Find out what Project FeederWatch is, its history, and more
Find out how you FeederWatch, when you can FeederWatch, and what you'll need to do to get started
Review these instructions carefully before you count and enter data
Find out about types of feeders and types of foods, and where to place your feeder
Feeding Birds FAQs
Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds.
Find out about color and plumage variations, bald heads, and deformed bills
Unusual Birds Gallery
Find out about bird disease and identifying the signs of bird disease
Sick Birds Gallery
Find out how to identify birds and download identification tools
Learn how to help birds as they seek out food sources, nesting habitat, protection, and more
Find educational resources for teachers, group leaders, and families
Find an article archive packed with lots of great bird study information
Learn about house finch eye disease
Review content from current and past BirdSpotter photo contests
Keep up to date with the latest FeederWatch happenings
These are exemplary FeederWatchers!
Send us your photos! Show us your count site, your birds, or you watching your site with loved ones!
Visit our live FeederWatch feedercams!
Cornell Lab of Ornithology feeders
Ontario (winter only)
See what birds occur the most by region
Explore species by state/province
See where FeederWatchers are
Graphs of regional population trends and distributions
Explore papers that have used FeederWatch data
Lab scientists analyze the data submitted by FeederWatch participants.
See birds well outside their winter range submitted to Project FeederWatch.
Start here for data entry and personal data review and exploration
Keep live track of your counts using the FeederWatch mobile app
Donna Barski
Arcade, NY, United States
If blue jays were rare, we would all be going to great lengths to see these beautiful blue birds. Last winter’s ever present snow in Western New York made for perfect opportunities to photograph these birds at their “Berry Blue” best!
Week 6: Boring is Beautiful
Just a Jay you say? No Way!
Lovely surprise to see this winter-colorful blue jay. It is such a different bird than ours on the West Coast. Very interesting to compare them and learn from your picture. Love your bird’s fluffy breast coat of downy down, too. Nice photo all around.
Thank you, Ellen, for appreciating my photo of our very noisy and common blue jay. At least it is common in the East. The West Coast’s stellar jay is Gorgeous too. I wish we could swap jay species now and then for variety.
I just checked my ID books and have learned that the scrub jay is also native to the West.
At least we can both say, at this time of year…”Jay to the World.”
You are a funny one, Donna. Thank you for sharing your lovely photo on BirdSpotter. Your photo has my vote!
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