Love Is in the Air

Share your love of nature with these picks from the Audubon Shop. Find a selection of items in our online shop or visit us in person at Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary in Lincoln, MA.

Also, enjoy our in-store February Birdhouse Sale! Members receive a 20% discount on nest boxes and poles.

Match Game

Match a Pair of Birds: A Memory Game
Member price: $13.45*
Nonmember price: $14.95

Here’s a unique twist on a classic memory game: instead of trying to find pairs of identical images, players match male and female birds of the same species. The cards have detailed illustrations and can also be used as flashcards. Ages 3+.

 

Coasters

Cardinal Pair Coaster Set
Member price: $39.60
Nonmember price: $44.00

Celebrate one of New England’s most popular couples: the male and female northern cardinal. This coaster set by local artist Alyssa Watters depicts both the red males and green-brown females. The set comes in a gift box and contains four tile coasters with cork backing to prevent scratching and slipping.

 

Nest BoxWindow Nest Box
Member price: $24.25
Nonmember price: $26.95

Invite lovebirds to nest right at your window. This pine box has a clear back wall so you can watch the chicks grow up. It’s just the right size for many small backyard birds. Four large suction cups secure it to your window. Made in the USA.

 

Wildflowers BookSpring Wildflowers of the Northeast
Member price: $26.95
Nonmember price: $29.95
By Carol Gracie

Flowers make a great gift—but a book about flowers lasts a lifetime. This one is a visual treat, with hundreds of spectacular wildflower photographs. Plus, it’s packed with cultural lore, natural history, and other entertaining details.

 

frogtoys.jpg

Plush Frogs with Sounds
Member price: $8.05
Nonmember price: $8.95

Frogs sing to find love. Enjoy their natural ballads with these plush toys that make sounds when squeezed. We offer several Massachusetts species: spring peeper, American bullfrog, eastern spadefoot toad, and American toad. 7″ long.

*Mass Audubon members always receive a 10% discount (applied at checkout)

Last Month in Birding: January 2016

Every month we share five amazing bird sightings as suggested by our experts. Here are a few interesting observations from January.

Smith’s Longspur (Calcarius pictus)

Like other longspurs, Smith’s longspur has a long claw (“spur”) on its hind toe. This bird breeds across parts of the western subarctic tundra. Its romantic life is complex. It’s polygynandrous: each male and female pairs with several others during the breeding season. Typically, all Smith’s longspurs spend the winter in a relatively confined region of the central US, so an individual spotted last month in Saugus was a special find—and only the second record ever for the state!

Smith's longspur © Oliver Burton

Smith’s longspur in Saugus © Oliver Burton

Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris)

The male Painted Bunting is one of our country’s most colorful birds. This finch is primarily a southern species, breeding in the southern and central US and Mexico, and generally overwintering farther south. This range, combined with its splash of bright colors, makes the painted bunting a birders’ favorite whenever it appears in the north. It’s usually a shy bird; however, it becomes conspicuous when it visits a feeder. Last month, a male was sighted at a bird feeder in Nantucket.

PaintedBunting

Painted bunting in Houston (CC BY 2.0) Ralph Arvesen

Varied Thrush (Ixoreus naevius)

This is another bird with striking colors. The varied thrush has a complex pattern of rusty orange, black, and stormy grey-blue. It’s about the same size and shape as the American robin, and the two species are related. It lives in parts of the western US and Canada, preferring dense old-growth coniferous forests. It eats insects in the warm months and seeds and berries in the winter. A varied thrush appeared last month in Rutland.

VariedThrush

Varied thrush (CC BY-NC 2.0) Sylvia Wright

Hammond’s Flycatcher (Empidonax hammondii)

This little flycatcher breeds in the western US and Canada and overwinters in Mexico and Central America. Flycatchers of the genus Empidonax are notoriously difficult to tell apart, but voice is a useful clue. A Hammond’s flycatcher was observed last month in Fairhaven, and luckily observers were able to gather both pictures and audio recordings to confirm its identity. It was only the second-ever record for Massachusetts.

Hammond's flycatcher in © Jeremiah Trimble

Hammond’s flycatcher in Fairhaven © Jeremiah Trimble

Pink-footed Goose (Anser brachyrhynchus)

This bird is slightly smaller than our familiar Canada goose, and true to its name, it has bubblegum-pink feet and legs. It breeds in Iceland, Greenland, and Svalbard, and winters in parts of Europe. Rarely, a few individuals head in the wrong direction and wind up in Canada and the US. A pink-footed goose was observed last month on the Connecticut River at Agawam in the company of Canada geese.

Pink footed goose

Pink-footed goose in Sweden (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0) Magnus Larsson