The sudden switch from our recent winter blast to a pre-spring weather week might bring out a butterfly or two in the Bitterroot Valley. So says Bob Danley of the KLYQ Bitterroot Outdoor Journal this week. The Milbert's Tortoiseshell butterfly (pictured above) has been seen as early as March 15th in some years. Bob said the butterfly "winters over" as an adult and can be out and about if there's sunshine and temperature in the 60s. You can find them near those nasty sticky nettles in the valley. There's a migration going on - but it's to the North. The Common Redpoll (photo below) is a little 5-inch long bird that is nomadic in the winter, usually found around birch trees. But in the spring, they head to their preferred nesting areas in boreal forests to the north. If you have Niger seeds in your bird feeder, you might see some of the little birds stoking up for the northward flight.