seasons: The Robin in Spring


 For the first time
I perceive this spring
that the year is a circle.

I would make a chart of our life,
know why just this circle of creatures
completes the world.

Henry Thoreau, April 18, 1852

You are always surprised by
the sight of the first spring bird or insect;
they seem premature,
[yet] there is no such evidence 
of spring as themselves,
so that they literally fetch the year about.

It is thus when I hear the first robin 
or bluebird or, looking along the brooks, 
see the first water-bugs out circling. But you think, 
They have come, and Nature cannot recede.
March 10, 1855

Something reminds me
of the song of the robin –
rainy days, past springs.

The robin is the only 
bird as yet that makes 
business of singing.
April 13, 1852


February 25I hear that robins were seen a week or more ago. February 25, 1859

February 25Goodwin says he saw a robin this morning. February 25, 1857 

February 28. C. saw a dozen robins to-day on the ground on Ebby Hubbard's hill by the Yellow Birch Swamp. February 28, 1860

March 10. A wood-chopper tells me he heard a robin this morning. Maarch 10, 1852
March 14. Count over forty robins with my glass in the meadow north of Sleepy Hollow, in the grass and on the snow. March 14, 1854 

April 13As I go down the railroad causeway, I see a flock of eight or ten bay-wing sparrows flitting along the fence and alighting on an apple tree. There are many robins about also. Do they not incline more to fly in flocks a cold and windy day like this? April 13, 1856

The peep.

February 27.   Before I opened the window this cold morning, I heard the peep of a robin, that sound so often heard in cheerless or else rainy weather, so often heard first borne on the cutting March wind or through sleet or rain, as if its coming were premature. February 27, 1857 

February 27. Mother hears a robin to-day. February 27, 1861

March 7. The birds which [the shrike] imitated — if it imitated any this morning — were the catbird and the robin, neither of which probably would it catch.  . . Hearing a peep, I looked up and saw three or four birds passing . . . They were robins, but the shrike instantly hid himself behind a bough and in half a minute flew off to a walnut and alighted, as usual, on its very topmost twig, apparently afraid of its visitors. The robins kept their ground, one alighting on the very point which the shrike vacated . . . The first note which I heard from the robins, far under the hill, was sveet sveet, suggesting a certain haste and alarm, and then a rich, hollow, somewhat plaintive peep or peep-eep-eep, as when in distress with young just flown. When you first see them alighted, they have a haggard, an anxious and hurried, look.  March 7, 1859

March 8.  I hear the hasty, shuffling, as if frightened, note of a robin from a dense birch wood. . . This sound reminds me of rainy, misty April days in past years.  March 8, 1855

March 12.   I hear my first robin peep distinctly at a distance. No singing yet. March 12, 1854

March 16. Saw a large flock of geese go over Cambridge and heard the robins in the College Yard. March 16, 1852

March 17.   Sitting under the handsome scarlet oak beyond the hill, 
I hear a faint note 
far in the wood which reminds 
me of the robin. 
Again I hear it; it is he, — an occasional peep. These notes of the earliest birds seem to invite forth vegetation. No doubt the plants concealed in the earth hear them and rejoice. They wait for this assurance.  March 17, 1858

March 18.   I stand still now to listen if I may hear the note of any new bird, for the sound of my steps hinders, and there are so few sounds at this season in a still afternoon like this that you are pretty sure to detect one within a considerable distance. Hark ! Did I not hear the note of some bird then? Methinks it could not have been my own breathing through my nose. No, there it is again, — a robin; and we have put the winter so much further behind us. What mate does he call to in these deserted fields? It is as it were, a scared note as he whisks by, followed by the familiar but still anxious toot, toot, toot. He does not sing as yet . . . The bluebird and song sparrow sing immediately on their arrival. . .But the robin and blackbird only peep and chuck at first. March 18, 1853

