Houston Audubon Society Swifts Over Houston
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   Chimney Swift images © Greg Lavaty

 
Help Us Track Houston's Chimney Swifts!
How to Participate
  1. Look for Chimney Swift activity - both nesting and roosting.
  2. Send us your reports. Tell us if you observe Chimney Swift activity and where it is.
  3. We'll track your results on a map and post them on this site. Only the neighborhoods will be posted. No home addresses will be displayed.
Need Help?

What to look for
Listen to swift calls

Contact Our Experts

Have a question?
Want to make a report?
Send us an email!
Happening Now!

Pershing/Whole Foods Market Count
Pam Smolen leads a count at Pershing Middle School and Whole Foods Market in Bellaire.


Swifts Over Dayton
Barbara Tilton is leading a swift count at the old American Rice Growers Association rice dryer in Dayton, Liberty County.

October 23 update: with the arrival of cold fronts, the Chimney Swifts are leaving Houston. Paul and Georgean Kyle wrote, "A fall Chimney Swift roost in Texas will normally leave all at once with the first cold frontal passage in October."


Chimney Swift Activity in Houston

Your sightings will be plotted on these maps. The maps are updated weekly. Please click on each map for a larger, pdf version

Chimney Swift Activity Chimney Swift Nests Chimney Swift Roosts

Did you know?

SwiftyChimney Swifts eat small flying insects less than 0.2 inch in length including mosquitoes, midges, flies, spittlebugs, aphids, winged ants, tiny bees and wasps, mayflies, stoneflies, and termites. Historical data demonstrates that the pellets of food given nestlings can contain more than 200 insects. Unlike many bird species where the only oldest / strongest nestling is fed, Chimney Swifts feed all their nestlings. The weakest / youngest nestling has been observed being fed first.

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