Birding On Woodson Ranch
Sandhill Cranes, Yellow-headed Blackbirds, Cinnamon Teal, Kildeer, Northern Harriers, Bald Eagles…these are just a few of the birds that come to enjoy the habitat created by Woodson Ranch. The diverse waterways, woodsy areas, marshy fens and open pastures provide ample food and cover for over 100 documented species of birds.
We welcome visitors to come and spot species of interest, or just to walk and view the amazing diversity. We have designated the West side of the river as a walking & hiking area for bird and wildlife watchers. Contact us to get a Permissive Use Document allowing you to have access. We simply keep the document on file so we have a record of who is coming and going on the ranch. Note that the ranch is not open during the big-game hunting season for safety reasons.
If you are unable to visit the ranch but want to experience some of the birding opportunities we have available, we invite you to listen to this recording. This recording was made in April of 2015 next to one of our wetlands at precisely 5 in the morning. The striking diversity of squawks, honks, twitters and tweets is so thick with the sounds of multiple species that it is difficult to parse out the number of types of birds on the recording.
So check out our list of birds confirmed on the property, and help us get a complete list. Or, better yet, come and visit; watch and listen. Stay in our fully-furnished ON-SITE Lodging. We think you’ll be amazed at the variety and quantity of birds who call Woodson Ranch home at various times of the year.
OUR GROWING LIST OF BIRDS SEEN ON THE RANCH
- American coot
- American crow
- American dipper
- American goldfinch
- American kestral
- American robin
- American white pelican
- American widgeon
- Audubon’s warbler
- Bald eagle
- Bank swallow
- Barn swallow
- Barrow’s Goldeneye
- Belted kingfisher
- Black-billed magpie
- Black-capped chickadee
- Black-headed grosbeak
- Black-necked stilt
- Blue jay
- Blue-winged teal
- Bobolink
- Brewer’s blackbird
- Brewer’s sparrow
- Brown-headed cowbird
- Bullocks oriole
- California gull
- Calliope hummingbird
- Canada goose
- Cassin’s finch
- Cedar waxwing
- Chipping sparrow
- Cinnamon teal
- Cliff swallow
- Common goldeneye
- Common grackle
- Common merganser
- Common nighthawk
- Common raven
- Common redpoll
- Common yellowthroat
- Cooper’s hawk
- Cordilleran flycatcher
- Cormorant
- Downey woodpecker
- Dusky flycatcher
- Dusky grouse
- Eastern kingbird
- Eurasian-collared Dove
- European starling
- Evening grosbeak
- Gadwall
- Golden eagle
- Gray catbird
- Gray partridge (huns)
- Great blue heron
- Great horned owl
- Greater yellowlegs
- Green-winged teal
- Hairy woodpecker
- Hermit thrush
- Hooded merganser
- Horned lark
- House finch
- House wren
- Killdeer
- Lazuli bunting
- Least flycatcher
- Lewis’s woodpecker
- Lincoln’s sparrow
- Long-billed curlew
- Long-billed dowitcher
- Long-eared owl
- MacGillivray’s warbler
- Magpie
- Mallard
- Marsh wren
- Merlin
- Mountain bluebird
- Mountain chickadee
- Mourning dove
- Northern flicker
- Northern goshawk
- Northern harrier
- Northern pintail
- Northern rough-winged swallow
- Northern saw-whet owl
- Northern shoveler
- Northern shrike
- Olive-sided flycatcher
- Orange-crowned warbler
- Oregon Junco
- Osprey
- Pied-billed grebe
- Pine siskin
- Red-naped sapsucker
- Red-tailed hawk
- Red-winged blackbird
- Ring-necked pheasant
- Rock pigeon
- Rough-legged hawk
- Ruby crowned kinglet
- Sandhill crane
- Savannah sparrow
- Short-eared owl
- Snow goose
- Solitary sandpiper
- Song sparrow
- Sora
- Spotted sandpiper
- Swainson’s hawk
- Swainson’s thrush
- Townsend solitaire
- Tree swallow
- Trumpeter swan
- Tundra swan
- Turkey vulture
- Veery
- Vesper’s sparrow
- Violet green swallow
- Virginia rail
- Warbling vireo
- Western bluebird
- Western kingbird
- Western meadowlark
- Western tanager
- Western wood-pewee
- White-crowned sparrow
- White-faced Ibis
- Wild turkey
- Willow flycatcher
- Wilson’s phalarope
- Wilson’s snipe
- Wilson’s warbler
- Yellow-rumped warbler
- Yellow warbler
- Yellow-headed blackbird
Come out and help us identify more! You could stay at our Hill House, a fully furnished home available for rent right on the ranch.