Friday, April 9, 2021

Island Beach SP 4/9--Piping Plover, Glossy Ibis

Piping Plover
Island Beach has by far the most species listed for the county, so if you're in the market for something "new" that's the place to go. I went Wednesday, planning to spend most of the day there and ran into some birders I know so we scoured the park, but, while I came up with some state birds for the year (I'd seen them in Delaware last month), I didn't find any year birds. So I tried again today, starting at Reed's Road, which, in the cold mist had no migrating species, and then, after checking out the beach, I hit Spizzle Creek, which had a lot of herons a couple of days ago. They were there again today, but it wasn't until I was on my way back from the southern fork that I finally saw a flock of Glossy Ibis over head.  "Land, land," I implored, and they did, but out of sight behind a line of cedars. That was a disappointment, but at least I had them on the list.

American Oystercatchers
Then I decided to walk the beach from A23 south. I figured there might be something new there, though I'd heard that Piping Plovers were being seen much farther north on the beach this year instead of the southern section. It was unsurprisingly sparse on the beach and in the water, though the Northern Gannets were close in and fun to watch flying north. A couple of American Oystercatchers were on the beach, but aside from the usual gulls, nothing much else. I suspect I overlooked some Lesser Black-backed Gulls because there were a lot of immature gulls along the foggy beach but unless I see an adult with yellow legs I don't bother trying to figure out what they are--gull molts are not my forte. 

I was walking at pretty good pace because the sand was hard and the breeze was cold despite the temperature supposedly being in the 50's, when suddenly a little plover ran right by me--Piping Plover! I took the camera off my shoulder and, despite it being the simplest P&S I could buy, the damn thing at that moment decided that the settings I had it on were no appropriate for the lighting conditions and would not take a picture. Meanwhile, I saw that there were two plovers running at the edge of the water like Sanderlings do, and after turning my camera on and off and randomly changing some controls I was finally able to get a documentary shot or two of one of the plovers. 

With that, I turned around instead of walking down to the inlet. Sure, I could have padded the list with the ducks that are still hanging out there, but I decided to save my energy for one or two more trails on my way out, hoping against hope for a newly arrived warbler, vireo, or flycatcher, none of which appeared. 

Still, two year birds is a decent morning's "work;" someone pointed out Wednesday that if you get too many year birds all at once, it just makes the subsequent outings duller, since there's nothing new to find. 

37 species for the day, down significantly from Wednesday (53) when I was with more eyes.

Species                  First Sighting
Brant   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Canada Goose   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Mute Swan   Reed’s Road
Mallard   Reed’s Road
American Black Duck   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Bufflehead   Reed’s Road
Red-breasted Merganser   Reed’s Road
Mourning Dove   Winter Anchorage
American Oystercatcher   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Black-bellied Plover   Northern Natural Area
Piping Plover   Southern Natural Area
Sanderling   Northern Natural Area
Herring Gull   Northern Natural Area
Great Black-backed Gull   Northern Natural Area
Forster's Tern   Johnny Allen’s Cove Trail
Northern Gannet   Northern Natural Area
Double-crested Cormorant   Southern Natural Area
Great Blue Heron   Winter Anchorage
Great Egret   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Snowy Egret   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Little Blue Heron   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Tricolored Heron   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Glossy Ibis   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Osprey   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Belted Kingfisher   Reed’s Road
Peregrine Falcon   Winter Anchorage
Fish Crow   Reed’s Road
Carolina Chickadee   Reed’s Road
Carolina Wren   Reed’s Road
Brown Thrasher   Spizzle Creek Blind Trail
Hermit Thrush   Reed’s Road
American Robin   Reed’s Road
Song Sparrow   Reed’s Road
Red-winged Blackbird   Reed’s Road
Boat-tailed Grackle   Winter Anchorage
Yellow-rumped Warbler   Reed’s Road
Northern Cardinal   Reed’s Road

Friday, April 2, 2021

Whitesbog 4/2--Palm Warbler

I neither expect nor certainly want wind chills of 19 degrees on April 2 but as in so much of life it doesn't matter what you want--or at least what I want, it may matter what you want--which is why there is the phrase, "You play the hand you're dealt." So the way I dealt with it was throwing out my plans to look for newly arriving shorebirds and waders down at Tuckerton and instead went to Whitesbog where the woods afford me at least some protection from the gusting winds of 25 mph blowing air just about freezing in my face--on April 2. 

