Friday, April 26, 2024

Whitesbog 4/26--Sora, Yellow Warbler

That black bird with red wing patches
I was actually asked a question today that is the punchline of a joke but seems to common one that non-birders ask. I had wandered back past the Upper Reservoir on the Ocean County side of Whitesbog, where I was detained by one of the more long-winded regulars. I saw his pickup truck but there he waved to me before I could make a U-turn. Naturally, he wanted to tell me about the two eagles he'd seen the other day. I told him I was looking for smaller birds, "tweety birds" as my informant calls them. He then asked me what were those "black birds with red patches on their wings." 

A guy with binoculars around his neck goes into a biker bar. A big guy with numerous tattoos comes up to him and asks, "You a birdwatcher?" 

"Yes, I am," he replies.

"Let me ask you a question," the big guy says.

"Of course." 

"What are those black birds with red on their wings?"

"Why, those are Red-winged Blackbirds."

Outraged, the big guy says, "What are you some kind of %&#* wise guy?" 

Which is what I told my interlocutor. He accepted the information without any indication that he saw the humor. 

Brown Thrasher
I had gone to Whitesbog this morning thinking of a number of spots where I might find new birds for the year. I was successful only in the one place in which I felt most confident, around my informant's parking spot, where in the past Yellow Warblers have been known to nest. The area was busy, especially with Tree Swallows and those black birds with red wing patches, along with Common Yellowthroats every 10 feet, as well as a Brown Thrasher high up in a tree out mimicking a Gray Catbird lower down in the branches. And then I heard the Yellow Warbler and with a little searching found it singing in a bush on the far side of a breach. 

The big surprise, though, came about an hour later. I circled around the bogs again and checked out the bogs around the dogleg. This can be a good place for Solitary Sandpipers, but not today, and it is also a spot where I've heard both Virginia and King Rail, but of course, not today. A cormorant flew out of the bog, unusual for Whitesbog, and then I heard the whinny call of a Sora. Played a recording to try to lure it out w/o success. Dismissed it. Walked away and at the other side of the bog heard it again. The second time I did not dismiss it. This is the first record of a Sora at Whitesbog and only the second one I've heard in the county. Of course, it wouldn't whinny when I put on my recorder and of course, like most rails, it was invisible, but the call is too distinct and the habitat too perfect for me doubt myself. Soras have been turning up a bit more frequently in the county of late--there was one at Spizzle Creek this month and one crazy sighting on the jetty at Barnegat Light, proving that any bird can by anywhere

40 species
Canada Goose  2
Wood Duck  3
Mallard  4
Mourning Dove  5
Sora  1     I
Double-crested Cormorant  1     
Turkey Vulture  1
Northern Harrier  1     Antrim Bogs
Belted Kingfisher  1
Red-bellied Woodpecker  3
Downy Woodpecker  1
Northern Flicker  4
Eastern Kingbird  4
Blue Jay  1
Fish Crow  2
Carolina Chickadee  10
Tufted Titmouse  1
Tree Swallow  35
Northern Rough-winged Swallow  1
White-breasted Nuthatch  1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  7
Gray Catbird  2
Brown Thrasher  1
Eastern Bluebird  1
American Goldfinch  2
Chipping Sparrow  1
Song Sparrow  2
Swamp Sparrow  2
Eastern Towhee  15
Red-winged Blackbird  55
Brown-headed Cowbird  2
Common Grackle  10
Ovenbird  6
Black-and-white Warbler  8
Common Yellowthroat  50
Yellow Warbler
  1
Pine Warbler  4
Yellow-rumped Warbler  1
Prairie Warbler  2
Northern Cardinal  1

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Cranberry Bogs 4/25--Chimney Swift, Eastern Kingbird, House Wren

House Wren
I always thought that the Second Law of Birding

           You will not see the bird until you have sincerely given up

was only in effect during the day you were chasing a bird. Today, I found out that it applies over the long term. 

This year I have visited, numerous times, the Cranberry Bogs on Dover Road, Shelter Cove in Toms River, the Ocean County side of Whitesbog, and any other place I thought might have a chance of turning up a Wilson's Snipe in the county. Having failed in all those places, I just told myself I wasn't going to see one around here and would have to be satisfied with the one I listed at Brig. At least it was on the year list. 

Today I went to the Cranberry Bogs to look for some new birds and of course, I flushed a snipe out the bog that I usually see them in, the bog I had peered into at least 10 times this year. Remember, your surrender must be sincere.

