hrub, it is likely to be a Rough-legged Hawk. They hunt from low perches or low flight and feed on voles, ground squirrels, mice and sometimes birds it can find on the ground.
Gadwall
Hermit Thrush
Yellow-breasted Chat
Long-billled Curlew
Sharp-shinned Hawk
American Kestrel
If you see a small, long-winged bird hovering over an open field, most of the time it will be an American Kestrel. This type of hunting pattern is used by only a few species of birds and it is a trademark for a kestrel, which hovers by facing into the wind, flapping its wings and spreading its tail.
Black Swift
Purple Finch
House Finch
Evening Grosbeak
Ruddy Duck
Swainson's Thrush
Brown Creeper
The Brown Creeper (BRCR) is about 5 - 5-1/2" long and is camouflaged with brown streaked plumage above and dull white below. It has a relatively long downcurved bill and long, pointed tail feathers. Creepers spiral upward from the base to the branches of a tree, then will fly to a lower place on another tree, probing bark for insects and larvae.
Killdeer
Gyrfalcon
Common Repoll
The Common Redpoll visits Washington in some winters in flocks ranging in size from a dozen to hundreds of birds. Because its arrival is unpredictable, it is known as one of the irruptive species of northern birds, which, depending on weather conditions and the availability of food sources, will migrate farther south in some winters