Gaspé
June 15th, 2009
Our vacation to Gaspé Peninsula is just about set.
We're leaving on Thursday, spending the night in Riviere-du-Loup, and arriving
in Percé the following day. The B&B in Percé is called
"Gîte Le Presbytère." It's set in an old presbytery, specifically
a former home for itinerant priests. It has several (all) positive reviews on
TripAdvisor. I look forward to it and to the other B&Bs we'll be staying at,
particular the breakfast part. French Canadians know how to do breakfast
right!
The major attraction in Percé is an offshore island called
Bonaventure. It's
basically one big bird sanctuary, boasting the following breeding sea birds:
This is just a start--the sea birds that I am pretty much guaranteed to see.
There will be more, as well as novel songbirds such as the
Boreal Chickadee.
Blackpoll
Warblers, whom I've only seen rarely in migration, breed on the island.
Gaspé even has an endangered population of east-coast
Harlequin Ducks that I may
chance to find. All in all I expect the length of my lifelist to jump by at
least several dozen.
We plan to do some whale-watching too, and some hiking inland at Forillon
National Park, where there may be bear and moose and, if we're lucky, lynx
sightings.
I'm bringing five memory cards and intend to fill them. In the meantime,
here's a few spring leftovers that I didn't get around to posting before.
Common Grackle
Female Downy Woodpecker
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Flowers don't fly away
June 12th, 2009
Spring migration is over. Birds have settled into their breeding territories.
They're no longer congregating in easily accessible migratory hotspots. They're
singing, nesting and foraging away in their individual habitats of choice.
Those who prefer to stay stratospherically high in the canopy, do so. Those
who prefer to stay hidden in six layers of foliage, do so.
Bird photography has been absolute unrelenting frustration.
On that note, I bring you these pretty plants.
A baby conifer cone--tamarack, I think. Photographed at Mer Bleue bog.
Devil's Paintbrush
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Rock Pigeon courtship
June 7th, 2009
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A male Rock Pigeon courts a prospective mate by poofing out his iridescent
throat feathers.
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Apparently I'm some kind of nut
June 4th, 2009
I went down to Old Quarry Trail in Kanata early yesterday morning, in search
of a warbler that I know breeds there:
Common
Yellowthroat.
Common Yellowthroats are beautiful little birds with bright yellow throats and
black, domino-shaped patches around their eyes. They're bashful skulkers of
marshes and wet meadows. It's easy to hear Yellowthroats singing--a loud,
cheerful "witchety witchety witchety" that can go on for hours--but hard
to get one to actually come out into the open.
I found a male in a wet grassy patch of land, hopping around in trees and
bushes and singing. Since he's what I came for, I gamely waded my way into the
grass after him...
And spent nearly an hour trying to photograph that damn bird. It went the way
it usually does. As soon as I startled him (which didn't take much), he darted
away, then about fifteen seconds later, I heard "witchety witchety witchety"
emanating from some other thick shrubbery or (if I was lucky) a small tree.
Follow, startle, repeat. And so we both went around in circles, me snapping
shots anytime he showed his face.
The grass was very tall and very wet. My jeans and sneakers both soaked
through to the skin in 8C. And when all was said and done, I had not a single
picture that I'm willing to share: nothing that is not of such poor quality
that it would be downright libelous to post it. No. Common Yellowthroats
deserve better. Even if they do drive me crazy.
I will be trying again.
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And your little dog too
May 29th, 2009
Common Grackles continue to amuse me.
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Vanity
May 28th, 2009
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Afternoon Stroll
May 27th, 2009
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Found this Great Blue Heron at Dominion Arboretum yesterday. Just out of view
is a small stream, which is what attracted him. In fact, at various times,
I've seen three different types of herons fishing there.
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Fletcher Wildlife Garden is the awesomest place
May 26th, 2009
Tree
Swallows are some of the most beautiful birds in North America.
You've probably seen them before: flocks of them circle over ponds and rivers
in the evening, hawking for insects, moving too fast to pick out any detail.
Swallows are so graceful and streamlined that they can stay aloft for hours,
never stopping to perch. Usually, the only way to get a good look at them is
to catch them nesting.
Which is why Fletcher Wildlife Garden is the awesomest place. It's got a pond
surrounded by very successful Tree Swallow nest boxes. They're busily setting
up now and will be raising families in the month to come.
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A mating pair:
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The Glare
May 24th, 2009
I took several pictures of this grackle, and this one, colorwise, was not the
best. But I just love the look he's giving me. "Do you
mind, lady?"
(
Bird geekage within )
Orioles continue to pose prettily for me. Most of the orioles at Mud Lake are
now breeders, not migrants. I can tell because orioles have
dialects--differing songs by region--and all the orioles I encountered on my
last trip out were singing the Mud Lake dialect.
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Another view of that flicker, calling to attract a mate. That's what he was
doing in the other picture too, but it's a little more obvious here.
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Speaking of half-decent flicker photos...
May 23rd, 2009
I finally got one!
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The one feature of note that isn't visible here is the bright yellow
underneath a flicker's wings and tail--although you can see a faint hint of it
at the edge of his folded wing.
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