Marin County is shifting from winter to spring. A rich tapestry of birds, amphibians, and predators is unfolding from Point Reyes to Sausalito, Mill Valley to Novato.
This seasonal transition brings eggs, calls, budding oaks, and plums. Locals in San Rafael, Corte Madera, and Fairfax hear a stirring chorus in the damp mornings and warm evenings.
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The article below takes a closer look at what observers across Marin are seeing. Winter loosens its grip, and spring starts to spark in the hills above Larkspur and the shores around Stinson Beach.
Seasonal wildlife in Marin: winter to spring
In the hills and along the coast, the change is audible and visible. From the Marin Headlands near Sausalito to Point Reyes Station, something new happens every day.
The air fills with the sounds of frogs and birds. The landscape gears up for nesting, migration, and growth as the rainy season eases.
Winter birds and spring signals
Marin’s winter still holds a diverse flock of sparrows and thrushes. Golden-crowned, white-crowned, Lincoln’s sparrows, and the occasional white-throated sparrow show up in neighborhoods from San Anselmo to Tiburon.
These visitors mingle with year-round song sparrows and inland-nesting white-crowns. They linger at Point Reyes and the Marin Headlands, offering reliable skyscapes and listening posts for birders in Corte Madera and Novato.
- Winter sparrows paint a mosaic from the bayside to the hills around Mill Valley
- Year-round song sparrows provide a constant chorus in sustainable habitats from Bolinas to Ross
- Inland-nesting white-crowns concentrate in Point Reyes National Seashore and the Headlands
As winter winds down, the area hosts a mix of migrants and residents. American robins, Hermit thrushes, Varied thrushes, juncos, and cedar waxwings add color to yards from San Rafael to Fairfax.
Gulls and large wintering flocks of sandhill cranes and snow geese increasingly gather in California’s Central Valley. Marin’s shoreline still holds its shorebird and waterbird visitors through the late season inlets and estuaries around Sausalito, Tiburon, and the Tomales Bay area.
Raptors and waterfowl along the coast
Across Marin, Accipiter hawks—especially Cooper’s and sharp-shinned hawks—often swoop through feeders, chasing songbirds. These hawks remind us that even in a crowded region, predator-prey dynamics play out, sometimes shaking up backyard feeders from Corte Madera to Larkspur.
Marin’s inshore waters host strong shorebird and waterbird numbers, even with some ups and downs. Look for canvasbacks, shovelers, and avocets around the marshes of Bolinas Lagoon, Tomales Bay, and nearby estuaries.
Even as some species decline, Marin’s coastline—from Stinson Beach to Point Reyes—remains a vital wintering ground.
In town, the blend of coastal and inland habitats supports a robust mix of species. This draws birders across the Golden Gate Corridor out of the city and into the Marin County shoreline and lagoons.
Owls, wrentits, and the quiet power of habitat
Winter remains an excellent time for owls. Point Reyes hosts a diverse array of nocturnal birds.
On a recent Christmas Bird Count, observers tallied five owl species. The great horned owl showed formidable daytime and nighttime predatory skill in Marin’s forests and chaparral.
In West Marin, burrowing owls nest in ground-squirrel burrows rather than building their own. This clever adaptation persists despite development pressure and H5N1 concerns, with thriving populations in protected Marin habitats near Inverness and Olema.
The small, enigmatic wrentit stands out in West Marin’s chaparral. This cryptic year-round resident is the only American member of the Old World babbler family.
Wrentits favor dense cover and poison oak berries. These traits make field sightings a prize for local birders from Marin City to Point Reyes Station.
Conservation and practical actions in Marin
Protecting habitat and using safe pest control are just part of Marin’s ongoing stewardship. Promoting barn owls with nest boxes offers an eco-friendly way to tackle rodent problems—without risking harm to raptors and other predators that share Marin’s ecosystems, from Nevado to Tamalpais.
- Nest boxes help barn owls thrive in San Geronimo and Fairfax. The owls then keep rodent populations in check—no poisons needed.
- Non-toxic pest management means raptors like Cooper’s and sharp-shinned hawks can hunt safely and rely on healthy prey numbers.
- Protecting ground-nesting birds in West Marin—think Point Reyes and nearby preserves—helps keep the whole web of life going, from the wrentit to the snowy egret.
As towns across Marin—Stinson Beach, Bolinas, Mill Valley, Sausalito, and honestly, everywhere else—watch the season change, folks start to notice: every bite of hillside, every tide pool, every backyard feeder, it’s all part of a living, tangled ecosystem. Maybe by celebrating these birds and sticking with non-toxic pest strategies, Marin keeps leading the way in wildlife-friendly living, right here in the heart of the Bay Area.
Here is the source article for this story: Honoring the changing seasons
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