

After waking up to the same high winds that shut us down early last night our morale got a bit of a boost tonight. The wind finally died down and we were able to open around 1 AM to get a few hours of banding in before sunrise. While we ended up with a modest 4 Saw-whets, we were thrilled that 3 of them were juveniles.
While we have now banded over 800 juveniles since we began the summer research in 2006 only a handful of these had yet to begin their molt into adult plumage. The juvenile pictured in the top photo is one of these birds and we purposely chose a photo with it's eyes closed to show it's eyelid feathers still molting in. The bottom photo is of an adult that has dropped the feathers on it's tarsi and feet. While we rarley see active flight feather molt on Saw-whets in spring, we regularly see adults beginning to drop the feathers on their legs and feet in late May. It is interesting, to us anyway, to see Saw-whets at similar stages of molt in May and July.

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