March 18. I now again hear the song sparrow’s tinkle along the riverside, probably to be heard for a day or two, and a robin, which also has been heard a day or two. March 18, 1857 

March 18. The robin does not come singing, but utters a somewhat anxious or inquisitive peep at first. March 18, 1858

March 18Three days ago, the 15th, we had steady rain with a southerly wind, with a clear interval and a brilliant double rainbow at sunset, — a day when all the russet banks were dripping, saturated with wet, and the peep of the robin was heard through the drizzle and the rain. March 18, 1859

March 21.  The robin is heard further off, and seen flying rapidly, hurriedly through the orchard . . . How suddenly the newly arrived birds are dispersed over the whole town! How numerous they must be! Robins are now quite abundant, flying in flocks. One after another flits away before you from the trees, somewhat like grasshoppers in the grass, uttering their notes faintly, ― ventriloquizing, in fact. I hear [one] meditating a bar to be sung anon, which sounds a quarter of a mile off, though he is within two rods  However, they do not yet get to melody.  March 21, 1853

March 22. Overcast and cold. Yet there is quite a concert of birds along the river; the song sparrows are very lively and musical . . . I also hear a short, regular robin song, though many are flitting about with hurried note. March 22, 1855

March 24.   The chip of the [song sparrow] resembles that of a robin, i.e., its expression is the same, only fainter, and reminds me that the robin's peep, which sounds like a note of distress, is also a chip, or call-note to its kind.  March 24, 1858

March 25. Hear the hurried and seemingly frightened notes of a robin and see it flying over the railroad lengthwise, and afterwards its tut tut at a distance. This and the birds of yesterday have come, though the ground generally is covered deep with snow. They will not only stay with us through a storm, but come when there are but resting-places for them. It must be hard for them to get their living now. March 25, 1856 

April 2.  The robin now peeps with scared note in the heavy overcast air, among the apple trees. The hour is favorable to thought. April 2, 1852 

April 2Sitting on the rail over the brook, I hear something which reminds me of the song of the robin in rainy days in past springs. April 2, 1854 

April 2.   Robins are peeping and flitting about. Am surprised to hear one sing regularly their morning strain, seven or eight rods off, yet so low and smothered with its ventriloquism that you would say it was half a mile off. It seems to be wooing its mate, that sits within a foot of it. April 2, 1856


The song.

March 17.
  I hear a robin fairly singing. March 17,1859

March 18. I now again hear the song sparrow’s tinkle along the riverside, probably to be heard for a day or two, and a robin, which also has been heard a day or two. March 18, 1857

March 20.  Now first I hear a very short robin's song. March 20, 1858

March 22. To Cliffs. 6 A. M.- There is a white frost on the ground. One robin really sings on the elms. March 22, 1853

March 31. The robins sing at the very earliest dawn. I wake with their note ringing in my ear.  March 31, 1852

March 31. At even I hear the first real robin's song.  March 31, 1860

April 1.   I hear a robin singing in the woods south of Hosmer's, just before sunset. It is a sound associated with New England village life. It brings to my thoughts summer evenings when the children are playing in the yards before the doors and their parents conversing at the open windows. It foretells all this now, before those summer hours are come.  April 1, 1852 

April 1The robin now begins to sing sweet powerfully.   April 1, 1854

April 1. It is a true April evening, feeling and looking as if it would rain, and 
already I hear 
a robin or two singing 
their evening song.  

