Through the Window: November 2025

A carved and painted Pileated Woodpecker is visible from shoulders up. It appears perched on the outside of a hollow snag facing an entrance hole to a cavity nest.The late fall November routine is all about ending the “summer” open season and preparing for the winter “behind the scenes” season. We often try to take lunch at the viewing window or share a moment with visitors there.

November Birds

  • Blue Jay
  • Black-capped Chickadee
  • Mourning Dove
  • White-breasted Nuthatch
  • Red-bellied Woodpecker
  • Tufted Titmouse
  • Red-breasted Nuthatch
  • Dark-eyed Junco
  • Northern Cardinal
  • Pileated Woodpecker
  • Hairy Woodpecker
  • American Goldfinch
  • Ruffed Grouse (eating the tiny crabapples!)

(Bold items in this list are species not recorded in October 2025)

Other wildlife: Gray Squirrels, Eastern Chipmunks (so quiet!).

Want to go look for birds with us? Register for one of our upcoming events or visit to the Museum. See you soon!

Below is a link for all official  eBird observations on the Museum’s property — from the viewing window and elsewhere, across all years of observations: https://ebird.org/hotspot/L282687 . Just for fun and cross-reference, this next link brings you to the iNaturalist records of birds at the Birds of Vermont Museum : https://www.inaturalist.org/places/199495#taxon=3


If you follow us on tiktok, BlueSkyFacebook and/or Instagram, you’ll find us talking about bird news, sharing photos, suggesting events, and more. Check us out! We are currently most active on Instagram and tiktok. We’ve got a Youtube profile, but largely we share interesting woodcarving tutorials there.

The “Through the Window” series is an informal record of observations made by staff, volunteers, and visitors. Anyone at the Museum may add to this list. Observations are usually through our viewing window: a large window with a film covering that helps hide watchers from the birds. We have chairs and binoculars to try, a white board, and many identification guides. Outdoors, several feeders are attached on a single, 8′ steel pole. A small pond, flowers and water plants, shrubs and trees add cover and (seasonally) other food choices.

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