Vacation photos: final round-up
July 23rd, 2010
Common Loon
This was one of the biggest surprises of the week. I saw and photographed him
from the dolphin-watching boat, but didn't realize what I had just
photographed until I looked at the LCD. Loons are only expected at Outer Banks
in winter and migration. This guy was supposed to be on some secluded mountain
lake in Canada, not on the Roanoke Sound. I guess he (or she) was a nonbreeder
who decided to linger on the wintering grounds.
Black Skimmer,
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Laughing Gull,
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THE Outer Banks gull. They share the beaches with smaller numbers of Herring
Gulls and Great Black-Backed Gulls--but I can see both of those back home, so
I don't focus my camera on them much. Like Ring-Billed Gulls, Laughing Gulls
are quite tame, readily taking handouts from humans.
Common Wood Nymph
An abundant butterfly along the Pea Island boardwalk.
Northern Mockingbird
This is a common species throughout the southeast, but especially common in
Outer Banks, I find. They must really like that coastal habitat.
Clouded Sulfur
Silver-Spotted Skipper
(
Triplist )
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Some odes
July 22nd, 2010
A few interesting odonates (dragonflies and damselflies) from my vacation. The
first two were photographed at Alligator River Wildlife Refuge, a place with a
huge diversity of dragonflies.
Needham's Skimmer,
wallpaper available
An exclusively coastal species that's easily mistaken for the more widespread
Golden-Winged Skimmer. In fact, you may have seen me so mistake it if you read
this entry within ten minutes of when I first posted it :-)
Blue Dasher,
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Ebony Jewelwing
I saw this one at Pocahontas State Park in Virginia, in the vicinity of Beaver
Lake, and was fairly startled--I'd never seen anything like it before. Turns
out it's a type of damselfly. Courtesy of
Gillian, I now know we have them
in Ottawa too!
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Shirley's Bay Adventure
July 21st, 2010
Today I went birding at Shirley's Bay. It's only the second time I've done
that, and my first time doing it solo.
Now, let me explain exactly what I mean by "birding at Shirley's Bay." There
are trails at Shirley's Bay--nice, publicly accessible hiking trails that you
can see on the Greenbelt map. And there's a boat launch and picnic area and so
on. But if you're a birder--a serious birder--you're probably not interested
in any of that. Here's what you do as a birder at Shirley's Bay:
You park at the end of Rifle Road and walk a short distance to a gate with a
big, imposing "Department of National Defense" sign next to it. You go through
the gate. You notice signs saying things like "no trespassing" and "danger -
active shooting range", and disregard them. Then you waltz past the big sign
saying "controlled access area" and "authorized personnel only." Oh, and "you
may be searched at any time."
You turn onto a narrow dirt road, thumbing your nose at the two red "NO ENTRY"
signs, continue on a ways, and finally, one last sign, "private property"
(right next to something about poison ivy), tries to convince you to turn
around, but you don't.
You do all this, mind you, after having obtained permission to do so. Still,
if it's the first time you've ever done it solo, and you're me, you feel a
little lurch in your stomach at every sign. You feel your heart beat. Fast.
You climb up onto the dike. And then...then, you're in heaven.
Kingfishers everywhere. Kingfishers flying right in front of your nose. Common
Terns diving. Four Great Egrets (a rare species in Ottawa) out in the water
and about three times as many Great Blue Herons. An Osprey flies by. Three
deer--two adults and a spotted fawn--come up on the dike behind you, see you,
think about it for a minute, and turn and run. And down in the shallows of the
river, what you've really come here for: shorebirds. Dozens and dozens of
shorebirds. The single best shorebird-watching spot in the entire city.
Just one thing about this mecca. Well, two things. One is the poison ivy. (I
went in shorts. I probably shouldn't have.) The other is the ants. I recommend
not setting your backpack down while you're on the dike. Because there are
ants. Lots of them. They'll swarm up onto it. That webbing that you keep your
drink in? They'll get all up in there. Then, when you put the backpack back
on, they'll get in your shirt.
And they won't be happy about it.
So, in sum: an adventure! I finally listed
Solitary
Sandpiper and
Pectoral
Sandpiper, two lifers that have been a long time coming for me. I've never
seen so many Lesser Yellowlegs in one place. I had no idea how noisy and
argumentative that species could become in groups--the individuals I saw at
Andrew Haydon Park were always quiet and graceful. At Shirley's Bay, it seemed
there were so many of them they couldn't get along. The altercations were
always in pairs: two birds facing off, staring each other down from an inch
away, then leaping and fluttering, kicking at each other. Then more staring.
Then more kerfuffle. This would go on until one of them decided that they were
more interested in eating than fighting. At which point the other seemed to
think "yeah, you have a point" and they both went back to probing the mud.
Like
this. (I didn't take that photo--it's from the Ottawa Citizen and was
taken by Francine Ouellette--but it's very similar to what I saw.)
I'm looking forward to bringing my camera back to capture those kingfishers.
I would add as a postscript that I love my country. Calling Range Control took
some nerve. Because here I am...phoning up the freaking
military...to
ask them if I can go bird-watching on their property? They're going to tell me
to get a life, right? But no. The voice on the other end was friendly. He
agreed right away and I could tell he'd heard the request many times before.
