A Free Lunch
June 27th, 2015
We got some nice views of Bald Eagles during the boat tour as well. They
trailed after the boat to ask for food, and the captain would obligingly toss
fish out on the water for them. You had to be fast on the shutter: the
retrieval was lightning-quick! One eagle came flying right up our wake after
that looking for seconds. "Greedy git", Mike called it. But perhaps the first
fish was for it, and the second was for its young back on the nest.
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"Kthxbye!"
We saw one more eagle when we got to the colonies, this time a young one. He
was perched right on the island. He had shrewdly chosen a nook with an
overhanging ledge to protect him from dive-bombing gulls (hovering just out of
frame here), who, like all the other nesting birds on the island, were Not
Happy to see him.
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Bird Islands Miscellanea
June 25th, 2015
Black Guillemots are the third type of auk that breed around Cape Breton.
Unlike the other two, they favor mainland cliffs as well, and we often saw
them on the water when hiking along headlands. Their feet can be quite
startlingly red. Even when looking down on them from tall cliffs, you can see
their little red feet paddling underwater.
With a Razorbill on the right:
A Grey Seal made a brief appearance as we started the trip back.
Black-Legged Kittiwake wonders: when is that egg gonna hatch already?
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Great Cormorants
June 23rd, 2015
Double-Crested Cormorants are common in Ottawa and ten times more common
throughout Cape Breton. Over-exposure has left me blase, although I still
remember my wonderment the first time I saw one, nine years ago in Hog's Back
Park: an all-black bird with feet like a duck, bill like a heron, wings like a
vulture, ghostly blue eyes and two weird little tufts on its head. (Little did
I know how rare it was to actually see those "double crests." In the years
I've been birding since I've never seen it again.)
But the Great Cormorants I saw on this vacation gave me a fresh appreciation
for cormorants--for the intensity and prehistoric weirdness of them. This is a
much less common variety, at least in North America, that is only found on the
north Atlantic coast from Maine to Newfoundland. Before this I'd only seen one
once before at a great distance (in Gaspé.) They're larger than
Double-Cresteds, and in breeding plumage really quite handsome. I was struck
by the steel blue sheen they showed in good light, and the scalloped,
mosaic-like pattern of their back feathers.
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(this one's best appreciated at high res!)
Cormorants stand like that for extended periods to dry their wings after
diving for fish. Unlike most water birds, they don't have waterproof plumage.
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Razorbills
June 21st, 2015
Razorbills (another type of auk) may actually have been my favorite part of
the Bird Islands. I just find them fascinating-looking birds, and they were so
forthcoming with great views, perching and interacting right out on the rocks,
and fishing in the water right beside our boat.
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The splash in the middle is a razorbill that just dove.
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The Star Of Bird Islands
June 19th, 2015
The Bird Islands are two rocky islets offshore of Cape Breton, blanketed in
colonies of nesting seabirds. We chose
Donelda's Puffin Boat Tours to take
us there and had a great time. They go as close to the islands as possible,
giving you good views (with binoculars) of the razorbills, guillemots,
puffins, cormorants and kittiwakes. The extra megapixels on my new camera
really strutted their stuff that day. "As close as possible" really wasn't all
that close, and I was surprised when some of my photographs, once cropped,
looked as if I'd been standing on the island right next to the birds!
The puffins--"chunky little sea parrots", as Peterson calls them--are the
ostensible stars of the show. In truth I enjoyed the other seabirds just as
much, but Atlantic Puffin was a lifer for me (one of my four this trip), and I
was excited to see and photograph it. Puffins are part of the auk family, the
north hemisphere's analogue to penguins. They eat small fish which they catch
by diving and swimming underwater. They are renowned for their ability to
carry dozens of fish at a time in their oversized bills when bringing food
back to the nest. (Apparently the known record is 62!)
The puffins were both less numerous and less obvious than the other seabirds,
nesting as they did in little hollows on the rock faces (instead of out in the
open.) I only managed to photograph them on the water.
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Puffins aren't very good fliers. Auks in general aren't very good fliers: to
quote Wikipedia, they are a compromise between the best possible design for
diving and the bare minimum needed for flying. (This still puts them a step
past penguins whose "compromise" was to give up flying entirely.) They have to
patter furiously across the water into the wind to achieve liftoff.
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The Star Of Yellow Sidecar
June 16th, 2015
I'm back from vacation in Cape Breton. I'll have lots more to say about it
soon, including my four lifers, all successfully photographed. But for now I
just want to share this little beauty.
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He was guarding a hummingbird feeder jealously--his mate was allowed to share
it with him, but no one else. He found the wicker chair a handy perch for
keeping an eye on things. This was at
Yellow Sidecar B&B in Cap Le
Moine, a little house on the coast in the middle of nowhere (to quote another
B&B's proprietor: "
no one stays in Cap Le Moine!...well, except you
guys") with two very active hummingbird feeders and a gloriously overgrown
tangle of a back yard, which I plowed my way into to enjoy the yellowthroats
and alder flycatchers. It was not just a wonderful birder's B&B, it was a
wonderful B&B period. I recommend it to anyone wanting an authentic experience
of Cape Breton.
