Common Redpoll (Acanthis flammea), male, family Fringillidae, order Passeriformes, Seedskadee NWR, WY, USA
photograph by Tom Koerner/USFWS
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Common redpoll/gråsiska. Värmland, Sweden (February 17, 2024).
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#NorthernRedpoll
Only from February till March that we're able to enjoy the company of the Redpolls. Soon, hundreds of them will be hoovering the area. These are some early scouts.
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My Photography [116/∞] | ☕ | Buy prints
Hidden orb.
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Nothing like minding your own business and getting photobombed by a rude little redpoll.
🏷️ • ☕ • 🛒
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Common Redpoll
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Christoph Ludwig Agricola (German, 1667–1719), "A Greater Redpoll and a Crested Tit"
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Common redpoll tushes
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Common Redpoll, Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge, Wyoming, USA
photo: Tom Koerner/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
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Common Redpolls (Acanthis flammea), in winter plumage, family Fringillidae, order Passeriformes, China
photograph by @jxjinjin
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BOTD: Hoary Redpoll
Photo: David Scott
"A very close relative of the Common Redpoll, but adapted to even bleaker conditions, the Hoary Redpoll is only a scarce visitor south of the Arctic. In those winters when large numbers of redpolls invade southward, a few Hoarys are usually mixed into the flocks. On the breeding grounds, this species extends farther north, onto high Arctic islands of Canada. Where the two redpolls overlap, the Hoary tends to nest on more barren upland tundra, where the patches of shrubs are fewer and smaller."
- Audubon Field Guide
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“You need nature as your teacher to help you reconnect with Being. But not only do you need nature, it also needs you.”
~ Eckhart Tolle
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