Nothin' like a lifer!  
After  posting here this morning, I grabbed a sandwich, a bottle of water, my binocular and my dog...all the essentials of a good  birding  trip...and headed out.  I was in the designated area within about 20 minutes, and then followed the  directions provided by the homeowner who had  found the bird and originally posted it.   Arrived  just as another car with two birders from the city were unpacking their gear.  We left  our cars, walked  up the long wooded drive...and were looking at the bird within another 15 minutes.
Mixed in among a flock of numerous Juncos, Fox Sparrows, American Tree Sparrows and Purple Finches (all commonly expected  birds)...a single Brambling, a species  that breeds all across the Eurasian continent  in the northern reaches, and then winters in a more southerly strip of that landmass, including the British Isles.  I'll bet our friends  from ""Blighty" would recognize  it.  Those  few  that make their way to North America likely all do it by crossing the Bering Sea between Alaska and Siberia.  It's not a bird  you expect  to find right out the corner from home in the center of the continent.
And  unlike many vagrants and strays that show up, which are  often immature birds or dull-coloured females in non-breeding  plumage, this one was a full adult male in almost full breeding colours.  Nice.
Let's  remember that there  are only a finite number of  bird species  to  be  seen.  Each  time you find a lifer, you slightly reduce the odds  of finding the next one.  After a  lifetime of birding in North America, there are still a number of NA birds I "need' to see, and an even smaller number local to my home turf.  Covid put a damper on recreational travel for me, so my accumulation of lifers has slowed to a dribble.  My last one was several years ago...another vagrant...so a new lifer now is a Big Deal.