April 2.   The air is full of the notes of birds, - song sparrows, red-wings, robins (singing a strain), bluebirds, - and I hear also a lark, - as if all the earth had burst forth into song. April 2, 1852

April 3.   I see small flocks of robins running on the bared portions of the meadow . . . Coming home along the causeway, a robin sings (though faintly) as in May. April 3, 1856

April 4. The robins sang this morning . . .  and now more than ever hop about boldly in the garden in the rain, with full, broad, light cow-colored breasts. April 4, 1853

April 4. The birds sing quite numerously at sunrise about the villages, - robins, tree sparrows, and methinks I heard the purple finch. The birds are eager to sing, as the flowers to bloom, after raw weather has held them in check. April 4, 1860

April 6. Now see considerable flocks of robins hopping and running in the meadows.  April 6, 1856

April 8. The robins now sing in full blast  April 8, 1855 

April 9. At sunset after the rain, the robins and song sparrows fill the air along the river with their song. April 9, 1855

April 9.  A robin peeping at a distance is mistaken for a hyla. April 9, 1856

April 13. Heard the robin singing as usual last night, though it was raining. April 13, 1852

April 13.  The robin is the only bird as yet that makes a business of singing, steadily singing, — sings continuously out of pure joy and melody of soul . . . [T]he song of the robin on the elms or oaks, loud and clear and heard afar through the streets of a village, makes a fit conclusion to a spring day . . . The robin is the prime singer as yet. April 13, 1852

April 14.   It being completely overcast, having rained a little, the robins, etc., sing at 4.30 as at sundown usually. The waters, too, are smooth and full of reflections. April 14, 1855

April 15 Robins sing now at 10 A. M. as in the morning. April 15, 1855 

April 15The purple finch is singing on the elms about the house , together with the robins  April 15, 1856

April 16The robins, etc., blackbirds, song sparrows sing now on all hands just before sunrise, perhaps quite as generally as at any season. April 16, 1855 

April 16.   The robins sing with a will now. What a burst of melody! It gurgles out of all conduits now; they are choked with it. There is such a tide and rush of song as when a river is straightened between two rocky walls. It seems as if the morning’s throat were not large enough to emit all this sound. The robin sings most before 6 o’clock now. I note where some suddenly cease their song, making a quite remarkable vacuum . . . A moist, misty, rain-threatening April day. About noon it does mizzle a little. The robin sings throughout it.  April 16, 1856

April 19.  6 a. m. — Rain still, a fine rain. The robin sang early this morning over the bare ground, an hour ago, nevertheless, ushering in the day . . .  In the midst of this storm I see and hear the robin still and the song sparrow, and see the bluebird also. April 19, 1852

April 21.  The robins sing through the ceaseless rain . . . On the east side of Ponkawtasset I hear a robin singing cheerily from some perch in the wood, in the midst of the rain . . . It sings with power, like a bird of great faith that sees the bright future through the dark present . . . It is a pure, immortal melody . . . I have not this season heard more robins sing than this rainy day. April 21, 1852

April 26.  We see and hear more birds than usual this mizzling and still day, and the robin sings with more vigor and promise than later in the season. April 26, 1855

May 4. A robin sings when I, in the house, cannot distinguish the earliest dawning from the full moon light. His song first advertises me of the daybreak, when I think it night, as I lie looking out into the full moonlight. I hear a robin begin his strain, and yield the point to him, believing he is better acquainted with the springs of the day than I, — with the signs of day.  May 4, 1855 

May 6.  The song of the robin heard at 4:30 P. M., this still and hazy day, sounds already vespertinal. May 6, 1860

May 9. The robin's strain is less remarkable. May 9, 1853

May 14.   Most birds are silent in the storm. Hear the robin, oven-bird, night warbler, and, at length, the towhee's towee, chickadee's phoebe, and a preluding thrasher and a jay. May 14, 1852

May 14.  The robin sings this louring day . . . The song of the robin is most suggestive in cloudy weather. May 14, 1852 

May 28. Methinks the bluebird and the robin are not heard so often (the former certainly not ). Those tumultuous morning concerts of sparrows, tree and song, hyemalis, and grackles, like leaves on the trees, are past, and the woodland quire will rather be diminished than increased henceforth. May 28, 1854

Nests and eggs.

