| Rose-breasted Grosbeak |
Of late that impoundment has been full of both flavors of yellowlegs, so I knew I'd have to pick through the feeding flock which was spread out about 180 degrees. Going early had the advantage that I beat the rush--I've been on that platform searching for a rarity rubbing shoulders with a crowd of birders and didn't enjoy it. On the other hand, someone to help would be appreciated. Just as I was about to give up, having scanned back and forth twice, that someone showed up, a good (in both senses) birder I know, who had seen the bird yesterday. Almost immediately he picked out the female phalarope, way in the back--here's my excuse: when I was looking for it was behind a dead cedar. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. Funnily enough, just this weekend I was talking to Scott about how I'd never seen a Wilson's Phalarope in the county; neither had he. And now it turns up. Eerie. The phalarope was #332 for the county. Why that seems important to me remains an enduring mystery.
What I don't have an excuse for missing, other than focusing on find the rarity, was to miss the Stilt Sandpiper that was close to the platform, feeding with the yellowlegs. Of course, the good birder pointed it out.After that I was on my own. I drove down to Great Bay Blvd in Tuckerton, which was my original plan for the day. I was just setting up the scope at Tuckerton Cove when I got a text from Shari with this picture:
Arghh! We annually get Rose-breasted Grosbeak in our backyard, but they usually only stay for the day. I had to hope that the safflower seeds were enticing enough to keep around until I got back home.The marshes were full of shorebirds and in contrast to Forsythe where the yellowlegs predominated, most of the sandpipers were Short-billed Dowitchers. But picking through them I did find a few Semipalmated Sandpipers, new for the year. I was also building up the state and county list with birds I'd already seen in Mexico, like Semipalmated Plover & Gull-billed Tern.
Down at the end of the road on the beach, I was hoping for Red Knots but it is probably a little early for them. I did, however, see my first Saltmarsh Sparrows of the year. As always, they flushed up as I was walking in the marsh grass. I got great looks but neither one posed for me. It reminded me of last summer when my friend Lon was here and needed both Seaside Sparrow and Saltmarsh Sparrow to complete his photographic collection of the Norther American sparrows. We tried Tuckerton, we tried Brig, we even tried Bombay Hook, but it wasn't until we went to Cattus Island (where, I told, even I could get pictures of those sparrows) that he successfully added both to his collection. Hey kids, collect 'em all!
| Indigo Bunting |
| Rose-breasted Grosbeak female |
For Great Bay Blvd I had 42 species:
Brant 5
Canada Goose 2
American Black Duck 1
Mourning Dove 2
Clapper Rail 8
American Oystercatcher 2
Black-bellied Plover 40
Semipalmated Plover 11
Short-billed Dowitcher 230
Spotted Sandpiper 2
Willet 20
Greater Yellowlegs 7
Ruddy Turnstone 8
Dunlin 100
Least Sandpiper 12
Semipalmated Sandpiper 5
Laughing Gull 25
American Herring Gull 15
Black Skimmer 3
Gull-billed Tern 1
Forster's Tern 25
Common Loon 1
White Ibis 1 Immature
Glossy Ibis 2
Black-crowned Night Heron 11
Little Blue Heron 1
Snowy Egret 30
Great Egret 25
Osprey 6
Bald Eagle 1
Fish Crow 1
Tree Swallow 1
Barn Swallow 10
Gray Catbird 7
Seaside Sparrow 4
Saltmarsh Sparrow 2
Song Sparrow 4
Red-winged Blackbird 50
Boat-tailed Grackle 40
Common Yellowthroat 4
Northern Cardinal 1
Indigo Bunting 1