Next up, nesting seabirds on the Bird Islands!
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A Delicate Beauty
May 30th, 2015
On Monday husband and I are off to Cape Breton! I'm looking forward to
lifelisting the adorable
Atlantic Puffin (a
gimme), and
Bicknell's
Thrush. Bicknell's Thrush will
not be a gimme, but a tantalizing
possibility. It is a very rare bird with a tiny range--so rare that there are
guided tours dedicated to seeing just it. Cape Breton happens to be within
its tiny range.
ETA:
Here's what I'll be listening
for.
We also hope to do some whale-watching, and probably a visit to Fortress of
Louisburg.
I tried for a last-minute twitch on Yellow-Crowned Night Heron, a southern
bird well out of range in someone's backyard in Carp. It too would be a lifer.
(If you've been following along it should sound familiar. It's a close
relative of a heron I just photographed!) The homeowner graciously allowed me
onto her property to look at the pond, but it wasn't there. It was probably
roosting somewhere out of the heavy rain and thus smarter than me :-) I might
try again tomorrow.
I leave you with this Spring Beauty from early May.
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Mud Lake, late spring
May 27th, 2015
Summer is moving in. You can see the progression on the
latest page of my gallery: brown and silver bokehs
predominating at the bottom, and at the top, green, green, and more green!
Mud Lake's Yellow Warblers are back:
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The Black-Crowned Night Herons at Mud Lake seem tamer than in years past, for
some reason. It used to be I could only get good pictures of the (stripy
brown) teenagers--adults would flush at the slightest disturbance. But I was
in clear view of this one and he paid me little mind. Mature Night Herons,
seen close up and in good light, are magnificent birds in my opinion!
Lily-of-the-valley, a garden flower that sometimes escapes into woodlands.
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Dragonflies and Wildflowers at Sugarbush Trail
May 23rd, 2015
I took my mother to Sugarbush Trail in the Gatineau last week, expecting a
nice walk and maybe an interesting bird or two. But despite it being a fairly
cool, breezy day, it turned out to be dragonfly heaven! While Chelsea Creek
was virtually deserted of odes, sunny, sheltered spots in the woods were
teeming with them. And it wasn't the usual "ten bazillion Four-Spotted
Skimmers" that you expect to see in spring--these were, at least for me (a
perennial dragonfly novice), exotic types that I had never seen before.
Most of them I couldn't identify down to species. But there are whole genera
of dragonflies that I'm largely unfamiliar with, and these were they.
Baskettails, for instance:
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And clubtails:
Chris Traynor, a well-known local naturalist, went to Sugarbush Trail recently
himself (perhaps inspired by my post on Facebook) and saw a Moustached
Clubtail, and he thinks my photo may be of the same species. If so it's a
rarity in this region.
I have no idea what it's dining on here--please comment if you do! So far the
best guess I or anyone has come up with is that it's eating a shrivelled-up
fellow dragonfly.
American Emerald. Nothing exotic about this one, but it is beautiful. Emeralds
are called that because of the color of their eyes. I think they should be
called Opals instead.
The woods were full of trillium, and I searched for those elusive "pink"
trilliums--white ones that have turned to pink but not yet wilted beyond the
point of photogenic. My mom pointed out this one, and it ended up being the
best of the lot.
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More exciting was our discovery of a red (a.k.a. purple) trillium. This is a
separate species, and one I've rarely seen. In fact I think this is the first
time I've found a red trillium in full bloom. There were more along the trail,
but they were all wilted already.
I tested the claim that red trillium is ill-scented. The claim is true! They
pollinate themselves with the help of flies, and attract the flies by smelling
like carrion. The liver-red color of the flower is also part of that
subterfuge.
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Three Hunters
May 13th, 2015
My mother is visiting from Virginia. I took her to Mud Lake this afternoon,
and Mud Lake brought out all its charms for her! It was the birdiest I'd seen
it (or heard it) this spring. Near the trailhead were two surprisingly tame
adult Night Herons, one of them actively fishing.
The action was so good I had to go back home, get my camera, and come back.
Fortunately one of the Night Herons waited for me.
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Down the trail, the Eastern Screech-Owl was out of his hole. (I've decided to
give up trying to keep this secret, since it's very much an open secret, and
really, the owl doesn't seem to care the darndest about people watching him.)
He was perched low down and close to the trunk of an old snag. From a
distance, he did a convincing imitation of a broken off branch:
While the bunch of us (my mom and I and other photographers) were watching the
owl, a Cooper's Hawk got into a noisy fight with a couple of crows, which
ended badly (though not fatally) for one of the crows! Most of us went over to
photograph the hawk, perched low after the altercation and looking completely
unruffled.
When we got back, my mom regaled us all with how the fight had woken the owl
up, and how it had its eyes wide open, looking all around. We got back just in
time to see it falling back to sleep.
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