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Ocean Hills CC Living March 2021

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30 | OHCC LIVING | MARCH 2021 | Birdwatchers SPRING MIGRATION Spring is a favorite time for birdwatching. Birds have lost their worn and tattered feathers, replaced with new plumage. Males look especially bright and colorful to claim territory and search for females. Females, not being as colorful, will have new plumage for the nesting season. Carry binoculars on your next walk and look for our year-round residents in their new plumage such as the house finch, scrub jay, lesser goldfinch, mockingbird, and California towhee, among others. Also keep a lookout for a bird migrating through on its way north to its nesting grounds. The double-crested cormorant (lower right) is one of our coastal residents. During breeding season both sexes form white feather tufts on either side of the head, thus named double crested. Look for them on the bait barges at Oceanside Harbor. Brown pelicans (upper left) can be found there also. The male and female pelicans develop a red gular patch by the neck. This red coloration disappears during incubation and chick feeding. The Ruddy duck (lower left) is another year-round resident of fresh water ponds and lakes. It is a small duck, 15" long, readily identified with its tail sticking upward. During breeding season, the male develops a rufous body, white patch on the cheek and a bright blue bill. Several males can be seen at Discovery Lake in San Marcos. Keep an eye to the sky.

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