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The image at right shows the parking lot. I will be parked in a green Subaru Crosstrek at the ponds edge. Lots of space here, I'll probably be outside the car with a camera or binocs when you arrive. During the season I visit Koill at least once a week. We will walk quite a way, move our cars about twice. This will be a familiarization

** Birds at Koll Center Wetlands (Latest Reports)**
Sources: eBird Hotspot data for Koll Center Wetlands Area
⭐ Newly Reported in the Last 48 Hours
These are the freshest additions to the hotspot list:

  • Hermit Thrush — 1 (Feb 16)
  • Glaucous-winged Gull — 1 (Feb 15)
  • Pacific Wren — 1 (Feb 15)
  • Brown Creeper — 1 (Feb 15)
  • Townsend’s Warbler — 1 (Feb 15)

These are classic mid‑February woodland-edge birds showing up along the north and east margins.

***

⭐ Most Recent Full Checklist (Feb 16, 2026)
Observer: Trista Newman
26 species recorded
Waterfowl (high activity right now)

  • Cackling Goose — 23
  • Canada Goose — 14
  • Mallard — 24
  • Northern Shoveler — 7
  • Gadwall — 6
  • Green-winged Teal — 15
  • Ring-necked Duck — 2
  • Bufflehead — 7
  • American Coot — 15

Upland / Edge Birds

  • Mourning Dove — 5
  • Anna’s Hummingbird — 3
  • Downy Woodpecker — 1
  • Steller’s Jay — 1
  • California Scrub-Jay — 1
  • American Crow — 10

Songbirds

  • Black-capped Chickadee — 3
  • Ruby-crowned Kinglet — 3
  • Hermit Thrush — 1
  • American Robin — 5
  • House Finch — 2
  • Lesser Goldfinch — 2
  • Fox Sparrow — 1
  • Golden-crowned Sparrow — 2
  • Song Sparrow — 1
  • Yellow-rumped Warbler — 12
  • Bushtit — 4

Other recent species (Feb 15)

  • Ruddy Duck — 4
  • Greater Yellowlegs — 1

***

** What This Means for Fieldcraft at Koll Right Now**

  • Waterfowl density is excellent — perfect for behavior shots (dabbling, pair-bonding, chases).
  • Yellow-rumped Warblers are abundant — good for flight and foraging sequences.
  • Edge passerines are active on the north treeline (kinglets, creepers, wrens).
  • Gulls are moving through, including Glaucous-winged — worth scanning the rooftops and pond edges.
  • Greater Yellowlegs suggests some early shorebird movement.

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