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Otto: Time to bundle up? Snow buntings are here

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Snow buntings are well equipped to handle cold weather. (Photo by Bob Andrini)

Call it an omen, call it what you will, but Wednesday on my way to work I saw [insert your favorite dramatic crescendo] ... snow buntings.

There I was, sitting in the left, westbound lane at Randall and Route 38, minding my own business – and contemplating that of others, namely, what circumstances may have led someone to let go of the plastic Meijer bag that was floating in the breeze – when the light turned green. I watched as the white bag sailed toward the Fifth Third Bank lot; then, hoping it soon would get picked up and disposed of properly, took my foot off the brake and proceeded through the intersection.

The next light, which serves the Route 38 entrance to Meijer and the St. Charles Moose Lodge, was green, so I gave the car a little gas. A flutter of white caught my eye, and just as I had begun to think, “Aw nuts, not another plastic bag,” a light bulb went off in my head: Snow buntings!

Now, the crazy thing about that thought is that, until Wednesday, I had never seen snow buntings in real life. These smallish birds, bigger than sparrows but not quite the size of, say, robins, are sporadic winter visitors in Kane County. The sightings I’ve heard about usually are at Fermilab – which at 6,800 acres is the largest chunk of publicly accessible open space in the county – or farther west toward DeKalb, where farm fields stretch far and wide. Alas, I’ve never made it to either site in time after a reported sighting, and the snow bunting box on my List O’ Birds has gone unchecked.

But even though I have no field experience with the species, what was working in my favor Wednesday is what I like to refer to as a Usual Suspect List – those birds known to occur in our area at a given time. In winter, or actually any season, we don’t have flocks of smallish, predominantly white (with a little brown) birds other than snow buntings here.

Sure, we see pigeons, which can have lots of white, but these birds were smaller. And yes, we can have birds displaying aberrant coloration, but not a whole bunch flying together.

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