Reports of migrants arriving for a new nesting season will begin to appear in about three weeks.
The Daily Bird Planner offered last year by the Minnesota Ornithologists’ Union gives median (midpoint) arrival dates for all Minnesota migrant bird species.
Horned larks are already being seen, Jan. 24 being the middle of their arrival period. That means those birds can be found foraging along country roadsides and in barren fields by diligent birders. The larks usually appear in flocks.
Waterfowl fill arrival dates into March, when great blue herons and turkey vultures also will be seen.
Eastern bluebirds should be looking for clean and open boxes around March 5. Tree swallows, nest-box competitors, will be about a week behind them.

Fox sparrows and brown-headed cowbirds have a median date of March 11, woodcocks March 12.
The list of arrivals grows quickly from that point, gull and raptor species arriving day by day. Expect meadowlarks, some blackbirds, winter wrens and Eastern phoebes in mid-March.
Shorebirds begin arrivals later in March. Passerine species — songbirds — will open the year for many birders in and around mid-April. By late April and into mid-May many of our colorful resident and migrant species will arrive.