I had barely exited the car this morning when I got my first year bird there--a singing House Wren across Dover Road. The place I expect to find them, the dilapidated buildings just east of the bogs--a house is a house to a House Wren--had a singing one too that I was able to get a good look at. 

I headed out to the bogs, flushed the snipe, and saw, above a swarm of Tree Swallows, my second year bird of the day, a flying cigar, otherwise known as the Chimney Swift. Naturally, this time of year, almost all the waterfowl are gone. All I saw were Canada Geese, Mallards, and three Wood Ducks that I flushed from the same bog where a Snowy Egret and Great Egret were standing side by side. I tromped around in my muck boots out to the large reservoir and way in the back on a branch of dead tree in the water I found year bird #3, an Eastern Kingbird. I took one blurry picture and my camera battery died. I dislike carrying the camera, which is always slipping off my shoulder. I really dislike carrying a camera with a dead battery. A couple of other birds were semi-interesting, like the Merlin in a treetop on the large reservoir and the Glossy Ibis flying over the bogs, but that was it for the new and exciting.

44 species and no ticks. A good morning. 

Canada Goose  5
Wood Duck  3     
Mallard  3
Mourning Dove  12
Chimney Swift  1
Killdeer  2     Bogs
Wilson's Snipe  1     
Laughing Gull  17
Herring Gull  3
Double-crested Cormorant  1     Large Reservoir
Snowy Egret  1     
Great Egret  3
Great Blue Heron  1
Glossy Ibis  1     
Turkey Vulture  3
Red-tailed Hawk  1
Northern Flicker  1
Merlin  1     
Eastern Kingbird  1
Blue Jay  2
American Crow  1
Fish Crow  1
Common Raven  1     Flying & croaking over bogs
Carolina Chickadee  7
Tree Swallow  30
Northern Rough-winged Swallow  1
Barn Swallow  3
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  2
House Wren  2
Carolina Wren  1
European Starling  2
American Robin  1
House Finch  2
Chipping Sparrow  2
Field Sparrow  1
Song Sparrow  3
Eastern Towhee  7
Red-winged Blackbird  50
Brown-headed Cowbird  5
Common Grackle  10
Black-and-white Warbler  2
Common Yellowthroat  5
Pine Warbler  3
Northern Cardinal  1

Monday, April 22, 2024

Double Trouble SP | Backyard 4/22--Prairie Warbler, Rose-breasted Grosbeak

Rose-breasted Grosbeak
I suppose it's because impatience is one of my defining characteristics that it seemed urgent this morning at Double Trouble that I at least find a Prairie Warbler there, despite knowing that I'm going to see a Prairie Warbler without a doubt this year, barring getting run over by a backhoe.  So instead of taking my usual route up to Ore Pond and back to the village walking along the canal (where the Louisiana Waterthrush often lurks--and did today but eluded me), I headed straight to the Hurricane Sandy Cedar Restoration area and almost immediately heard a Prairie. Talk about a misnamed bird! Prairie Warblers have absolutely no interest in prairies--they should be called Pine Barrens Warblers, so much do they love the jack oaks and pitch pines around here.  Only the Pine Warbler (which lingers all year) seems more of a Piney than the Prairie. 

Everything else there was what I'd expect and had already seen. Not only did I not find the Looie, but there was also no sign of the Pileated Woodpecker reported there yesterday by very reliable birders, which I believe will be a new species for the park, nor did I see the American Bittern someone else found in the reeds, nor did I see the Spotted Sandpiper on one of the ponds. Of those four, the sandpiper is the only one I'm certain I'll see this year. 

I left mid-morning because I had an appointment and came home after that. Putzing around the house, I glanced out the back window and said to myself, "That's no House Finch!" Picking up the bins I was thrilled to see our first Rose-breasted Grosbeak gorging on sunflower seeds. We usually get a Rose-breasted once a year and it may hang for a day or two, but they're certainly not regular. This one seems to be a little early for these parts as it was flagged "rare." But I have the photographic evidence. 

About an hour later our roofmate called me and said, "Larry go look at what's on my feeder." I already knew what it was before I looked back there, but he was just flabbergasted at how stunning this male looked. He says he saw the bird last week so maybe another one spent a day or so here. I don't think we've ever had one stay more than 2 days. 

A Rose-breasted Grosbeak is not a gimme and getting one in the backyard after a disappointing walk at Double Trouble was (ahem) doubly satisfying. 


Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Double Trouble SP | Ocean City Welcome Center 4/16--Lesser Yellowlegs, Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, Ovenbird, Worm-eating Warbler

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, Ocean City Welcome Center
A bifurcated day. I started the morning early, since the whip-poor-will woke me up at 5:20. A walk around Double Trouble seemed like it might turn up some new birds which it did, including one that was totally unexpected. First thing in the morning, the area behind the sawmill is often very active, as it was today, with Common Yellowthroats singing and Blue-gray Gnatcatchers buzzing around, but one bird caught my attention in a bush.  I couldn't see it very well but size and "giss" told me it was a warbler. Luckily, it flew up out of the bush and into a tree that was just starting to bud. Definitely a warbler but one with a black strip behind its eye and a buffy face. Then it "sang" a song that was cross between a Pine Warbler and Chipping Sparrow--huh! a Worm-eating Warbler. A couple of gnatcatchers came into the tree and chased it away. I don't see a lot of worm-eaters--I'm lucky to hear a couple a year--and I have definitely never had one at Double Trouble, so this was a treat. 

No Louisiana Waterthrush again today, but at the reservoir along Mud Dam Road there are now mud flats where two weeks ago there was water and on those flats I found the usual Killdeer and the not so usual Lesser Yellowlegs. I'm often leery of separating the yellowlegs if they don't call, but this one was, as I once hear Greg describe it, a "delicate" sandpiper, feeding daintily in the muck. 

I was also looking for one more warbler today and figured the best place to look for it was along the purple trail but walked toward there along Mud Dam I got lucky and heard the unmistakable song of the Ovenbird and got even luckier when some forceful pishing brought it out of the brush and onto a branch over my head. Three year birds in a couple of hours, I was happy.Late morning, Shari & I headed down the Parkway for our annual trip to the Ocean City Welcome Center on the causeway to (where else) Ocean City. The rookery there is quite an attraction, even if you're not an ardent photographer. I've often said that it's like going to the zoo, because it is so-ooo easy to find the birds. That was and was not the case today. 

Part of the rookery
I remember 9 years ago when one White Ibis showed up in the rookery. It was an event and birders from all over New Jersey, including us, made the trip down to see the bird. Today, the bird is no longer flagged as rare in Cape May County. In fact, the rookery is now overwhelmingly a White Ibis breeding colony. There were at least 125 White Ibises there, and probably many more. I see that last year I listed 200 and that's probably closer to the actual number. But, as the White Ibises move in, something has to move out, as there are only so many trees in that little patch of marsh. And what have move out, it seems, are the Yellow-crowned Night-Herons.  When I looked over the railing, all I saw were white waders nesting and roosting--mostly ibises, with some Great Egrets and Snowy Egrets sprinkled in. It was distressing not to find any yellow-crowns when last year I broke the eBird filter by listing 40 (which was probably an undercount). Finally, I saw one flying in the back of the marsh. About a half hour later, Shari found another walking on the edge of the rookery, gathering sticks, which was a good sign, meaning that some nesting is still going on there. In all, we found perhaps 5 yellow-crowns, including an immature bird, but it is nothing like in years past. Perhaps it's early and the yellow-crowns will find a way to fight their way back in, but right now the White Ibises have the hammer. 

Little Blue Heron
Photo: Shari Zirlin
Aside from Green Herons and, surprisingly, Great Blue Herons, we found every wader you'd expect in NJ, including nesting Little Blue Herons and one Tricolored Heron. And two American Oystercatchers out on point of land made the day for Shari. If I was going to introduce somebody to birding, the place I would take them is the rookery. 

Double Trouble:

40 species (+1 other taxa)
Canada Goose  5
Mallard  3
Mallard (Domestic type)  1
Mourning Dove  1
Killdeer  1     
Lesser Yellowlegs  1     
Herring Gull  1
Great Blue Heron  1
Turkey Vulture  5
Osprey  1
Red-bellied Woodpecker  2
Downy Woodpecker  1
Northern Flicker  2
Eastern Phoebe  2
White-eyed Vireo  2
Blue Jay  2
American Crow  3
Common Raven  1     Croaking
Carolina Chickadee  1
Tufted Titmouse  3
Tree Swallow  2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet  2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  6
Carolina Wren  2
American Robin  5
House Finch  2
Chipping Sparrow  10
Field Sparrow  2
Dark-eyed Junco  1
White-throated Sparrow  1
Song Sparrow  4
Eastern Towhee  7
Red-winged Blackbird  6
Brown-headed Cowbird  2
Ovenbird  1
Worm-eating Warbler  1     
Common Yellowthroat  3
Palm Warbler  2
Pine Warbler  4
Yellow-rumped Warbler  2
Northern Cardinal  2

