He seems to be a pine warbler. I can't tell the colouring apart from a yellow-throated vireo, but he doesn't seem to have a notched beak, and the song I heard in our yard this morning sounded more like a pine warbler (so it seems that these birds are around).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiX3g4PklFm3BuNCchRjJH8vsjW58Lb6I4Uio5Mn6fygUfwyUp2KuDkhbrvLKOVvZCVlh8ydThrPZkAabfbqIAKvV_DzpZvGYvXacC3H14h7fyb9D3Xlfsa-5zt3ZkD0MfuJPMNfhQSI7A/s200/PineWarbler.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh7n4M-mGSfUKOqgTXSuXmy7OHsjtOBvqc0gSoDRD0Yf2_n3LUBZsRudyNfp582rTcZ5ASWIycYCkxTgIkOLJ6-78yKQIdQF37HuIt9m_C0C240GDlc5CnuzabZInxFJJB10reULPX2c0Q/s200/Yellow-throatedVireo.jpg)
1 comment:
juvenile Magnolia Warbler is the corrected bird identification thanks to Anne Hobbs of Cornell University. http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/BirdGuide/Magnolia_Warbler_dtl.html
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