Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Lake of the Lilies 11/19--Eurasian Wigeon

Eurasian Wigeon with American Coots, American Wigeons and Mute Swan
It was raining this morning so I couldn't go for my birding walk; instead, I went to Costco in Brick and since I was in the neighborhood, I decided to go to Lake of the Lillies in Point Pleasant Beach, despite the cold rain. There has been a Eurasian Wigeon there for more than a week and this seemed like a good time to try to find it. When I first heard about it, last week, I had just gotten back from a place not too far away and I wasn't about to make a special trip for this oxymoronic common rarity. I assumed I had one ticked off for the year. However, checking my year list, I didn't. Still, I assumed it would stick around. It has been my experience that once a duck, swan, or goose finds its happy place, there is no reason for it to leave. The challenge would be in finding the oddball in the flocks of swans, wigeons, Gadwalls, Ruddy Ducks, coots, gulls and so forth in the 12 acres of water the lake encompasses.  I parked at the "L" in the NW corner of the lake where there was a big flock of Ruddy Ducks, walked to the edge of the water and immediately flushed two Wilson's Snipes from the reeds.  I already felt like I was in the "win" column since snipes were a patch bird for me. Looking out through the murk and the needles of rain, I could see that I was going to need my scope. With it, I scanned through the flock of ruddies, found a few Gadwalls, Mallards, and then more and more American Wigeons appeared, along with coots and big, lumbering swans, which I suspected might be blocking my view of the target bird. I finally found our Eurasian visitor--brick red head, gray body--all the way on the south side of the lake. I briefly thought about driving over to that side but saw that the angle would be no good as it would be blocked by vegetation. I took out my camera and, zoomed it up to maximum, and took pictures of the general vicinity in which I'd found the bird. The photo above is the best of a poor batch. Fortunately, all this only took me 15 minutes, as the rain at the shore was becoming more or less horizontal. Happy is the man who finds his target bird along with a couple of snipes. 

The quarter-hour list:

13 species
Mute Swan  50
Gadwall  5
Eurasian Wigeon  1     
American Wigeon  50
Mallard  10
Hooded Merganser  1
Ruddy Duck  75
American Coot  60
Wilson's Snipe  2     
Ring-billed Gull  5
American Herring Gull  25
Great Black-backed Gull  20
Great Blue Heron  1

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