
It’s once again time for my annual Predictions Blog, where I view into my crystal binoculars and attempt to forecast some of the “new” birds to grace the State of Maine – and then my own personal state list – in the coming year.
2020 was definitely a different year. “Worst year ever” was a common refrain by year’s end, but don’t tell that to 2021 which seems to be taking up the challenge so far. I’ve written this blog for over a decade now, but this was the first one written about, and during, a national crisis that was so deadly that many birders stayed home for much of the year. Before spring had arrived in Maine and the deadly COVID-19 pandemic had fully arrived in Maine, trips were cancelled, many folks stayed closer to home if venturing out at all, and many birders avoided crowded seasonal hotspots. I wrote about birding in a pandemic in this early spring blog, but a small silver lining to this tragedy was the huge growth in birding, especially in the backyard. I was even interviewed about this in the New York Times this summer.
By fall, the growth in birding and bird-feeding and the new online community connections made while stuck at home yielded even more opportunities to see amazing birds and add some really spectacular rarities to brand-new life lists. A massive incursion of birds from the western US was underway throughout the East this fall, and this resulted in some of the most incredible “mega” rarities, such as Rock Wren and Bullock’s Oriole. The first chaseable Rufous Hummingbird in many years was another real crowd-pleaser and was made accessible by gracious hosts.

Nonetheless, there were not any first state records detected this year. Therefore, my list of next 25 species to occur in Maine for 2021 remains unchanged:
- Neotropical Cormorant
- Graylag Goose
- California Gull
- Spotted Towhee
- Hammond’s Flycatcher
- Bermuda Petrel
- Black-chinned Hummingbird
- Common Shelduck
- Trumpeter Swan (of wild, “countable” origin)
- Audubon’s Shearwater – on “hypothetical” list, but I think the record is good).
- Little Stint
- Anna’s Hummingbird
- “Western” Flycatcher (Pacific-slope/Cordilleran)
- Common Ground-Dove
- Allen’s Hummingbird
- Redwing
- Spotted Redshank
- Painted Redstart
- Ross’s Gull
- Black-capped Petrel
- Lesser Nighthawk
- Elegant Tern
- Kelp Gull
- Black-tailed Gull
- Common Scoter
Despite such a great year for rare birds in Maine, I actually only added two birds to my own state list however. But they were good ones! But first, let’s check in with last year’s prediction list to see how I did…at least for the birds, the rest of the year, no, I did not predict.
Of course, there was (is) the Rock Wren (Honorable Mention) in Ogunquit (photo above), but for me, the bigger one was the Say’s Phoebe in New Gloucester on 9/24. It was #4 on my list, but my #1 nemesis bird.
As usual, there were also a handful of potential state birds for me that I did not see. Common Ringed Plover (#12) on Seal Island in September and a Sooty Tern (Honorable Mention) on Matinicus Rock following Tropical Storm Isaias were obviously beyond my reach, obviously, a Franklin’s Gull (#5) in Lamoine on 11/5 did not linger, and a Yellow Rail (#22) was kept secret. The big miss however was the Golden-crowned Sparrow (Honorable Mention) in October at a feeder in Abbot that I just did not chase for a variety of reasons, including how busy the fall was at the store.
So a few tweaks to my list for my next additions to my personal state list are as follows:
- American White Pelican
- Neotropic Cormorant
- Franklin’s Gull
- Brown Pelican
- Graylag Goose
- California Gull
- Black-bellied Whistling-Duck
- Slaty-backed Gull
- Boreal Owl
- Calliope Hummingbird
- Common Ringed Plover
- Cerulean Warbler
- White Ibis
- Gull-billed Tern
- Hammond’s Flycatcher
- Spotted Towhee
- Pacific Golden-Plover
- Wood Stork
- Ross’s Gull
- Black-chinned Hummingbird
- Brewer’s Blackbird
- Yellow Rail
- Loggerhead Shrike
- Virginia’s Warbler
- Common Shelduck
So let’s see what 2021 brings to the Maine birding world. A return to a sense of normalcy would be a nice start, however.
