Nets were operated at this suburban backyard station before and after work during the week, and all day on as many weekends as possible, from 23 August to 30 November. A trip to Spain interrupted banding in mid-September and accounted for the drop in both species and individuals banded. This also explains the 66% drop in Gray Catbirds, which was by far my most common species last year. As in past years, no netting was done within 15 m of the bird feeders, and no traps were baited until the nets were removed in December.
White-throated Sparrows (9) and Carolina Chickadees (7) accounted for half of my returns. The oldest returns were a 6-year-old White-throated Sparrow and a 7-year-old Carolina Chickadee. The only species banded in unusually large numbers were American Robin and Black-throated Blue Warbler. A Red-shouldered Hawk and a Golden-winged Warbler raised the species total for this station to 112.
Three birds remained here long enough to increase their weight by more than 30%: an HY female Black-and-white Warbler arrived on 29 August with a weight of 11.2 g and was last captured on 5 September with a weight of 17.1 g. It took an HY Ovenbird 24 days to increase from 20.8 g to the 28.2 g that it weighed when last caught on 13 October. A Swainson's Thrush, on the other hand, went from 36.5 g to 48.1 g between 10 and 14 October. Other heavy-weights were Hairy Woodpecker, 74.4 g; Blue Jay, 103.2 g; Gray Catbird, 46.4 g; Wood Thrush, 64.1 g; and White-eyed Vireo, 15.0 g.