Pileated Woodpecker, Snow's Cut Trail |
The first place Rick took me was Fort Fisher SRA--it looked and felt a lot like Island Beach. When we were in Kure Beach, on our way to Fort Fisher, I looked out the front windshield and saw two Brown Pelicans lazily drifting south along the ocean. Since I had deliberately not done any research on what birds I might fight down there since I didn't want to be tormented, I was surprised to see them. Of course, there, they're common and in the three days we saw dozens of them, but the first ones are always sweet.
When we started our walk on Fort Fisher Basin Trail the first bird we heard was unfamiliar to me. I opened up Merlin and it returned Painted Bunting. I played the song to confirm that that was what we were hearing, and it was, but finding it in the dense foliage was impossible--hard to believe with a red, blue, and green bird but we were able to rectify that later in the day when all four of us went to Airlie Gardens in Wilmington proper. There we again heard Painted Buntings, but it wasn't until Shari spotted one in a bald cypress that we were able to get eyes on one.
Painted Bunting, Airlie Gardens |
Brown-headed Nuthatch, Carolina Beach State Park |
On Friday we took a quick walk along a trail that ran along Snow's Cut, which I think is man-made to connect two bodies of water for boating. I heard a rapid, repeating call that I first mistook for a cuckoo and then quickly realized was the long call of a Pileated Woodpecker. It sounded like it was right on top of us--and it was. Rick spotted it in a hole of a dead tree. It was in its nest, popping its head in and out. This was by far the best look I've ever had of a Pileated and the first look for Rick. We also heard another Painted Bunting and spotted it singing atop a dead snag.
Later in the day the four of us took a walk along the Wilmington Waterfront. Wilmington dates back to colonial times and many of the buildings are still standing. For a lark, we took a one-hour boat tour that ran up and down the Cape Fear River between two bridges (I refrained from humming the Gilligan's Island theme song). I didn't bring my binoculars since it is geeky to be scanning birds while you're supposed to be socializing, but while we were on the river I looked up and saw a bird with a long thin neck flying over. A flying broom. "That ain't no cormorant," I said to myself. When it flew over the starboard side, I could tell it was an Anhinga. I was already composing the rare bird description in my head when I listed it on eBird, only to find that Anhinga is expected in that part of North Carolina. Later, when I told Shari about it, she started looking and found three roosting on a rotting pier in the river.
Of the six year-birds 4 would have been rare treats in New Jersey. Only the pelican and tern do I expect to see relatively soon. For the 5 days we were in NC I had 65 species, starting with a Wild Turkey on the side of I-40 and ending with a couple of European Starling at a pit stop at Dunkin Donuts in Goldsboro.
Canada Goose Carolina Beach Rd
Wild Turkey I-40 E
Rock Pigeon Wilmington Riverwalk
Mourning Dove Wilmington
Clapper Rail Fort Fisher SRA
American Oystercatcher Fort Fisher SRA
Black-bellied Plover Fort Fisher SRA
Willet Fort Fisher SRA
Ruddy Turnstone Fort Fisher SRA
Laughing Gull Fort Fisher SRA
Black Skimmer Fort Fisher SRA
Least Tern Airlie Gardens
Forster's Tern Fort Fisher SRA
Royal Tern Fort Fisher SRA
Anhinga Cape Fear River
Double-crested Cormorant Fort Fisher SRA
White Ibis Fort Fisher SRA
Glossy Ibis Carolina Beach State Park
Black-crowned Night Heron Fort Fisher SRA
Little Blue Heron Carolina Beach State Park
Tricolored Heron Carolina Beach State Park
Snowy Egret Cape Fear River
Green Heron Airlie Gardens
Great Egret Fort Fisher SRA
Great Blue Heron Fort Fisher SRA
Brown Pelican Kure Beach
Black Vulture Capeside Dr
Turkey Vulture Airlie Gardens
Osprey Fort Fisher SRA
Red-shouldered Hawk Carolina Beach State Park
Red-bellied Woodpecker Carolina Beach State Park
Pileated Woodpecker Snow’s Cut Trail
Eastern Phoebe Fort Fisher SRA
Great Crested Flycatcher Snow’s Cut Trail
Red-eyed Vireo Carolina Beach State Park
Blue Jay Airlie Gardens
American Crow Wilmington
Fish Crow Wilmington
Carolina Chickadee Wilmington
Tufted Titmouse Wilmington
Bank Swallow Snow’s Cut Trail
Tree Swallow Cape Fear River
Barn Swallow Fort Fisher SRA
Brown-headed Nuthatch Carolina Beach State Park
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Airlie Gardens
Carolina Wren Wilmington
European Starling US-117 N
Gray Catbird Fort Fisher SRA
Brown Thrasher Wilmington
Northern Mockingbird Fort Fisher SRA
House Sparrow Wilmington Riverwalk
House Finch Wilmington
Chipping Sparrow Carolina Beach State Park
Seaside Sparrow Fort Fisher SRA
Eastern Towhee Carolina Beach State Park
Red-winged Blackbird Fort Fisher SRA
Brown-headed Cowbird Carolina Beach State Park
Boat-tailed Grackle Fort Fisher SRA
Common Yellowthroat Fort Fisher SRA
Northern Parula Airlie Gardens
Pine Warbler Carolina Beach State Park
Northern Cardinal Wilmington
Blue Grosbeak Carolina Beach State Park
Indigo Bunting Carolina Beach State Park
Painted Bunting Fort Fisher SRA