Ocean City Welcome Center

23 species
Brant  55
Canada Goose  5
American Black Duck  1
Clapper Rail  1
American Oystercatcher  2
Laughing Gull  1
Herring Gull  2
Great Black-backed Gull  1
Forster's Tern  2
Yellow-crowned Night Heron  5    
Black-crowned Night Heron  3
Little Blue Heron  3     
Tricolored Heron  1
Snowy Egret  20
Great Egret  25
White Ibis  125
Glossy Ibis  12
Osprey  1
Fish Crow  1
House Finch  1
Song Sparrow  2
Red-winged Blackbird  1
Boat-tailed Grackle  20

Black-crowned Night-Heron

Sunday, April 14, 2024

IBSP Spizzle Creek 4/14--White Ibis


Naturally, the day after I was at Spizzle Creek last week, White Ibises showed up.  While not as rare and exciting as they used to be (they're breeding at the rookery in Ocean City), it is still a cool bird for the county. This morning was the first chance I had to get back there and I drove directly to Spizzle Creek instead of working my way south, sacrificing quality for quantity. 

I took the left fork first and did not see any ibises, white or glossy. On the right fork, which overlooks a much larger marsh, I saw lots of white forms--one had a red beak, but before I could get my scope on it, it disappeared into a channel. Ibises aren't all that large, compared to Great Egrets or Great Blue Herons, and if they stand in a foot of water, their bodies can easily be hidden by reeds and spartina grass. I walked up to the blind and stood on the "porch." Scanning around, I found Tricolored Herons, Little Blue Herons, Snowy Egrets, the aforementioned "Greats," and suddenly, a very nice White Ibis standing up in the marsh. I was able to get some so-so photos. 

The reports I had seen indicated there were multiple ibises (one report even speculated about breeding) so I thought that perhaps I had seen two--the cooperative one and the one that ducked down. Then, while still standing by the blind, I saw three more (?) ibises feeding in a pool. Three? Four? Five? I put down three. I only need one. 

From there I when up to the Johnnie Allen Cove Trail which looks south into the same marsh. Again, the ibises played peekaboo with me and the one (or possibly two) that I saw did not afford photo opportunities. 

The rest of the bayside trails (and one peek at the ocean) turned up only what I'd expect and, aside from Yellow-rumps, no warblers. 

Now the moan and groan department. Steve & I crossed on the roadway, he going south, me going north and he texted me that he had found Rusty Blackbirds at Reed's Road. I read his message as I was starting out there, but not only did I have no luck finding them, I was embarrassed to find out that there is a stream off the trail that I never noticed, despite being there dozens of times. Then, when I got home, I saw that someone had gone to Spizzle Creek right after I left and turned up a Sora walking in the marsh. Nice photo. I had walked up those trails twice with nary a Sora. According to Steve, it's the first sighting of one there in almost 60 years! Much gnashing of teeth. 

35 species
Brant  100
Mute Swan  1
American Black Duck  15     Flyover flock
Northern Pintail  4     Continuing brown headed ducks with white stripe up long thin necks
Lesser Scaup  1     Hen
Bufflehead  40
Red-breasted Merganser  8
Mourning Dove  4
American Oystercatcher  2
Greater Yellowlegs  1
Herring Gull  100
Great Black-backed Gull  2
Forster's Tern  2
Common Loon  1
Double-crested Cormorant  8
Little Blue Heron  2
Tricolored Heron  3
Snowy Egret  3
Great Egret  10
Great Blue Heron  1
White Ibis  3     
Osprey  8
Northern Flicker  1
American Crow  2
Tree Swallow  1
Golden-crowned Kinglet  1     Entrance trail
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  1
Northern Mockingbird  1
American Robin  1
House Finch  1
Song Sparrow  3
Eastern Towhee  1
Red-winged Blackbird  10
Boat-tailed Grackle  2
Northern Cardinal  1

Friday, April 12, 2024

Backyard 4/12--Eastern Whip-poor-will

 At 8:03 tonight the first Eastern Whip-poor-will of the year started singing in the woods behind the house. When I stepped out the door, I thought I heard one warming up but it was so faint I couldn't be certain, and then, just as I was saying to myself, "not tonight," it began to sing. Shari, sitting in the bedroom with the window open, heard it at the same time. 


Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Double Trouble SP 4/10--Blue-gray Gnatcatcher


Some birds you go looking for, some birds you just run into. The latter, I think, are more fun. 

