American Goldfinch

In spring, the American Goldfinch swings over fields with its distinctive, undulating
flight and fills the air with jubilant po-ta-to chip! calls. It prefers open areas with
shrubs nearby. If you know the location of a large patch of thistles, you will almost
surely see American Goldfinches there in the summer, perched on the tops of the seed
heads, extraCting the minute thistle seeds.
The female American Goldfinch builds a cup-shaped nest in a shrub, into which she lays
four to six pale blue eggs. Nesting is delayed until June or July to ensure that a depend-
able source of insects, thistles and dandelion seeds are available to feed the young.

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