May 6.  Four large robin's eggs in an apple tree. May 6, 1853

May 6.  A robin’s nest with two eggs, betrayed by peeping.  May 6. 1855 

May 13.  A robin's nest, with young, on the causeway. May 13, 1853 

May 19.  The robin's nest and eggs are the earliest I see.  May 19, 1854 

May 21. A robin's nest and eggs in the crotch of a maple. May 21, 1852

May 21. A robin’s nest without mud, on a young white oak in woods, with three eggs. May 21, 1856 


Young Robins.

May 24. Young robins some time hatched. May 24, 1855

June 9A young robin abroad. June 9, 1856 

June 10. We  hear 
the cool peep of the 
robin calling to its young, 
now learning to fly. 

June 15. Young robins, dark-speckled.  June 15, 1852 

June 15. Robin’s nest in apple tree, twelve feet high — young nearly grown.  June 15, 1855

June 18. I think 
I heard the anxious 
peep of a robin whose young 
have just left the nest.  
June 18, 1854

June 20.  A robin’s nest with young, which was lately, in the great wind, blown down and somehow lodged on the lower part of an evergreen by arbor,—without spilling the young! June 20, 1855


Reminiscence

October 10. The faint suppressed warbling of the robins sounds like a reminiscence of the spring. October 10, 1853


See also A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, Reminiscence and Prompting


I heard a robin in the distance, 
the first I had heard for many a thousand years, methought, 
whose note I shall not forget for many a thousand more,—
the same sweet and powerful song as of yore. 

O the evening robin, 
at the end of a New England summer day!
 If I could ever 
find the twig he sits upon! 
I mean he
I mean the twig
~ Walden

A Book of the Seasonsby Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality."
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx ©  2009-2026

Thursday, January 22, 2026

A Book of the Seasons, The Brown Creeper

  

I would make a chart of our life, know how its shores trend,
 that butterflies reappear and when,
 know why just this circle of creatures completes the world.
Henry Thoreau, April 18, 1852


I hear a faint note --
a brown creeper inspecting
branches of the oaks.

Think how thoroughly the trees 
are thus explored by various birds.

You can hardly sit near one for five minutes now,
but either a woodpecker or creeper 
comes and examines its bark rapidly,

or a warbler makes a pretty thorough 
exploration about all its expanding leaflets,
even to the topmost twig.

The whole North American forest
 is being thus explored for insect food.
Each is visited by many kinds and thus

the equilibrium of the insect and 
vegetable kingdom is preserved.
May 16, 1860

February 14. All at once an active little brown creeper makes its appearance, a small, rather slender bird, with a long tail and sparrow-colored back, and white beneath. It commences at the bottom of a tree and glides up very rapidly, then suddenly darts to the bottom of a new tree and repeats the same movement, not resting long in one place or on one tree. February 14, 1854

March 25. I have not seen a tree sparrow, nuthatch, creeper, nor more than one redpoll since Christmas. They probably went further south. March 25, 1856

May 16.  Near Peter's I see a small creeper hopping along the branches of the oaks and pines, ever turning this way and that as it hops, making various angles with the bough; then flies across to another bough, or to the base of another tree, and traces that up, zigzag and prying into the crevices. May 16, 1860

November 26.  I see here to-day one brown creeper busily inspecting the pitch pines. It begins at the base, and creeps rapidly upward by starts, adhering close to the bark and shifting a little from side to side often till near the top, then suddenly darts off downward to the base of another tree, where it repeats the same course. November 26, 1859

December 21. Going to the post-office at 9 A. M. this very pleasant morning, I hear and see tree sparrows on Wheildon’s pines, and just beyond scare a downy woodpecker and a brown creeper in company, from near the base of a small elm within three feet of me. The former dashes off with a loud rippling of the wing, and the creeper flits across the street to the base of another small elm, whither I follow. At first he hides behind the base, but ere long works his way upward and comes in sight. He is a gray-brown, a low curve from point of beak to end of tail, resting flat against the tree. December 21, 1855

January 2.  It is singular that the nuthatch and the creeper should be so rare, they are so regular. January 2, 1857