I hadn't decided what side of Whitesbog I wanted to walk, Burlco or Ocean, but as I was pulling into "my" parking space at the county line, I met my friend there and he told me of his recent sightings which persuaded me to do the Burlington County trek, even though it meant facing the wind off the bogs. Fortunately, I didn't start up the trail through the woods to Ditch Meadow because he warned me that it was completely flooded. 

I walked around Union Pond, up to the airstrip, then around Ditch Meadow and was walking up the eastern side of Union Pond when I hit a little flurry of warbler activity. I knew immediately I had a year bird before I even saw the bird. I don't know how I instantly identified a Palm Warbler other than to credit subliminal suggestion, but there it was, brown cap and wagging its tail. It was with a few Pine Warblers and Yellow-rumped Warblers. Blindly snapping away with my camera, I managed to get pictures of all 3 though none will win any awards. Happy to have a year bird, I walked into the village via the Triangle Field and then back out to the bogs, getting in my minimum walk because for April, it was just too unpleasant to try to pad the list up to 30. I was satisfied with 27.

Wood Duck  3     two in Upper Bog flew to Union Pond, one drake in Rome
Mallard  6     5 in Upper and Lower Bogs, one drake in Ditch Meadow
American Black Duck  6     Union Pond
Mourning Dove  1     Rome Road
Turkey Vulture  7
Belted Kingfisher  1     Ditch Meadow
Northern Flicker  4     One in Ditch Meadow, three near village
Eastern Phoebe  4
American Crow  4
Fish Crow  1     Heard
Carolina Chickadee  1     Heard
Tree Swallow  60     10 over bogs, large flock over Rome Pond
White-breasted Nuthatch  4
Carolina Wren  1     Heard Village
Eastern Bluebird  2     One in Ditch Meadow, one in Triangle Field
American Robin  1     Behind Catalog House
Chipping Sparrow  3     Two in Triangle Field, one below feeders
Dark-eyed Junco  7
White-throated Sparrow  1     Feeders
Song Sparrow  1     Heard Ditch Meadow
Eastern Towhee  1     Ditch Meadow
Red-winged Blackbird  4
Brown-headed Cowbird  4     One in Triangle field, one at feeders, pair in garden
Palm Warbler  1     Union Pond
Pine Warbler  4
Yellow-rumped Warbler  2     Union Pond
Northern Cardinal  1     Union Pond

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

March--A Wide-ranging Month

Wood Ducks, Ditch Meadow, Whitesbog
I ended the month at Raritan Bay Waterfront Park in Middlesex County, another place I haven't visited since pre-pandemic, in this case just about two years, because that's when Scott runs a few trips there and I try to get up there in hopes that his expertise will pull out a white-winged gull from the flocks of usual gulls. It took a bit of doing but he got the group on an Iceland Gull flying out over the bay. Not the field guide looks you'd like but obvious enough.  Also new for me was Laughing Gull, though I wasn't too concerned about getting that species for the year. 

Being in Middlesex today made it the seventh New Jersey county I've birded this month, which is another thing I can say I haven't done since the pandemic started. Why that's one third of the counties in the state. But in Delaware we birded two thirds of the counties in the state. Impressive if you don't know there are only three in the state. 

Sandhill Cranes, New Egypt
On Sunday, Scott found a quartet of Sandhill Cranes in the storied corn field on Brynmore Road in New Egypt. They are off and on again habitués of that field over the years. Unfortunately, this is where my eschewing of social media and the GroupMe alerts bit me on the ass, because I didn't find out about it until late in the afternoon on Sunday. Monday & Tuesday we were in Delaware. Today, just as I was about to leave South Amboy and was checking eBird to see if anyone had seen the cranes today, Mike texted me that he had them again in the field. There's no good way to get there from South Amboy but I took the least bad way and made it there in a little over an hour. As always seems to be case with this species in NJ, they were hard to see in the corn stubble unless they stood straight up. Luckily, when I got there a couple were. Not a year bird; hell, not even a month bird since I saw pair fly over at the end of Scott's trip to Salem County early in the month which bled over into Gloucester County when we stopped at Pedricktown Marsh. 

