July 15 2016. Flamborough On. Twenty years on and I clearly remember this bird. Circumstances have me anchored at home this month, unable to go very far and while idly spinning back through years of photographs I landed on several of this Field Sparrow. Taken nearly ten years ago it came right back to mind. I thought I’d share it.
Mid July and a hot summer day, I had hauled my way to the top of a large hill that overlooks a village crossroad. The hill is not very high but rises abruptly. It is open-topped with a spectacular all-around view that has you tracing roads and trying to put names to places that have become bare smudges on the horizon.

I know this was not my first visit to this hill, it’s a longish drive from home but a peaceful retreat on a summer afternoon and the birding makes the climb worthwhile. It’s a sure place for Grasshopper Sparrows where the vegetation is parched and thinnest, Song Sparrows almost anywhere and this singing Field Sparrow who was working the length of a hawthorn hedge, up and down, making sure we knew the limits of his territory.
When we hear a Field Sparrow’s trailing song, like a ping-pong ball bouncing to a rest, we know to check woody or brushy edges. I only feature him here because he made a lasting impression and at this time of year with snow squalls a possibility, is a summer bird memory to hold on to.



October 1 2025. Our house, Burlington, Ontario. By design, our late season back yard has drifted into colourful chaos. It’s thick and verging on overgrown in places. We love it, birds do too as well as a couple of neighbourhood cats. I don’t much care for cats, outdoor cats but supposedly domestic, particularly those that use our place as their toilet; and sometimes snare birds. I’ll accept though that they probably exert some control on unwanted rodents.






