Eastern Towhee
July 12th, 2010
The
towhee
is the most abundant breeding sparrow of the Outer Banks. At Pea Island you
can find them on any summer morning, singing in the bushes beside the
boardwalk. Individual towhee songs vary, but they all have a characteristic
rhythm that some describe as, "drink-your-tea-tea-tea!"
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Laughing Gull
July 11th, 2010
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Lifer songbirds in the south
July 10th, 2010
Four new songbirds for me on this trip--a bit of a surprise for a vacation
that was centered around the ocean!
1.
Seaside Sparrow
This rather drab little bird is a permanent resident in the salt marshes of
Outer Banks. Usually a secretive species, one hopped onto a nearby perch and
sang (a buzzy, insectile song reminiscent of a Grasshopper Sparrow) while I
was photographing the skimmers. I had time for one shot. Poor-quality though
it is, the picture plus that song is sufficient to identify him confidently.
2.
Prairie Warbler
I found one of these handsome southern warblers when I was hiking Swift Creek
Trail in Virginia. It's misnamed--it's a bird of scrubby fields and forest
undergrowth, not prairie. Alas, when I went back later with camera in hand,
came to what I thought was his territory and pished like crazy, he did not
make a second appearance.
Instead, a
White-Eyed
Vireo answered my pishes by fluttering down into the understory and
perching right in front of me. So I photographed him instead :-)
3.
Brown-Headed
Nuthatch
A bird of southern pine forests. I saw my first on Roanoke Island, where
they're abundant (specifically, saw a band of them just outside the Aquarium
parking lot). This is Outer Banks' only nuthatch in summer, so the ID was
pretty easy. No photo for this one.
4.
Prothonotary
Warbler
Best for last.
This is one of the most striking warblers there is, and the picture does not
do it justice. (For that, click on the above link.) The breeding male is deep
golden with a tinge of orange--"marigold yellow", Michael called it. It's also
an unusual warbler, being one of only two species who nest in tree cavities:
leftover woodpecker holes and the like.
Prothonotary Warblers breed in wooded swamps, primarily in the southeast. I
found my lifer, and three more besides, at Alligator River Wildlife Refuge (on
the mainland), whose cypress swamps are ideal habitat for them.
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One Of A Kind
July 9th, 2010
It's always exciting to see a new species. But even more exciting is to see a
bird that's literally one of a kind--like this partial albino Red-Winged Blackbird!
He lives at Pea Island Wildlife Refuge, making his territory, along with other
redwings, in the tangle of bushes on either side of the boardwalk. He's
famous, in fact. There are photos of him in the visitor center. Leucistic
birds usually look motley, but I find this one quite striking.
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Osprey
July 8th, 2010
The
Osprey is a large
fish-eating raptor found throughout the world, on every continent save
Antarctica. They breed both inland and on the coast. When my family first
started going to Outer Banks--late 70's, early 80's--I never saw a single
osprey. I now know that that was probably due to DDT poisoning. Being apex
predators, osprey developed a concentrated buildup of DDT in their bodies. The
chemical caused their eggs to be fragile and crack easily.
DDT has since been banned and their numbers have recovered. Now, crossing over
from the mainland to Nagshead in summer, you can see multiple active osprey
nests right beside the bridge!
When we went dolphin-watching, the dock where we departed from had an osprey
nest close enough to photograph. One adult stayed in the nest while another
flew back and forth, bringing food to the young. In the second photo, you can
just see the fuzzy little head of a nestling peeking up.
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The Stars of the Show
July 7th, 2010
Of all the avifauna of Outer Banks, none capture my heart like the
Black Skimmers. Ternlike
birds with striking, huge black and red bills, they fly low, dragging their
oversized lower mandibles in the water. They're 16-20 inches perched, but in
flight, they look a lot bigger than that, with a wingspan of up to four feet.
The first time I saw one I couldn't believe my eyes.
On Sunday afternoon, three of them gave me an extended show at Pea Island salt
marsh. They flew quite close to me as they circled around skimming the water,
allowing me to snap dozens of pictures.
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You can see this bird's strangest feature above--the lower mandible is about a
third longer than the upper.
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This is the classic skimmer posture. The lower mandible skims in shallow water
feeling for fish and crustaceans. They'll fly along some distance like that,
leaving a little wake behind them. I see them most often on salt marshes and
sounds, but they also skim the ocean surf. (A few years ago a pair of them did
that right outside our cottage!)
When they find food, they double their bills back to catch it.