I did one trip to Brig this month where I got the surprise of the King Rail and a long recording of it. The Delaware trip is documented above. Mostly, of course, I was in Ocean and Burlington Counties. I had a few great moments at Whitesbog this month like when I found the woodcocks in the triangle field pre-dawn, or came up the Wood Ducks above in Ditch Meadow. And here's a peculiarity: I now hold the Ocean County record for most Ring-necked Ducks seen in one place--665 at Colliers Mills, the vast majority of them staging the south end of Turnmill Pond. That was a memorable sight. And finding the Red-headed Woodpecker (twice) at Colliers Mills always seems like an accomplishment to me. 

It was a good month with 134 species listed of which 24 were year birds. April begins the craziness of warblers and shorebirds. I already have anticipation anxiety. 

Counties birded:
Delware: Kent, Sussex
New Jersey: Atlantic, Burlington, Gloucester, Middlesex, Monmouth, Ocean, Salem
Species               First Sighting
Snow Goose   Pemberton Lake WMA
Brant   MacLearie Park
Canada Goose   Deal Lake
Mute Swan   Silver Lake
Tundra Swan   Whitesbog
Wood Duck   Whitesbog
Blue-winged Teal   Bombay Hook
Northern Shoveler   Silver Lake
Gadwall   Holly Lake
Eurasian Wigeon   MacLearie Park
American Wigeon   MacLearie Park
Mallard   Deal Lake
American Black Duck   Whitesbog
Northern Pintail   Salem River WMA
Green-winged Teal   Whitesbog
Redhead   Whitesbog
Ring-necked Duck   Whitesbog
Greater Scaup   Great Bay Bvld. WMA
Lesser Scaup   Silver Lake
King Eider   Manasquan Inlet
Common Eider   Manasquan Inlet
Harlequin Duck   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Black Scoter   Spring Lake
Long-tailed Duck   Manasquan Inlet
Bufflehead   MacLearie Park
Common Goldeneye   LBI Bayside
Hooded Merganser   Manahawkin WMA
Common Merganser   Pemberton Lake WMA
Red-breasted Merganser   Deal Lake
Ruddy Duck   Silver Lake
Wild Turkey   Wranglebrook Rd
Pied-billed Grebe   Bamber Lake
Horned Grebe   MacLearie Park
Rock Pigeon   Pilesgrove
Mourning Dove   35 Sunset Rd
King Rail   Brig
Clapper Rail   Prime Hook
American Coot   Lake of the Lilies
Sandhill Crane   Pedricktown Marsh
American Avocet   Bombay Hook
American Oystercatcher   Great Bay Bvld. WMA
Black-bellied Plover   Bombay Hook
Killdeer   Compromise Rd.
Ruddy Turnstone   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Dunlin   Manasquan Inlet
Purple Sandpiper   Manasquan Inlet
American Woodcock   Crestwood Community Gardens
Wilson's Snipe   Great Bay Bvld. WMA
Greater Yellowlegs   Eno's Pond
Lesser Yellowlegs   Eno's Pond
Bonaparte's Gull   Shark River
Laughing Gull   Raritan Bay Waterfront Park
Ring-billed Gull   Manahawkin WMA
Herring Gull   Deal Lake
Iceland Gull   Raritan Bay Waterfront Park
Lesser Black-backed Gull   Wreck Pond
Great Black-backed Gull   Deal Lake
Forster's Tern   Bombay Hook
Red-throated Loon   Manasquan Inlet
Common Loon   Manasquan Inlet
Northern Gannet   Island Beach SP
Great Cormorant   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Double-crested Cormorant   Deal Lake
American Bittern   Island Beach SP
Great Blue Heron   Pemberton Lake WMA
Great Egret   Manahawkin WMA
Snowy Egret   Bombay Hook
Little Blue Heron   DuPont Nature Center
Black Vulture   Plumsted Recreation Park
Turkey Vulture   1398 State Highway 35
Osprey   Pedricktown Marsh
Northern Harrier   Manahawkin WMA
Cooper's Hawk   CVS parking lot Schoolhouse Rd.
Bald Eagle   Pemberton Lake WMA
Red-tailed Hawk   Whitesbog
Rough-legged Hawk   Featherbed Lane WMA
Short-eared Owl   Brig
Belted Kingfisher   Manahawkin WMA
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker   Great Bay Bvld. WMA
Red-headed Woodpecker   Colliers Mills WMA
Red-bellied Woodpecker   Whitesbog
Downy Woodpecker   35 Sunset Rd
Hairy Woodpecker   Whitesbog
Northern Flicker   Manahawkin WMA
American Kestrel   Colliers Mills WMA
Merlin   Mannington Marsh
Peregrine Falcon   Cedar Bonnet Island
Eastern Phoebe   Colliers Mills WMA
Blue Jay   35 Sunset Rd
American Crow   35 Sunset Rd
Fish Crow   35 Sunset Rd
Common Raven   Lake of the Lilies
Carolina Chickadee   35 Sunset Rd
Tufted Titmouse   35 Sunset Rd
Horned Lark   Sunset Park
Purple Martin   Bombay Hook
Tree Swallow   Reeves Bogs
Golden-crowned Kinglet   Whitesbog
Red-breasted Nuthatch   35 Sunset Rd
White-breasted Nuthatch   35 Sunset Rd
Brown Creeper   35 Sunset Rd
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher   Forest Resource Education Center
Marsh Wren   Great Bay Bvld. WMA
Carolina Wren   1398 State Highway 35
European Starling   35 Sunset Rd
Brown Thrasher   Manahawkin WMA
Northern Mockingbird   New Egypt
Eastern Bluebird   Colliers Mills WMA
Wood Thrush   Manahawkin WMA
American Robin   Silver Lake
House Sparrow   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
House Finch   35 Sunset Rd
Purple Finch   Island Beach SP
Pine Siskin   35 Sunset Rd
American Goldfinch   35 Sunset Rd
Chipping Sparrow   Colliers Mills WMA
Field Sparrow   Colliers Mills WMA
American Tree Sparrow   Island Beach SP
Fox Sparrow   35 Sunset Rd
Dark-eyed Junco   35 Sunset Rd
White-throated Sparrow   35 Sunset Rd
Savannah Sparrow   Barnegat Lighthouse SP
Song Sparrow   35 Sunset Rd
Swamp Sparrow   Meadowview Lane
Eastern Towhee   Bombay Hook
Red-winged Blackbird   Whitesbog
Brown-headed Cowbird   Whitesbog
Rusty Blackbird   Reeves Bogs
Common Grackle   Plumsted Recreation Park
Boat-tailed Grackle   Manahawkin WMA
Pine Warbler   Cloverdale Farm
Yellow-rumped Warbler   Island Beach SP
Yellow-throated Warbler   Prime Hook
Northern Cardinal   35 Sunset Rd

