
When the young leave the nest, their incessant food calls help the parent find them, well hidden in dense foliage , high in the canopy. They migrate early and few are to be found in Ontario after early September. They winter mainly in Central America and northern South America.
Males are bright orange, with black head and upper back and black central tail feathers: the black wings have white flashes.
Females are dull versions of the male, with the black reduced to spots or streaks. The song is a rich, whistled “too-hee-tew-tew-tew” (varying somewhat from bird to bird): they will often come to a whistled version of the final drooping “tew-tew-tew”. They often utter a scolding, lip-smacking sputter.