A number of years ago, Greg Prelich discovered a Louisiana Waterthrush at Double Trouble SP, along a slow-moving canal. At the time, LOWA was, if not a rarity, an extremely infrequent visitor to the county. I got that bird, and annually, it seems, Louie shows up at Double Trouble, an odd place for one, since they seem to prefer fast-moving streams. Today, I went there to see if I could turn one up--I haven't for the last couple of years--and I concentrated on both that canal and the parallel Cedar Creek, which does move with speed, especially now with the water coming out over the spillway from Ore Pond. I looked assiduously. I was very patient. And I didn't find one. 

Now, I was also thinking that those pine and cedar lined trails would be a good place to pick up a Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, but mostly what I saw and heard were Pine Warblers. I varied my route today and walked in the woods on a trail that runs besides the Parkway (Parkway Access Road, it's called, though there is no Parkway access) and aside from a few chickadees and a dove, it was dead in there. After that, I shrugged my shoulders and just birded. 

I was doing a big "S" around the 3 bogs in back (Platt, Sweetwater, and one I don't know the name of) when I heard a familiar buzz. I saw a bird in a small cedar on the Sweetwater trail, but out hopped a Swamp Sparrow.  But I still I heard that little buzz and looking into the no-name bog, in the reeds and bare twigs, where I wouldn't expect to find one (although I suppose gnats are just as likely to be there as in the woods) I found the gnatcatcher actively jumping around, making warblers look sluggish. 

Aside from that bird, everything else today was expected:

34 species
Canada Goose  5
Mallard  2
Mourning Dove  1
Killdeer  1     Mud Dam Reservoir
Laughing Gull  2
Turkey Vulture  1
Bald Eagle  1     Ore Pond on power line tower
Downy Woodpecker  1
Hairy Woodpecker  1     Heard Mud Dam
Northern Flicker  5
Eastern Phoebe  4
American Crow  1
Fish Crow  2
Carolina Chickadee  4
Tufted Titmouse  2
Tree Swallow  7
White-breasted Nuthatch  1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  1
Carolina Wren  1
Eastern Bluebird  2
American Robin  3
House Finch  1
American Goldfinch  2
Chipping Sparrow  3
Field Sparrow  1
Dark-eyed Junco  5
Song Sparrow  1
Swamp Sparrow  1     Sweetwater Lane
Eastern Towhee  1
Red-winged Blackbird  1
Brown-headed Cowbird  5
Pine Warbler  13
Yellow-rumped Warbler  1
Northern Cardinal  4

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Island Beach SP 4/9--Glossy Ibis, White-eyed Vireo, Red-eyed Vireo

I made my first trip of the year to Island Beach SP today. Through the spring, I'm going to try to get there at least once a week. Try. I stuck strictly to the bayside today, starting on Reed's Road, which is a muddy mess. I didn't really expect to find much there since it is too early for a migration push but there is an unwritten law that you must walk it. I was right in my expectations, but there was an impressive fight of Northern Flickers, especially going over the bowl, so that species seems to be on the move.  

Brown Thrasher, Spizzle Creek
Instead of methodically working my way south, I drove down directly to Spizzle Creek which has the most varied habitat of all the trails--marsh, the bay, a tree-lined entrance path. It was on that path that I heard a Brown Thrasher (county bird) and while I was looking for it, I felt a shadow pass above me. Looking up, I saw a flock of 18 Glossy Ibis flying northeast. Year bird, and the species I figured I'd find at Spizzle, it being the best spot for waders. Too bad I couldn't get a picture of them. I eventually found the thrasher atop a tree--a good rule of thumb when looking for thrashers or mockingbirds it always to look at the highest point around. In Brooklyn, the tops of TV antennas (remember those?) were always a good spot to find the singing bird. 

Spizzle Creek has what I think is the largest concentration of Ospreys in the state and it seem every nest platform was already occupied. Herons and egrets were out in the flooded marsh, which was coming up to and in places overrunning the fairly new boardwalk to the blind, which was completely surrounded by water. 

Then I started to work my way back north. A walk along Johnnie Allen's Cove trail added Dunlins and Black-bellied Plovers to the day list. They kayak access trail was dead. The next trail, about 3 miles north, was the Tidal Pool trail. As soon as I stepped onto it I could see there was a lot of activity, most of which turned out to be Yellow-rumped Warblers. However, I did hear and record my first White-eyed Vireo of the year, and then a little later on saw a Red-eyed Vireo. Both of these birds were flagged "rare" but another a week or so will eliminate that appellation.  

