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Bird Card
NeoDrop Official
ðŠ House Finch â Species ID Dossier
Episode 10 of 59. Four-card field-ID dossier for the House Finch: perched portrait with six field-mark callouts and female inset; dorsal/ventral flight-view with red rump patch highlight; "What-cheer, weeta-weeta-weet!" song card with spectrogram; three-species look-alike comparison against Purple Finch and Cassin's Finch.
2026/5/27 · 19:26
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Episode 10 of 59 | Haemorhous mexicanus
That smear of raspberry-red at your feeder? Half the time it's a House Finch â not a cardinal, not a Purple Finch. The male's orange-red head and breast look bold until you know what to actually look for.
Four cards. Everything you need to lock in the ID.
Card 1 â Perched Portrait
Field marks at a glance:
- Red head, breast & rump â three separate red zones
- Brown-streaked back and flanks (red doesn't wash the back the way Purple Finch does)
- Conical, slightly curved bill â built for cracking seeds
- Plain dark eye, no eye ring
- Notched tail
- Female: plain brownish, heavy streaking, no red, no supercilium
Size: 5â6 in (12.5â15 cm) · wingspan 8â10 in · weight 0.6â0.9 oz
Card 2 â Flight View
What to watch for in flight:
- Dorsal: that red rump patch pops against the brown-streaked back â the single most reliable in-flight mark
- Ventral: streaked underparts, slightly notched tail
- Flight style: bouncy undulating bound-glide-bound, typical finch behavior â almost rhythmic once you clock it
- Wings are short and rounded for a finch; no wing bars flash in flight
Card 3 â Song & Calls
Primary song mnemonic:
"What-cheer, what-cheer, what-cheer, weeta-weeta-weet!"
Phonetic breakdown:
WEET-cheer · WEET-cheer · wee-ta-WEE-ta-weet!Rich, warbling, melodious â ends with a distinctive upslurred or buzzy final note. Pitch 2â4 kHz, bright liquid quality.
Call types:
- Song â breeding males, year-round from exposed perches
- Contact/flight call â sharp upslurred "WEEET" or "WHIT"
- Alarm call â nasal "ch-wink"
One useful trick: if the warble sounds like it's asking a question at the end, you've got a House Finch.
Card 4 â Look-alike Comparison
The three Haemorhous finches:
| Feature | House Finch â | Purple Finch â | Cassin's Finch â |
|---|---|---|---|
| Red extent | Head, breast, rump only | Entire head AND back washed raspberry-wine | Crown cap only; pale throat & nape |
| Flank streaking | Heavy brown streaks | Less streaked below | Finer, crisper streaking |
| Female mark | No supercilium, plain-faced | Bold white supercilium | Finer streaking overall |
| Range | Widespread â backyards nationwide | East & Pacific Coast forests | Western mountains |
| Bill | Conical, curved culmen | Similar but slightly heavier | Slightly longer |
Quick rule: if the red stops at the back and the flanks are heavily streaked, it's a House Finch. If the back itself looks dipped in wine, check for Purple Finch. If the red is capped to the crown and the throat goes pale, you're in Cassin's territory (and probably in the mountains).
Species Data
| Order | Passeriformes |
| Family | Fringillidae |
| Genus | Haemorhous |
| Species | H. mexicanus |
| Pool position | #10 of 59 |
| Previously covered | American Robin, Northern Cardinal, Mourning Dove, Blue Jay, Black-capped Chickadee, House Sparrow, Mallard, Red-tailed Hawk, American Crow |
Caption (Instagram / social)
ðŠ House Finch â Species #10 of 59
That red smear at your feeder every morning? Here's the full dossier.
The male's orange-red stops at the back â that's your first clue it's not a Purple Finch. Four field-mark callouts, dorsal + ventral flight views, the "What-cheer, weeta-weeta-weet!" song breakdown, and a side-by-side with Purple and Cassin's Finch.
Swipe through. The look-alike card alone is worth saving.
#HouseFinch #HaemorrhousFinch #BackyardBirds #BirdID #FieldGuide #BirdingLife #NorthAmericanBirds #BirdWatching #FinchFamily #BirdsOfInstagram
Sources: Cornell Lab of Ornithology (All About Birds), Sibley Guide to Birds, Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Birds
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