Tundra Swans, pre-dawn, Union Pond |
As always, I started off way before dawn, on Whitesbog Road, playing owl calls at 5 AM and not hearing any. I then drove into Whitesbog and started playing screech owl calls at spot near the Triangle Field. What I got in response was a very distant Great Horned Owl. I then drove out through the village to the bogs and played screech owl in another usually reliable spot. Great Horned Owl again. And again, distant.
I drove to the double-laned road and walked to the other side of the bogs and played both owls again. I was disappointed to hear nothing until I was halfway back to the car when I heard and Eastern Screech-Owl whinnying behind me and then another responding in front of me. They were probably about an 1/8 of a mile apart and I was getting them in stereo. So, I was one bird ahead of last year and it was only 6 o'clock.
I drove to the "landing strip" behind Union Pond, hoping for more owls as the sky was turning from black to mauve. I walked toward Union Pond and heard whooping. As I had hoped, there were 8 Tundra Swans standing on the ice. I had just enough time to walk back to the car, get the camera, walk to the pond edge and take a couple of photos before they took off to where there might be some open water.
I walked all around Union Pond and found no birds, walked back through Ditch Meadow and found no birds, walked around Union Pond again and finally had a Sharp-shinned Hawk buzz over me. I could see that the bogs were not going to be very productive, so I drove back to the edge of the Triangle Field and things began to pick up just a little bit. A Cooper's Hawk flew into a tree and posed, chickadees, titmice, and nuthatches called, and a Hermit Thrush chucked in the tangles.
Fox Sparrow |
With about 5 hours spent at Whitesbog, I was pretty sure was in the diminishing returns phase, so I left there and walked Whitesbog Road from Rt 530 to Rt 70. The happy find there was Red-breasted Nuthatch calling within a flock of chickadees, titmice and White-breasted Nuthatches. I never could locate the bird in the pines but recorded it. Red-breasted Nuthatches are flagged as rare in Burlington County, while in my backyard, 9 miles away, they're feeder birds. Go figure.
American Kestrel, Pasadena Road |
Finally, I drove over to Country Lake Estates, a development where I don't expect to find much but have to give it a look because of its artificial lake. Half of it was ice, but surprisingly, half of it was open. I supposed the big flock of geese there have managed to act as bubblers and keep the water moving. Those were my only geese of the day, along with my only Mallards, my only Ring-necked Duck, and my only Ring-billed Gulls, which were standing on the ice. The Ring-necked was #30 on the day and as it was about 1 o'clock, I felt that 8 hours of solid birding was enough. I've never kept track of my numbers for the census year over year, but I suspect that 30 is just slightly below average.
Canada Goose Country Lake Estates
Tundra Swan Whitesbog
Mallard Country Lake Estates
Ring-necked Duck Country Lake Estates
Mourning Dove Whitesbog
Ring-billed Gull Country Lake Estates
American Herring Gull Whitesbog
Turkey Vulture Whitesbog
Sharp-shinned Hawk Whitesbog
Cooper's Hawk Whitesbog
Eastern Screech-Owl Whitesbog
Great Horned Owl Whitesbog
Red-bellied Woodpecker Whitesbog
Hairy Woodpecker Whitesbog
American Kestrel Pasadena Road
Blue Jay Whitesbog
American Crow Whitesbog
Carolina Chickadee Whitesbog
Tufted Titmouse Whitesbog
White-breasted Nuthatch Whitesbog
Red-breasted Nuthatch Whitesbog Road
Carolina Wren Whitesbog
Northern Mockingbird Whitesbog
Hermit Thrush Whitesbog
American Robin Whitesbog
House Finch Whitesbog
American Goldfinch Whitesbog
Fox Sparrow Whitesbog
Dark-eyed Junco Whitesbog
Northern Cardinal Whitesbog
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