While I there I met Steve coming up the path. Hadn't seen him in a while. Cedar Waxwings flew above us. I asked him if there was anything at the marina which is just north and west of the park's entrance, and he said "only" Forster's Terns. But I needed Forster's Terns for the state and county (saw them in Delaware in last month). So, my last stop was the marina where there were 14 of the terns roosted at the far end of a pier. I examined each to see if one was a Roseate Tern  (it was around this time last year that one was at the spot) but they were all the same species. 

Forster's Terns, IBSP Marina

Five trails and one marina yielded 55 species 3 year birds, 1 state bird, 2 county birds. I'm sure a look at the ocean side would have added more ducks and perhaps gannets, but there didn't seem a compelling reason to over to that side today. 

Brant
Mute Swan
Mallard
American Black Duck
Northern Pintail
Green-winged Teal
Greater Scaup
Bufflehead
Hooded Merganser
Red-breasted Merganser
Horned Grebe
Mourning Dove
Black-bellied Plover
Greater Yellowlegs
Dunlin
Laughing Gull
Herring Gull
Great Black-backed Gull
Forster's Tern
Common Loon
Double-crested Cormorant
Little Blue Heron
Tricolored Heron
Snowy Egret
Great Egret
Glossy Ibis
Osprey
Belted Kingfisher
Northern Flicker
Peregrine Falcon
Eastern Phoebe
White-eyed Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
Blue Jay
American Crow
Tree Swallow
Golden-crowned Kinglet
Carolina Wren
Brown Thrasher
Northern Mockingbird
Hermit Thrush
American Robin
Cedar Waxwing
House Finch
American Goldfinch
Dark-eyed Junco
White-throated Sparrow
Song Sparrow
Swamp Sparrow
Eastern Towhee
Red-winged Blackbird
Brown-headed Cowbird
Boat-tailed Grackle
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Northern Cardinal

Thursday, April 4, 2024

Mathis Veteran's Memorial Park 4/4--Laughing Gull


There use to be an informal contest among Jersey birders to see who could find the first Laughing Gull of the year. I think Pete Bacinski started it; at least he was the one who seemed to keep track of it. If that contest was still going on today, I would finish a miserable last. Laughing Gull shouldn't be an elusive bird, yet, despite a number of trips to the shore, not to mention Wawa parking lots, I actually had to seek them out today as if they were a rarity. 

After a walk at Double Trouble SP this morning, I drove to the nearest spot where I thought they would be likely and that wouldn't be under water after 3 days of rain--Mathis Veteran's Memorial Park in what I think is Beachwood. This little park fronts onto the Toms River where it gets very wide before entering Barnegat Bay. Sure enough, lining the concrete edge of the parking lot were 35 or 40 Laughing Gulls. Put 'em on the list. 

Embarrassing. 

Not to anthropomorphise, but I think this bird is sneering at me.

Monday, April 1, 2024

March Recap--Brink of Disaster Edition

Eastern Bluebird, backyard
 Considering how close I came to catastrophe this month, I'm rather pleased with its results. One minute I was looking at Killdeer in a drawn down bog, the next minute my car was practically in the bog, reaffirming my core belief that you are always that one minute from disaster. Around that unfortunate incident I got in some good birding in Delaware and New Jersey, finding some of my favorites (American Avocet, Sandhill Crane, Brown-headed Nuthatch, all in Delaware) and adding 21 birds to the year list. All the additions have been previously documented save for the Red-breasted Nuthatch on the list. That was a happy find at Reeves Bogs, where I was forced, due to flooding, to walk a long distance on Cooper Road in the woods, where I not only heard the RB Nut but saw it climbing down a pine along with a couple of its white-breasted cousins. In Burlco, at that time, it was flagged as rare. 

Our feeders have been entertaining this month, hosting so many Pine Siskins that sometimes they can't all fit on the feeder and end up grazing in the grass, and quite a few Eastern Bluebirds. Shari, seeing the bluebirds bought mealworms for them, which they seem to snub. The starlings like them, though. 

For the month, 125 species. 