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Bombay Hook | Prime Hook 3/29-30--Blue-winged Teal, Clapper Rail, American Avocet, Black-bellied Plover, Forster's Tern, Snowy Egret, Purple Martin, Yellow-throated Warbler

Yellow-throated Warbler, Prime Hook
For my birthday (thank you, I'm officially old), Shari took us to Delaware for two days of birding the two big NWRs down there, Bombay Hook and Prime Hook. It was the first time in over a year that I've been out of state. While late March is probably not the ideal time to be down there as you're between waterfowl and shorebird seasons, I was very glad to see one of my favorite species, American Avocet, in the hundreds yesterday, a nice birthday present.  While they for the most part remained too far away to get decent photographs, the flocks were easily viewed through the scope and they were in such numbers that just the patterns of white, black, and rufous in the distance was an impressive sight. 

American Avocets, Bombay Hook
Purple Martin, Bombay Hook
Our first year bird was found in the parking lot of Bombay Hook within a minute of our arrival. Two Purple Martins were already checking out the one martin house that is permanently up, being an old wooden structure that is immobile on its post. 

Thousands of Dunlin were flying in and out of the Raymond Pool. Scoping the huge flock a couple of Black-bellied Plovers stood out, large and plump compared to the smaller sandpipes. I can't remember if it was over Raymond or Shearness that we saw our first Forster's Tern of the year, but I do remember that at the far end of Shearness was where we saw our FOY Snowy Egret. Herons and egrets were in surprisingly short supply there--it wasn't until Finis Pool that we came upon 4 Great Egrets