January 22.  In the woods by Abel Brooks's rye hollow I hear a faint note, and see undoubtedly a brown creeper inspecting the branches of the oaks. It has white and black bars on the head, uttering from time to time a fine, wiry, screeping tse, tse, or tse, tse, tse. January 22, 1857

A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season, out-of-doors, in its own locality."
 ~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx ©  2009-2026

https://tinyurl.com/hdt-creeper

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Friday, January 2, 2026

A Book of the Seasons: The Snow Bunting (Emberiza nivalis)


I would make a chart of our life,
know why just this circle of creatures completes the world.
Henry Thoreau, April 18, 1852

Snow buntings flying
high against a cloudy sky
look like large snowflakes.

A flock of snowbirds
so white and arctic – buntings.
It begins to snow.
December 24, 1851

A small flock of eight snow buntings feeding on the seeds of the pigweed.
They have come with this 
deeper snow, colder weather.
January 2, 1856

A flock of buntings 
and that black and white effect
when they fly past you.
 February 1, 1857

November 7  Going up the lane beyond Farmer’s, I was surprised to see fly up from the white, stony road, two snow buntings, which alighted again close by, one on a large rock, the other on the stony ground. They had pale-brown or tawny touches on the white breast, on each side of the head, and on the top of the head, in the last place with some darker color. Had light-yellowish bills. They sat quite motionless within two rods, and allowed me to approach within a rod, as if conscious that the white rocks,  etc., concealed them. It seemed as if they were attracted to surfaces of the same color with themselves, — white and black (or quite dark) and tawny. One squatted flat, if not both. Their soft rippling notes as they went off reminded me [of] the northeast snow-storms to which ere long they are to be an accompaniment. November 7, 1858 


November 29. Saw quite a flock of snow buntings not yet very white. They rose from the midst of a stubble-field unexpectedly. The moment they settled after wheeling around, they were perfectly concealed, though quite near, and I could only hear their rippling note from the earth from time to time. November 29, 1859 

December 10. See a large flock of snow buntings (quite white against woods, at any rate), though it is quite warm.  December 10, 1854

Crossing the fields west of our Texas house, I see an immense flock of snow buntings, I think the largest that I ever saw. There must be a thousand or two at least. There is but three inches, at most, of crusted and dry frozen snow, and they are running amid the weeds which rise above it. 

The weeds are chiefly Juncus tenuis (?), but its seeds are apparently gone. I find, however, the glumes of the piper grass scattered about where they have been. 

The flock is at first about equally divided into two parts about twenty rods apart, but birds are incessantly flitting across the interval to join the pioneer flock, until all are united. They are very restless, running amid the weeds and continually changing their ground. They will suddenly rise again a few seconds after they have alighted, as if alarmed, but after a short wheel settle close by. 

Flying from you, in some positions, you see only or chiefly the black part of their bodies, and then, as they wheel, the white comes into view, contrasted prettily with the former, and in all together at the same time. 

Seen flying higher against a cloudy sky they look like large snowflakes. 

When they rise all together their note is like the rattling of nuts in a bag, as if a whole binful were rolled from side to side. They also utter from time to time — i. e., individuals do — a clear rippling note, perhaps of alarm, or a call. It is remarkable that their notes above described should resemble the lesser redpolls'! 

Away goes this great wheeling, rambling flock, rolling through the air, and you cannot easily tell where they will settle. Suddenly the pioneers (or a part not foremost) will change their course when in full career, and when at length they know it, the rushing flock on the other side will be fetched about as it were with an undulating jerk, as in the boys’ game of snap-the-whip, and those that occupy the place of the snapper are gradually off after their leaders on the new tack.

As far as I observe, they confine themselves to upland, not alighting in the meadows. Like a snow-storm they come rushing down from the north. The extremities of the wings are black, while the parts next their bodies are black [sic]. They are unusually abundant now . . . 