Species             First Sighting
Snow Goose   Whitehall Neck Rd.
Brant   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Canada Goose   Colliers Mills WMA
Mute Swan   Sunset Park
Tundra Swan   Whitesbog
Wood Duck   Whitesbog
Blue-winged Teal   Manahawkin WMA
Northern Shoveler   Bombay Hook
Gadwall   Bombay Hook
American Wigeon   Waretown
Mallard   Colliers Mills WMA
American Black Duck   Bayview Ave Park
Northern Pintail   Whitesbog
Green-winged Teal   Bombay Hook
Ring-necked Duck   Colliers Mills WMA
Greater Scaup   Sunset Park
Lesser Scaup   Sunset Park
King Eider   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Common Eider   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Harlequin Duck   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Surf Scoter   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Black Scoter   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Long-tailed Duck   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Bufflehead   Sunset Park
Hooded Merganser   Colliers Mills WMA
Common Merganser   Bombay Hook
Red-breasted Merganser   Sunset Park
Ruddy Duck   Sunset Park
Wild Turkey   Bombay Hook
Pied-billed Grebe   Bombay Hook
Horned Grebe   Waretown
Rock Pigeon   Bayview Ave Marina
Mourning Dove   35 Sunset Rd
American Coot   Lake of the Lilies
Sandhill Crane   Bombay Hook
American Avocet   Bombay Hook
American Oystercatcher   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Black-bellied Plover   DuPont Nature Center
Killdeer   Colliers Mills WMA
Piping Plover   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Long-billed Dowitcher   Brig
American Woodcock   Crestwood Community Gardens
Wilson's Snipe   Brig
Greater Yellowlegs   Bombay Hook
Ruddy Turnstone   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Dunlin   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Purple Sandpiper   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Bonaparte's Gull   DuPont Nature Center
Ring-billed Gull   DuPont Nature Center
Herring Gull   Sunset Park
Great Black-backed Gull   Sunset Park
Forster's Tern   Prime Hook
Red-throated Loon   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Common Loon   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Northern Gannet   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Great Cormorant   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Double-crested Cormorant   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Black-crowned Night Heron   Point Pleasant Canal
Little Blue Heron   Manahawkin WMA
Tricolored Heron   Joe Torg Nature Preserve
Snowy Egret   Brig
Great Egret   Bombay Hook
Great Blue Heron   Colliers Mills WMA
Black Vulture   Dover
Turkey Vulture   Colliers Mills WMA
Osprey   Bayview Ave Park
Northern Harrier   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Cooper's Hawk   Whitesbog
Bald Eagle   Bombay Hook
Red-shouldered Hawk   Whitesbog
Red-tailed Hawk   Colliers Mills WMA
Short-eared Owl   Bombay Hook
Belted Kingfisher   Whitesbog
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker   Whitesbog
Red-headed Woodpecker   Colliers Mills WMA
Red-bellied Woodpecker   Colliers Mills WMA
Downy Woodpecker   35 Sunset Rd
Hairy Woodpecker   Whitesbog
Northern Flicker   Whitesbog
American Kestrel   Milford
Peregrine Falcon   Cedar Bonnet Island
Eastern Phoebe   Whitesbog
Blue Jay   Colliers Mills WMA
American Crow   Colliers Mills WMA
Fish Crow   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Common Raven   Colliers Mills WMA
Carolina Chickadee   Colliers Mills WMA
Tufted Titmouse   35 Sunset Rd
Horned Lark   Whitehall Neck Rd.
Tree Swallow   Bombay Hook
Purple Martin   Brig
Golden-crowned Kinglet   Whitesbog
White-breasted Nuthatch   Colliers Mills WMA
Brown-headed Nuthatch   Prime Hook
Red-breasted Nuthatch   Reeves Bogs
Brown Creeper   Colliers Mills WMA
Carolina Wren   35 Sunset Rd
European Starling   Colliers Mills WMA
Gray Catbird   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Brown Thrasher   Brig
Northern Mockingbird   Colliers Mills WMA
Eastern Bluebird   Colliers Mills WMA
Hermit Thrush   Colliers Mills WMA
American Robin   35 Sunset Rd
Cedar Waxwing   35 Sunset Rd
House Sparrow   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
House Finch   35 Sunset Rd
Pine Siskin   35 Sunset Rd
American Goldfinch   35 Sunset Rd
Chipping Sparrow   35 Sunset Rd
Field Sparrow   Cranberry Bogs--Dover Rd
Fox Sparrow   Prime Hook
Dark-eyed Junco   35 Sunset Rd
White-throated Sparrow   Crestwood Community Gardens
Savannah Sparrow   Cranberry Bogs
Song Sparrow   Colliers Mills WMA
Swamp Sparrow   Whitesbog
Eastern Towhee   Bombay Hook
Red-winged Blackbird   Colliers Mills WMA
Brown-headed Cowbird   Colliers Mills WMA
Common Grackle   Colliers Mills WMA
Boat-tailed Grackle   Bayview Ave Park
Pine Warbler   Whitesbog
Yellow-rumped Warbler   35 Sunset Rd
Northern Cardinal   Colliers Mills WMA

