Blue winged Warbler, KC Trail, Amherst, MA, May 20, 2026
Bay breasted Warbler, Rail Trail, Amherst, MA, May 20, 2026
Brewster's Warbler, Rail Trail, Amherst, MA, May 20, 2026
Worm eating Warbler, Skinner SP, South Hadley, MA, May 21, 2026
Now for an update on the progress of my big warbler year in the US. At this point I have seen a total of 46 species plus the two widely recognized hybrids of Blue winged x Golden winged Warblers. There are now just five regularly species I have not yet seen with Golden winged Warbler, Prothonotary Warbler, Connecticut Warbler, Kentucky Warbler and Kirtland's Warbler. The only species I'm likely to get here at home would be a Connecticut Warbler in the fall. The rest will require a trip away from home although there is always a chance of a few of the species showing up here as a rarity. My plan going forward to get the remaining species is to make a drive a bit further south (probably Pennsylvania...hopefully somewhere closer) to get Kentucky Warbler and maybe a Golden winged Warbler. I then have a short stop planned (two nights) for Wisconsin before our trip up to Alaska in July. This should get me Prothonotary Warbler near Minneapolis (where I'm flying into), Golden winged Warbler (if I missed it elsewhere) and Kirtland's Warbler (hopefully in the upper peninsula of Michigan and if not I will have to make a longer drive to the lower peninsula). Depending on how the trip works out I may also try to get Connecticut Warbler on their breeding grounds in Minnesota. There are other rare warblers possible in the US (Crescent chested Warbler, Gray crowned Yellowthroat, Fan tailed Warbler, Golden crowned Warbler and Slate throated Redstart) but I'm very unlikely to get these as most do not show up every year and each would involve a decent investment of time and money. The only one of the above mentioned species that has been reported so far this year is Golden crowned Warbler in the lower Rio Grande Valley. In addition I'm still toying with the idea of making a late year trip down to Puerto Rico to get two more species for the US big year with Elfin Woods Warbler and Adelaide's Warbler (sadly airfares have gone up significantly thanks to the debacle in the middle east). For now I will continue to try to find one (or more) of the remaining species as a rarity here and try to figure out when to make the drive south to get Kentucky Warbler.

Common Yellowthroat, Home, Belchertown, MA, May 18, 2026
Around the yard I have added a few new warbler species for the year in the last several days with my total for the year now at 22 species with the recent additions of Canada Warbler, Blackpoll Warbler and Tennessee Warbler. I also captured a new species for the year at the water feature with a Common Yellowthroat.
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