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| Eastern Meadowlark |
In an early Peterson guide I used to have, long since fallen to pieces and discarded, I remember being struck by a phrase in his introduction, discussing habitat and the kinds of birds one should expect to find in them: "A meadowlark needs a meadow." It seemed axiomatic at the time, but even Homer nods, as, over the years I have compiled a little list in my head of all the spots I have seen meadowlarks that were
not meadows, including the marsh at the Bridge to Nowhere, Rome Pond at Whitesbog, an airport runway, and today, in the big sandy area next to the concrete walkway at Barnegat Lighthouse SP. I was walking back toward the lighthouse when I saw to my left a large bird fly off into a little bit of scrub. It's outer white tail feathers immediately told me what it was, but I was certainly surprised, not having that bird on my expected list for the day. Yet, there it was, picking at the little bush it had flown to. I suppose with no bugs around whatever seeds or berries it could find in that wasteland would have to suffice for a diet. It wasn't particularly shy, so I was able to get some decent pictures of it.
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| Blue-headed Vireo |
It was a day of little discoveries. Earlier I stopped off at Cedar Bonnet Island, only because the traffic on the bridge to LBI was at a standstill, so I figured I'd walk around the refuge and let it ease up. I'm glad I did, because though the birdage wasn't heavy, as I was walking out on the entrance path I came across what I mistook for a Ruby-crowned Kinglet, which would be "infrequent" according to eBird, but instead it turned out to be a
Blue-headed Vireo, which, for this time of year, is "rare." The spectacles fooled me initially, but I was able to get one quick photo and my suspicion that the bird was too big and too inactive for a kinglet was confirmed.
Back at Barnegat Lighthouse, I climbed the hill to overlook the pool and saw a big flock of American Oystercatchers and, just like at Holgate, where there are a lot of oystercatchers in winter there is a good
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| Marbled Godwit |
chance of finding a
Marbled Godwit mixed in among them. This was a much better look than I had at Holgate last month, the birds being only about a hundred yards away instead of half a mile. Also within that big scooped out area was a large flock of
Snow Buntings swirling around. I looked in vain for a Lapland Longspur. Snow Buntings are a restless species, seemingly constantly in motion, but at one point, while I was scanning the ocean at the beach, the flock landed behind me and was stationery long enough for me to count up to 73.
What I really wanted from the ocean was White-winged Scoter, which I hadn't seen January and hadn't seen in the county yet this year. I was hopeful that the ocean would be calm, since the inlet seem lake-like, but the seas were rough, and it made finding the ducks a challenge, though I did tally Common Eiders and Harlequin Ducks around the old, submerged jetty, but the scoters I was hoping for were not swimming. Instead, there were big flocks of Black Scoters flying along the horizon and finally, after my patience was just about spend, a couple of big ducks with white wings shot past me going south, followed a few minutes later by another 9 more. So, I had my target and few more goodies and trudged back to the parking lot, stopping along the jetty until I got a couple of Ipswich Savannah Sparrows to round out the list. Oh yes, one Purple Sandpiper on the north jetty, viewed with the scope, so I got all the Barney specialties.
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| Savannah Sparrow (Ipswich) |
My Barnegat Light list:
31 species (+1 other taxa)
Brant 75
Canada Goose 4
Mallard 15
American Black Duck 10
Common Eider 7
Harlequin Duck 6
White-winged Scoter 11
Black Scoter 130
scoter sp. 25
American Oystercatcher 33
Black-bellied Plover 1
Marbled Godwit 1
Ruddy Turnstone 10
Dunlin 5
Purple Sandpiper 1
Bonaparte's Gull 2
American Herring Gull 100
Great Black-backed Gull 30
Horned Grebe 1
Red-throated Loon 25
Common Loon 4
Northern Gannet 50
Double-crested Cormorant 2
Northern Flicker 1
Blue Jay 1 Heard
Common Raven 2 Two large croaking corvids over the pool
Carolina Wren 1
Northern Mockingbird 1
House Sparrow 5
Snow Bunting 73
Savannah Sparrow (Ipswich) 2
Eastern Meadowlark 1
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