Killdeer, Lake of the Lilies

Sunday, March 31, 2024

Brig 3/31--Long-billed Dowitcher, Wilson's Snipe, Snowy Egret, Purple Martin, Brown Thrasher

Snowy Egret
Easter, a rare Sunday off for Shari, and we headed down to Brig to see what shorebirds had come in and what ducks remained. The Gull Pond was the hot spot today. Yesterday, a Ruff had been sighted there, so naturally, thousands of dollars of optics were set up there, with 7 or 8 birders on the observation tower. I'm not a fan of the observation towers--I don't like being in crowded places where I can't look into my scope (if I even have room to set up my scope) because every movement by someone shakes the eye piece so that the distant little bird in the shimmer is even more impossible to see. Thanks, I'll find other ways to frustrate myself. 

Long-billed Dowitchers
Anyway, no one saw the Ruff today. It is probably somewhere on the refuge and no doubt will turn up tomorrow, in a flock of yellowlegs. But there were other new shorebirds to see--we finally got nice looks at the very large flock of Long-billed Dowitchers that have wintered there. Supposedly rare, there always seem to be LB Dowitchers somewhere in NJ in winter. I counted 22, but they were pretty far away and bunched together--someone else counted 32. I only need one. 

I can't tell you how many times I've gone looking for Wilson's Snipe this year. Actually, I could, I just don't feel like looking it up. This is like using the word "countless" when you just mean "a lot." There are very few things in this universe that are countless--atoms, molecules, grains of sand, the numbers themselves--otherwise, in principle, as the philosophers say, you can count anything. But this has nothing to do with snipe. There were Wilson's Snipe in the Gull Pond, which were fairly easy to see if you were up on the tower--so Shari told me after she climbed up there. But down on the edge of the pond they were much more difficult to find--you had to peer through the phragmites to find the cryptic bird--eventually one appeared in our scope, extremely difficult to make out, with its bill tucked into it feathers, but the "racing stripes" on its back clearly visible. There were five there, so I'm told. I only need one. 

Unexpected bird I should have expected: When we arrived there were Tree Swallows flying around the Visitor's Center and in with their twittering I heard the different "song" of Purple Martins which have returned and were investigating the martin houses in front of the center. I saw three. Probably more. I only need one. 

Out on the Wildlife Drive between markers 4 & 5 we came across a car backing up. We knew the birders in the car so we didn't think they were complete morons as we would strangers--they had heard that back at marker 4 2 Pectoral Sandpipers and a Stilt Sandpiper were being seen. We had obviously overlooked them in the flock of Greater Yellowlegs that we saw there. We weren't about to back up for them. Someone we don't know might think we were complete morons. 

However, at Marker 5 we notched our 4th year bird of the day--a Snowy Egret preening near the channel. After that it was pretty much waterfowl and Ospreys until we got to the upland portion of the trail where about 3/4 of a mile in Shari stopped the car because she thought she heard a vireo. Way too early for that kind of bird, but we listened and at first I thought it might be a chat until we realized that the songs were differing and were repeated twice. A check with Merlin confirmed that we had our first Brown Thrasher of the year, deep in the brush and not willing to show itself. 

5 year birds compensated for a short list of 42:

Canada Goose  150
Mute Swan  9
Northern Shoveler  125
American Black Duck  150
Green-winged Teal  60
Bufflehead  40
Hooded Merganser  3
Red-breasted Merganser  1
Ruddy Duck  25
Mourning Dove  3
Long-billed Dowitcher  22     
Wilson's Snipe  1     
Greater Yellowlegs  25     25+
Ring-billed Gull  2
Herring Gull  100
Great Black-backed Gull  5
Double-crested Cormorant  20
Snowy Egret  1
Great Egret  9
Great Blue Heron  6
Turkey Vulture  3
Osprey  12
Northern Harrier  1
Bald Eagle  1     3rd year?
Blue Jay  1
Fish Crow  15
Carolina Chickadee  2
Tufted Titmouse  1
Tree Swallow  6
Purple Martin  3
Carolina Wren  2
Brown Thrasher  1     
American Robin  2
House Finch  2
Dark-eyed Junco  2
White-throated Sparrow  8
Song Sparrow  1
Red-winged Blackbird  20
Common Grackle  1
Pine Warbler  1
Yellow-rumped Warbler  3
Northern Cardinal  2