This morning we drove down to Prime Hook and again, in the parking lot, we got our first year bird, a calling Clapper Rail. Some other birders claimed a King Rail along the boardwalk trail, but we didn't hear it and I have to say I'm a tad dubious about that, but hey, it isn't my state to worry about. The coolest bird probably of the two days we came upon because, as we driving out, Shari saw a road we'd never taken and just impulsively turned down it. It lead to a canoe launch and while we didn't see any waterfowl there, on the road in Shari spotted a Yellow-rumped Warbler, and, as we were walking back to our car, I heard a warbler song I couldn't identify, not surprisingly. I just started playing songs of early-arriving warblers, like waterthrushes but they were not like anything we were hearing. Then I thought, well, I don't know Yellow-rumps song because I always see them in winter, so I played that and it was wrong too. But next to Yellow-rump was Yellow-throated Warbler, which I played on a whim and it didn't seem to match, but then I heard the bird singing right behind us and sure enough, I had inadvertently called in Yellow-throated Warbler!

Forster's Tern, DuPont Nature Center
On our way back north we stopped at the DuPont Nature Center, another favorite spot in Delaware, specifically hoping to get Shari her FOY American Oystercatcher and we were successful with two pairs on the jetty. Then it was back up to Bombay Hook for one more circuit of the pools where we saw even more avocets than we had the day before (alas, no Black-necked Stilts, a much harder bird to find in the state) and we added our final year bird when we saw four ducks that looked different and braved the wind gusts to confirm that they were indeed what we suspected, a set of drake Blue-winged Teals

For the two days we totaled 69 species, not bad for a time of year that falls between two stools.

Species                First Sighting
Snow Goose   Bombay Hook
Canada Goose   Bombay Hook
Mute Swan   Bombay Hook
Wood Duck   Bombay Hook
Blue-winged Teal   Bombay Hook
Northern Shoveler   Bombay Hook
Gadwall   Bombay Hook
Mallard   Leipsic River Bridge
American Black Duck   Bombay Hook
Northern Pintail   Bombay Hook
Green-winged Teal   Bombay Hook
Bufflehead   Bombay Hook
Ruddy Duck   Bombay Hook
Pied-billed Grebe   Bombay Hook
Mourning Dove   Bombay Hook
Clapper Rail   Prime Hook
American Coot   Bombay Hook
American Avocet   Bombay Hook
American Oystercatcher   DuPont Nature Center
Black-bellied Plover   Bombay Hook
Dunlin   Bombay Hook
Greater Yellowlegs   Bombay Hook
Lesser Yellowlegs   Bombay Hook
Ring-billed Gull   Bombay Hook
Herring Gull   Bombay Hook
Great Black-backed Gull   Prime Hook
Forster's Tern   Bombay Hook
Double-crested Cormorant   DuPont Nature Center
Great Blue Heron   Bombay Hook
Great Egret   Bombay Hook
Snowy Egret   Bombay Hook
Little Blue Heron   DuPont Nature Center
Black Vulture   Bombay Hook
Turkey Vulture   Bombay Hook
Osprey   Bombay Hook
Northern Harrier   Bombay Hook
Bald Eagle   Bombay Hook
Red-tailed Hawk   Bombay Hook
Belted Kingfisher   Bombay Hook
Red-bellied Woodpecker   Bombay Hook
American Kestrel   Bombay Hook
Merlin   Bombay Hook
Eastern Phoebe   Bombay Hook
Blue Jay   Prime Hook
American Crow   Sleep Inn Dover
Fish Crow   Bombay Hook
Carolina Chickadee   Prime Hook
Purple Martin   Bombay Hook
Tree Swallow   Bombay Hook
Golden-crowned Kinglet   Bombay Hook
Carolina Wren   Bombay Hook
European Starling   Bombay Hook
Northern Mockingbird   Sleep Inn Dover
Eastern Bluebird   Bombay Hook
American Robin   Bombay Hook
House Sparrow   Bombay Hook
House Finch   Bombay Hook
Chipping Sparrow   Prime Hook
Field Sparrow   Prime Hook
Song Sparrow   Prime Hook
Swamp Sparrow   Prime Hook
Eastern Towhee   Bombay Hook
Red-winged Blackbird   Bombay Hook
Brown-headed Cowbird   Prime Hook
Common Grackle   Wawa Dover
Pine Warbler   Prime Hook
Yellow-rumped Warbler   Prime Hook
Yellow-throated Warbler   Prime Hook
Northern Cardinal   Bombay Hook