The one behind appears to be a juvenile: note the white collar and other
imperfections of his plumage.
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I'm back
July 6th, 2010
I return from vacation with ten zillion photos. And twice as many bug bites.
Oy vey, the ticks. Oy vey, the chiggers. What a relief to be back in a place
where the bugs only bite you once then fly away. Instead of freaking
colonizing you!
That aside, I had an awesome time at Outer Banks. The cottage was spacious and
beautiful and comfy and oceanfront. The body boarding was great. The birding
was out of this world. Between Virginia and Carolina I racked up six lifers.
Bird
photography in Virginia was of limited success, but at Outer
Banks, all sorts of sea birds and a few song birds posed nicely for me.
Details to come. For now, my bed is calling.
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Life Bird!
June 23rd, 2010
"I'm going hiking!" I announced.
"You're nuts," said my mom.
"You need your head checked," said my dad.
"Cuckoo!" said my husband.
"100F," said the thermometer.
Pshaw, I say. It's not so bad. You move slow, you drink lots. The body adapts.
I grew up with this weather (generally in July and August, mind you, not
June). It remembers.
Today I went exploring Swift Creek Trail, a forest road near where my parents
live. If I followed it far enough I'd get to Swift Creek, where my brother
went fishing and camping as a teenager. (There was a big puddle that used to
form on the dirt road behind our house; it drained via a narrow channel into
the woods and eventually into Swift Creek. My brother and I used to dam up the
channel so the puddle got huge and then we'd play in it. And then we'd get in
trouble because some guy lived back there and actually had to drive on that
road. Ah, memories.) But today was not the day for a two-mile hike.
So I just went a ways down the gravel road, seeing what I could see. It made
my day, my week, and heck, my entire month when I found a singing
Prairie
Warbler, a striking yellow-breasted bird with black flank streaks and
"mustache", and my 220-somethingth lifer! I found him exactly the way I love
to find new birds: unannounced and unexpected. This is one of the southeastern
warblers that almost never occurs in Ottawa.
The other point of interest was a
Summer
Tanager, the cherry red bird that's a close cousin to our Scarlet Tanager.
(Speaking of Scarlet Tanagers, we saw one of those at Shenandoah, along with
two other "mountain specialties", Common Ravens and Slate-Colored Juncos.
Those three northern birds breed nowhere else in Virginia but the mountains.)
My body handled it fine. I didn't even get a dehydration headache like I got
after the last hike, where I didn't drink quite enough. There is, however, a
small problem with ticks. The underbrush is teeming with them this summer: the
little bitty ones that, IIRC, are the ones that transmit Lyme Disease. I've
picked (or had picked) three off me so far.
The rest of the week will be eventful. Dutch Gap tomorrow, Busch Gardens on
Friday, then off to Cape Hatteras for a week on Saturday.
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Last fling before Virginia
June 15th, 2010
Went walking today, starting from Dominion Station and heading northeast along
the river. This was a "this day's too beautiful to waste" walk, not a birding
walk per se, but I brought along my binoculars on general principle.
I'm glad I did! I ended up at Champlain Bridge--I didn't realize the hike from
Dominion to there was so short. This bridge is a nesting site for
Cliff
Swallows, probably the scarcest of Ottawa's six swallow species, certainly
one I don't see every day. (These are the guys who, famously, "return to
Capistrano"--although of late, those particular Cliff Swallows
have
relocated.) I'd heard about the colony but never come to see it before. I
took a stairway up, and found that the bridge had both a bike lane and a
pedestrian lane (have I mentioned I love my city?), so I followed along and
watched for them. Ended up seeing quite a few flying back and forth, their
pale buff-colored rumps (and sometimes their white forehead spots) clearly
visible. From down on Bate Island, I was even able to see one of the rows of
nests. They build them out of mud along the sides of the bridge.
On the bike path, a smell of carrion attracted a Turkey Vulture who, in turn,
attracted the attention of several angry songbirds. (Not sure why they bother
harassing a vulture...maybe he could prey on a nestling?) Yellow Warbler
parents were busily carrying insects to their young. And at one point, on the
ground, was a quite young but out-of-the-nest Red-Winged Blackbird. His head
wasn't even fully feathered yet.
This will be my last outing before Virginia. We're leaving in three days, and
I have lots to do before then.
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A Dragonfly Quintet
June 14th, 2010
I'm starting to learn my dragonflies. At Stony Swamp last week, I saw five
different species in one day.
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More )
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