This cordial relation between Ottawa birders and the DND is a very nice state
of affairs. I hope it lasts.
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Black Swallowtail
July 19th, 2010
Some butterflies look prettier from the underside.
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This is a particularly abundant species at Alligator River Wildlife Refuge,
which is where these pictures were taken.
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Water Snake
July 18th, 2010
I noticed this guy slithering along in the water while I was photographing
skimmers at Pea Island. It's either an Outer Banks Kingsnake (an isolated
subspecies of the Eastern Kingsnake that occurs only on the barrier islands)
or a Carolina Water Snake (also an isolated subspecies.) I don't have the
expertise to say which, and I've heard differing opinions from the experts.
Feel free to chime in!
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A face only a mother could love
July 17th, 2010
And now for a change of pace...
Photographed at the Manteo Aquarium. I was amused by this guy's curmudgeonly expression.
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One good tern...
July 16th, 2010
While I was out on the river yesterday photographing sandpipers, a nearby pair
of
Common
Terns was angrily harassing a gull. And they seemed none too happy about
me, either--circling directly overhead,
kee-arring loudly. So I took
the hint, got a few good pictures and left.
Terns are largely oceanic birds, but this is one species that lives inland as
well.
It wasn't until I looked at my photos back home that I realized why the pair
was so defensive: they had a young un'! Standing on a little islet, apparently
begging his parents for food. I didn't realize terns bred in that area.
(
Terns of Outer Banks )
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A present-day interlude
July 15th, 2010
So, remember how I said sandpipers migrate really early?
Least Sandpiper
Low water levels on the Ottawa River have left behind extensive mud flats.
This is great news for those of us who want to go shorebird-watching in late
summer. Sandpipers and plovers are attracted to that kind of habitat,
sometimes in large flocks. And even though it's only mid-July, the first wave
of migrants shorebirds is now moving through.
At Andrew Haydon Park yesterday, a flock of several dozen Least Sandpipers was
foraging in the mud and shallow water. This is one of an informal class of
birds known as the "peeps": very small (sparrow-sized), very cute sandpipers
that can be hard to distinguish from each other. Least Sandpipers are the
easiest of them. They're the only ones (in our area) with yellow legs instead
of black ones.
A few
Semipalmated
Sandpipers were mixed in with the flock. They're a little grayer and a
shade bigger, but leg color is the most reliable difference.
Other early migrants included one
Semipalmated
Plover and one
Lesser Yellowlegs,
along with the usual, locally breeding
Spotted Sandpipers
and
Killdeers.
The Killdeers did the best they could to alarm everyone about my presence
("it's a human! it's a human! it's a human! it's a human! watch out! watch
out! watch out!" Hey guys? Shut up.), but, I'm happy to say, none of the peeps
got particularly alarmed. They allowed me to approach within ten feet of them
and paid me little mind. Such tameness is typical of birds who breed in the
far north, which many sandpipers do.
I went back today with camera in hand and got the above photos, but found, to
my dismay, that the shorebird habitat at Andrew Haydon was getting swallowed
up: the water level was rising. And I heard from a fellow birder yesterday
that it had risen between then and the day before. This seems to happen to us
every year. Just when it's getting good, boom, the river rises, the mud
disappears, shorebirds go elsewhere. (Like to sewage lagoons for instance. I'm
sorry, I may be a pretty insanely enthusiastic bird-watcher, but I'm not
insane enough for
that yet.) To mangle one of Jack Sparrow's favorite
lines: "why is the mud always gone?"
The extensive shallows still make it easier to explore that stretch of river
than it usually is, provided you have a good set of waterproof hiking boots
and are willing to wade through muddy, buggy vegetation. If I did what I did
today back in Virginia I'd've probably come back with tick bites, chigger
bites, and furthermore dead because I'd have gotten bit by a water moccasin.
There are advantages to living in the north.
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Willets
July 14th, 2010
Outer Banks has a variety of sandpipers in migration and winter--32 of them on
the official checklist--but as far as breeders, it has just one: the
Willet. It's a medium-ish
sandpiper, about the size of a grackle on stilts. I've been familiar with them
since I was a girl, though I didn't know them by name until I became a birder.
We often see them on evening walks down the beach. They stride back and forth
at the edge of the surf, looking for tidbits.
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Willets also forage in the shallows of the sound, where they can be hard to
distinguish from other medium-sized sandpipers. (And yes, even in July, there
are other sandpipers: for this class of birds, fall migration begins very
early.) As soon as one takes flight, though, there's no doubt. The striking
black-and-white banded wings are unique to this species.
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Herons and Ibises
July 13th, 2010
In past summers, I've seen numerous herons and ibises wading close to shore
from the Pea Island trail. This year, due to lack of rainfall, that area was
dried up and unappealing to them and most of them waded far away from me and
my camera. Thus, most of my heron photos were of birds in flight.
These are all common species in the salt marshes of Cape Hatteras. You can
scarcely visit Pea Island in summer without spotting some of each of them.
Great Egret
A characteristic bird of Hatteras--big, numerous, and not particularly timid.
They can even be seen wading in wet ditches along roadsides.
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