I should like to know where all those snowbirds will roost to-night, for they will probably roost together. And what havoc an owl might make among them! 

[Melvin tells me that he saw a thousand feeding a long time in the Great Meadows, — he thinks on the seeds of the wool-grass (!!), — about same time.] 

December 15. I see again a large flock of what I called buntings on the 10th, also another flock surely not buntings, perhaps Fringilla linaria. May they not all be these? December 15, 1854

December 21. Also a large flock of snow buntings, fair and pleasant as it is. Their whiteness, like the snow, is their most remarkable peculiarity. December 21, 1859

In this slight snow I am surprised to see countless tracks of small birds, which have run over it in every direction from one end to the other of this great meadow since morning. By the length of the hind toe I know them to be snow buntings. 

Indeed, soon after I see them running still on one side of the meadow. I was puzzled to tell what they got by running there. Yet I [saw them] stopping repeatedly and picking up something. Of course I thought of those caterpillars which are washed out by a rain and freshet at this season, but I could not find one of them. 

It rained on the 18th and again the 20th, and over a good part of the meadow the top of the stubble left by the scythe rises a little above the ice, i. e. an inch or two, not enough to disturb a skater. The birds have run here chiefly, visiting each little collection or tuft of stubble, and found their food chiefly in and about this thin stubble. 

I examined such places a long time and very carefully, but I could not find there the seed of any plant whatever. It was merely the stubble of sedge, with never any head left, and a few cranberry leaves projecting. 

All that I could find was pretty often (in some places very often) a little black, or else a brown, spider (sometimes quite a large one) motionless on the snow or ice; and therefore I am constrained to think that they eat them, for I saw them running and picking in exactly such places a little way from me, and here were their tracks all around. Yet they are called graminivorous. 

Wilson says that he has seen them feeding on the seeds of aquatic plants on the Seneca River, clinging to their heads. I think he means wool-grass. Yet its seeds are too minute and involved in the wool.

Though there was wool-grass hereabouts, the birds did not go near it. To be sure, it has but little seed now. If they are so common at the extreme north, where there is so little vegetation but perhaps a great many spiders, is it not likely that they feed on these insects?

It is interesting to see how busy this flock is, exploring this great meadow to-day. If it were not for this slight snow, revealing their tracks but hardly at all concealing the stubble, I should not suspect it, though I might see them at their work. 

Now I see them running briskly over the ice, most commonly near the shore, where there is most stubble (though very little); and they explore the ground so fast that they are continually changing their ground, and if I do not keep my eye on them I lose the direction. 

Then here they come, with a stiff rip of their wings as they suddenly wheel, and those peculiar rippling notes, flying low quite across the meadow, half a mile even, to explore the other side, though that too is already tracked by them. 

Not the fisher nor skater range the meadow a thousandth part so much in a week as these birds in a day. They hardly notice me as they come on. Indeed, the flock, flying about as high as my head, divides, and half passes on each side of me. 

Thus they sport over these broad meadows of ice this pleasant winter day. The spiders lie torpid and plain to see on the snow, and if it is they that they are after they never know what kills them.

December 24. Saw a flock of snowbirds on the Walden road. I see them so commonly when it is beginning to snow that I am inclined to regard them as a sign of a snow-storm. The snow bunting (Emberiza nivalis) methinks it is, so white and arctic, not the slate-colored. December 24, 1851

December 29. The driving snow blinds you, and where you are protected, you can see but little way, it is so thick. Yet in spite, or on account, of all, I see the first flock of arctic snowbirds (Emberiza nivalis) near the depot, white and black, with a sharp, whistle-like note . . . 
Of the snow bunting, Wilson says that they appear in the northern parts of the United States “early in December, or with the first heavy snow, particularly if drifted by high winds.” 

 This day answers to that description exactly. The wind is northerly. 

