In the eleven years I've been living up here I didn't see a redpoll until last fall. The redpolls are a small bird, and amazingly some remain in the High Arctic even through our winter. But even though I'm quite familiar with the two species of them (Hoary and Common) from feeders down south, I'd never seen them around Arctic Bay.
This, however, seems to be a great year for them. Last summer, Travis saw one at Victor Bay. He was able to describe the bird he saw, and pick it out in a field guide. And although he showed me the area he saw it, my search failed to turn one up.
Then in the fall, while looking for shorebirds at Uluksan I found a pair of them. Hoary Redpolls. Then this winter, occasional reports would pop up in the mid-winter of "snow buntings" in the area of the school. I suspected, because the Snow Buntings had long left, that it was redpolls.
Then in January I heard of a small flock of them at Ullisautitalik, and although we heard them on one of our trips there. We were never able to track them down.
But this spring I've seen them regularly. I've watched them feeding in grasses near the apartment amongst some Snow Buntings, and through out town, and on trips outside of town.
Here is a photo from yesterday, out at First Bridge, of a pair of (I believe) Common Redpolls. I'm not 100 percent sure of the ID though.

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When I read “I saw them feeding on the grasses…” I was a bit confused. I thought, huh? grass in the arctic at this time of year? Then I saw the photo…so I presume the grass is the red fuzzy looking stuff on the rock? That would make more sense, obviously. (Btw, that type of grass is really hardy then…wow!) I always say though, grass is one of the most resilient things to grow. It can look like it’s totally dead after a drought and then just one or two days of rain, it will be green again! WOW! And now seeing that it can grow in subzero temps is amazing!!!
I love your photos. They are amazing!
Grasses and sedges are by far the most common plants up here Melonie. Not grass, as in lawns, but uncultivated grasses, the type that grow seed heads. They were feeding on the seeds from last year’s plants, that have stayed on the stalks through the winter.
The red fuzzy stuff on the rocks (and the black and grey fuzzy stuff) are lichens.
Thanks for the picture Clare. I saw a redpoll yesterday though I’m not sure exactly which kind….just couldn’t get close enough in time with the binoculars though I think it might have been a hoary redpoll. I was wondering when I’d get a chance to see one. We’ve also been visited by what I’m pretty sure were chipping sparrows which have made a real mess of the back deck with all the birdfeed they’ve dropped. And I thought that crazy squirrel was going to be a problem!
Hi Darcy, here is a great primer on redpolls on Seabrooke’s blog, the Marvelous in Nature.
Here is the link…
http://themarvelousinnature.wordpress.com/2009/02/07/the-old-man-redpoll/