Top 10 Long-awaited Signs of Spring Signs of spring aren't limited to daffodils blooming.
When the winter weather breaks, get outside to look for signs that spring is on its way!
Most people can’t wait for spring to arrive, and backyard bird watchers seem especially eager for the earth, spinning on its invisible axis, to lean closer to the sun. This subtle planetary shift creates warmer weather for those of us in the northern hemisphere. Warmer weather brings us many of our favorite things: birds, flowers, butterflies, and best of all, an end to being cooped up inside the house during bitter cold winter days.
10. Songbird songs. The first species that I noticed tuning up this year was a tufted titmouse singing Peter, Peter, Peter in our orchard on a sunny Sunday afternoon in late January. His song was my first aural reminder that winter will eventually fade. Since then I’ve heard house and purple finches, white-breasted nuthatches, song sparrows, and northern cardinals.
9. Woodpeckers drumming. On our farm we hear woodpeckers drumming in early spring and it continues until the following fall. Woodpeckers use drumming both as a territorial announcement and as a part of spring courtship. Some suburban woodpeckers have discovered the great resonance of chimney flues and drainpipes, much to the dismay of slumbering human homeowners. Among our drummers are pileated, red-bellied, hairy, and downy woodpeckers, and northern flicker. Yellow-bellied sapsuckers tap our birch trees each spring but do not stick around to breed. And red-headed woodpeckers (my favorite birds) nest in a small colony just a couple of miles away. We’ve tried to lure the red-headeds to our property with ears of corn, but so far we’ve only had a few too-short visits.
8. Clumps of raptors/pairs of raptors. Last weekend we went out birding with the kids, and we saw 10 red-tailed hawks in 4 hours. Some of these are our local year-round residents, some are winter visitors, and some are birds of passage, returning north to set up territories, having spent the winter to the south of us. Late winter and early spring are excellent times for raptor watching. Many of our resident red-tailed and red-shouldered pairs are already courting each other, complete with acrobatic flights, dives, and piercing screams.
7. Owls hooting. Hawks aren’t the only raptors making noise. Our evenings are punctuated with hoots from great horned and barred owls. If we listen carefully at dusk we can hear eastern screech-owls whinnying far off in our east woods. Owls can be hard to hear if you don’t get outside to listen. Late winter is the best time to catch the concert of hoots, because many owl species are setting up territories and starting the breeding cycle. Spend an hour outside right at dusk, listening quietly, and you might tune into a little night music.
6. Tree and flower buds. Our water maples and red maples are the first trees to show signs of budding. In a few weeks the bare, leafless branches will offer a reddish glow—the effect created by the thousands of growing red buds at the end of every twig. Soon every living tree in our woods will be about to burst into leaf. When the budding is at its fullest, we know the blue-gray gnatcatchers will be here soon.
5. Duck flights. As the Great Lakes begin to open up and ice disperses, we get skeins of ducks coming up the Ohio River Valley. It’s so exciting to take a Sunday drive along the rivers and past the ponds in our area, because each one offers a chance to see the first stunning drake bufflehead, ring-necked duck, or even a northern pintail. Our first spring ducks are often the hardy mallards and black ducks, followed closely by the impressive wood ducks. One of these years we hope to put in a pond on our property, so we might lure some waterfowl to stop and rest.
4. Juncos leaving. Though we’ll have a few with us until early May, by late February, our junco numbers are slowly dwindling. I’m always fascinated by these little grayish wonders that seem to be with us no matter how bad the weather, all winter long, scratching out seed bits from under our feeders. This species is a notable “get” for our spring Big Day list in early May (when a late-lingering junco may visit our feeder) and for our Big Sit day in early October (when the first junco of winter magically appears at our feeders). Before they leave, our juncos sing and jostle around our yard with increasing intensity, practicing for the coming breeding season.
3. Peepers. One night soon I’ll be making my way from the garage to our front door (a walk of about 100 feet) and I’ll hear that high-lonesome sound of spring. No it’s not a Bill Monroe bluegrass ballad, it’s the evening chorus of spring peepers—those tiny cold-hardy amphibians that sing from every wet patch of ground in the woods. Peepers start vocalizing so early in spring they might be more accurately called late-winter peepers. Hearing them lets us know that the ground is thawing and the springs are starting to flow.
2. That spring smell. I love to inhale the earthy spring smell that the land produces in late February and early March. It’s equal parts rain and soil, grass and ozone, creating a perfume that no amount of chemical wizardry can replicate. Julie and the kids often catch me standing in the front yard at dusk, nose pointed skyward, eyes closed, breathing deeply. It’s heaven.
1. Woodcock. It’s often when I’m coming in from the garage, at the end of a workday, perhaps when I’m smelling the spring air, or listening to the first spring peepers, that I hear the first peent! of our American woodcock male. He’s a tough old coot, often starting his spring performances when there’s still snow on the meadow and ice in the valleys. But he knows that the early male woodcock gets not only the earthworms, but also the gals. We cherish the evenings we spend listening to his nasal calls and watching his silhouette against the pink western horizon as he spirals skyward and twitter-tumbles back to our old meadow. Of all the signs of spring we see each year, he’s our favorite.