He adds that "they are . . . universally considered as the harbingers of severe cold weather.” They come down from the extreme north and are common to the two continents; quotes Pennant as saying that they
 “inhabit not only Greenland but even the dreadful climate of Spitzbergen, where vegetation is nearly extinct, and scarcely any but cryptogamous plants are found. It therefore excites wonder, how birds, which are graminivorous in every other than those frost-bound regions, subsist: yet are there found in great flocks both on the land and ice of Spitzbergen.” 
P. also says that they inhabit in summer "the most naked Lapland Alps,” and “descend in rigorous seasons into Sweden, and fill the roads and fields; on which account the Uplanders call them "hardwarsfogel,” hard-weather birds. Also P. says “they overflow [in winter] the more southern countries in amazing multitudes.” 

W. says their colors are very variable, "and the whiteness of their plumage is observed to be greatest towards the depth of winter.” Also W. says truly that they seldom sit long, “being a roving restless bird.” 

Peabody says that in summer they are “pure white and black,” but are not seen of that color here. 

 Those I saw to-day were of that color, behind A. Wheeler's. 

He says they are white and rusty brown here. 
These are the true winter birds for you, these winged snowballs. I could hardly see them, the air is so full of driving snow. What hardy creatures! Where do they spend the night ? December 29, 1853

January 2.  A flock of snow buntings flew over the fields with a rippling whistle, accompanied sometimes by a tender peep and a ricochet motion.  January 2, 1854

January 2.  Crossing the railroad at the Heywood meadow, I see some snow buntings rise from the side of the embankment, and with surging, rolling flight wing their way up through the cut . . . Returning, I see, near the back road and railroad, a small flock of eight snow buntings feeding on the the seeds of the pigweed, picking them from the snow, – apparently flat on the snow, their legs so short, – and, when I approach, alighting on the rail fence. They are pretty black, with white wings and a brown crescent on their breasts. They have come with this deeper snow and colder weather.  January 2, 1856

January 3. Saw four snow buntings by the railroad causeway, just this side the cut, quite tame. They arose and alighted on the rail fence as we went by. Very stout for their length. Look very pretty when they fly and reveal the clear white space on their wings next the body, — white between the blacks. They were busily eating the seed of the piper grass on the embankment there, and it was strewn over the snow by them like oats in a stable. Melvin speaks of seeing flocks of them on the river meadows in the fall, when they are of a different color.  January 3, 1859

January 5. Now and then I hear a sort of creaking twitter, maybe from a passing snow bunting. This is the weather for them. January 5, 1856

January 6 While I am making a path to the pump, I hear hurried rippling notes of birds, look up, and see quite a flock of snow buntings coming to alight amid the currant-tops in the yard. It is a sound almost as if made with their wings. What a pity our yard was made so tidy in the fall with rake and fire, and we have now no tall crop of weeds rising above this snow to invite these birds! January 6, 1856 

January  6 Near Nut Meadow Brook, on the Jimmy Miles road, I see a flock of snow buntings. They are feeding exclusively on that ragged weed which I take to be Roman wormwood. Their tracks where they sink in the snow are very long, i. e., have a very long heel, or sometimes almost in a single straight line. They made notes when they went,—sharp, rippling, like a vibrating spring. They had run about to every such such, leaving distinct tracks raying from and to them, While the snow immediately about the weed was so tracked and pecked where the seeds fell that no track was distinct. January 6, 1859 

January 14Warm and fall-like as it is, saw many snow buntings at the entrance to the beach. January 14, 1858

January 16. I hear flying over (and see) a snow bunting, -- a clear loud tcheep or tcheop, sometimes rapidly trilled or quavered, -- calling its mates. January 16, 1856

