That two-note whistle from the bare winter branch? That's a Black-capped Chickadee, and it's been singing the same fee-BEE since before the last frost.
One of the most cold-hardy songbirds in North America β it doesn't migrate. Just caches thousands of seeds, remembers where most of them are, and waits out the winter with apparent indifference to the thermometer.
How to spot it:
Jet-black cap + crisp white cheeks + black bib. The formula is almost too clean. Add buffy peachy flanks, bold white wing edging, and a compact round body β and you have a bird that looks like it was painted with intention.
That alarm call:
chick-a-dee-dee-dee β the number of dee notes isn't random. More dees = closer predator. Flocks decode it in real time.
The lookalike problem:
Carolina Chickadee in the Southeast is nearly identical β look for the cleaner bib edge and less white on the wings. Mountain Chickadee out West wears a white eyebrow stripe right through the black cap. Impossible to miss once you know it.
Body 4.7β5.9 in Β· Wingspan 6.3β8.3 in Β· Weight 0.3β0.5 oz
#BlackcappedChickadee #BirdID #BackyardBirds #BirdWatching #FieldGuide #NorthAmericanBirds #BirdNerd #GoGouache




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