
Warblers
Tiny bursts of color flitting through the canopy, warblers are the confetti of spring migration. Their songs pour from the treetops long before they’re seen, and finding them often means craning your neck, squinting into dappled light, and chasing motion in the leaves—what birders affectionately call “warbler neck.” They’re elusive, fast, and often high above, but when the light hits just right, they glow like forest jewels. These birds remind us that fleeting beauty is worth the patience.
"The small birds in spring are the hardest to see and the hardest to forget."
— Terry Tempest Williams
Magnolia Warbler - High Island, TX
Common Yellowthroat - Lake of the Woods Forest Preserve, IL
MacGillivray's Warbler - Mazama, WA
Black and White Warbler - High Island, TX
Yellow Warbler - Galápagos Islands, Ecuador
Hooded Warbler - High Island, TX
Pine Warbler - Big Thicket National Preserve, TX
Prairie Warbler - Jasper, TX
American Redstart - High Island, TX
American Redstart - High Island, TX
Golden-winged Warbler - High Island, TX
Swainson's Warbler - Jasper, TX
Black-throated Green Warbler - High Island, TX
Yellow-rumped Warbler - Seattle, WA