I’m always amazed by the birds at my feeders in February. Only the toughest survive the North Dakota winter.
My father-in-law once pointed out to me the obvious. Birds, like other wildlife and even livestock, will survive the North Dakota winter if they have food and a place to escape the wind. The temperature may fall below zero and the wind-chill drop to minus twenty or thirty degrees, but every morning, as the sun rises, the birds are busy with breakfast at my feeders.
The Common Redpoll, a member of the finch family, typically nests in the tundra of northern Canada. Their idea of flying south for the winter is to migrate to southern Canada and North Dakota where they spend the winter. This gives a whole new meaning to the term “snowbird.”
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