January 21 As I flounder along the Corner road against the root fence, a very large flock of snow buntings alight with a wheeling flight amid the weeds rising above the snow in Potter's heater piece, — a hundred or two of them. 
They run restlessly amid the weeds, so that I can hardly get sight of them through my glass; then suddenly all arise and fly only two or three rods, alighting within  three rods of me. (They keep up a constant twittering.) 
It was as if they were any instant ready for a longer flight, but their leader had not so ordered it. Suddenly away they sweep again, and I see them alight in a distant field where the weeds rise above the snow, but in a few minutes they have left that also and gone further north. 
Beside their rippling note, they have a vibratory twitter, and from the loiterers you hear quite a tender peep, as they fly after the vanishing flock. 
What independent creatures! They go seeking their food from north to south. If New Hampshire and Maine are covered deeply with snow, they scale down to Massachusetts for their breakfasts. 
Not liking the grain in this field, away they dash to another distant one, attracted by the weeds rising above the snow. Who can guess in what field, by what river or mountain they breakfasted this morning. 
They did not seem to regard me so near, but as they went off, their wave actually broke over me as a rock. They have the pleasure of society at their feasts, a hundred dining at once, busily talking while eating, remembering what occurred at Grinnell Land. 
As they flew past me they presented a pretty appearance, somewhat like broad bars of white alternating with bars of black. January 21, 1857 

January 22Snow buntings are very wandering. They were quite numerous a month ago, and now seem to have quit the town. They seem to ramble about the country at will. January 22, 1860

February 1.   Warm as it is, I see a large flock of snow buntings on the railroad causeway. Their wings are white above next the body, but black or dark beyond and on the back. This produces that regular black and white effect when they fly past you. February 1, 1857  

February 13.  One of these pigweeds in the yard lasts the snow-birds all winter, and after every new storm they re-visit it. How inexhaustible their granary!  February 13, 1855

February 13.  In the midst of the snow-storm on Sunday (to-day), I am called to window to see a dense flock of snowbirds,  on and under the pigweed in the garden. It was so in the other storm. I have not observed them in the garden at any other time this winter. They come with the storm, the falling and driving snow.  February 13, 1853

February 27.   I see a snow bunting, though it is pleasant and warm. February 27, 1858 
 
March 2  See a large flock of snow buntings, the white birds of the winter, rejoicing in the snow. I stand near a flock in an open field. They are trotting about briskly over the snow amid the weeds, —apparently pigweed and Roman wormwood, —as it were to keep their toes warm, hopping up to the weeds. 
Then they restlessly take to wing again, and as they wheel about one, it is a very rich sight to see them dressed in black and white uniforms, alternate black and white, very distinct and regular. Perhaps no colors would be more effective above the snow, black tips (considerably more) to wings, then clear white between this and the back, which is black or very dark again. 
One wonders if they are aware what a pleasing uniform appearance they make when they show their backs thus. They alight again equally near. Their track is much like a small crow’s track, showing a long heel and furrowing the snow between with their toes. March 2, 1858  

March 3 Going by the solidago oak at Clamshell Hill bank, I heard a faint rippling note and, looking up, saw about fifteen snow buntings sitting in the top of the oak, all with their breasts toward me, — sitting so still and quite white, seen against the white cloudy sky, they did not look like birds but the ghosts of birds, and their boldness, allowing me to come quite near, enhanced this impression. 
These were almost as white as snow balls, and from time [to time] I heard a low, soft rippling note from them. I could see no features, but only the general outline of plump birds in white. 
It was a very spectral sight, and after I had watched them for several minutes, I can hardly say that I was prepared to see them fly away like ordinary buntings when I advanced further. At first they were almost concealed by being almost the same color with the cloudy sky. March 3, 1859

March 20. As to the winter birds, — those which came here in the winter, - I saw . . .  in midwinter, the snow bunting, the white snowbird, sweeping low like snowflakes from field to field over the walls and fences.  March 20, 1852


Beside their rippling note, they have a vibratory twitter . . .
they presented a pretty appearance, somewhat like
broad bars of white alternating with bars of black.

See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Winter Birds

A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, The Snow Bunting (Emberiza nivalis) 
A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality."
 ~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx ©  2009-2026

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