Thursday, May 31, 2007

Snowy Plover photo gallery


I've added 18 photos of today's Snowy Plover to my Snowy Plover Photo Gallery. Thanks ever so much to Shawn Zierman for alerting us all to this splendid bird, and to Mike Hendrickson for calling my house yesterday to make sure I knew about it--I'd been gone to the Twin Cities all day and may not have had a chance to check the Minnesota birding listservs if I didn't know about it. And a special thanks to Harold Nordin for looking beyond the little flock of Monarch butterflies on the beach that were gathered like a flock of shorebirds to find the plover for the final bird of this year's Spring Warbler Walks.

Last Warbler Walk report

As has suddenly become our tradition, we saved dessert for last--both in terms of today being the best of all the warbler walks for the total number of species (75) and in terms of seeing the best bird of the day (the Snowy Plover originally discovered there by Shawn Zierman and today first noticed in our group by Harold Nordin) at the very end. Here's the list:

Canada Goose
Mallard
Blue-winged Teal
Redhead
Greater Scaup
Red-breasted Merganser
Common Loon
Red-necked Grebe
Double-crested Cormorant
Black-bellied Plover
Snowy Plover
Semipalmated Plover
Killdeer
Spotted Sandpiper
Whimbrel
Sanderling
Semipalmated Sandpiper
Dunlin
Wilson's Snipe
Bonaparte's Gull
Ring-billed Gull
Herring Gull
Common Tern
Mourning Dove
Black-billed Cuckoo
Common Nighthawk
Chimney Swift
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Red-headed Woodpecker
Northern Flicker
Olive-sided Flycatcher
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
Alder Flycatcher
Least Flycatcher
Eastern Kingbird
Blue-headed Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
Blue Jay
American Crow
Purple Martin
Tree Swallow
Black-capped Chickadee
Red-breasted Nuthatch
House Wren
Veery
Swainson's Thrush
American Robin
Gray Catbird
European Starling
Cedar Waxwing
Tennessee Warbler
Yellow Warbler
Chestnut-sided Warbler
Magnolia Warbler
Cape May Warbler
Black-throated Green Warbler
Blackburnian Warbler
Blackpoll Warbler
Black-and-white Warbler
American Redstart
Mourning Warbler
Common Yellowthroat
Wilson's Warbler
Canada Warbler
Scarlet Tanager
Chipping Sparrow
Clay-colored Sparrow
Savannah Sparrow
Song Sparrow
Indigo Bunting
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird
Baltimore Oriole
American Goldfinch

How can such a rare bird be so cute?

I'll post our final list and more trip photos in a bit, but WOW--there may be birds as cute as a Snowy Plover. But no bird is cuter.



Reader question

A reader writes:


We live near Santa Cruz, California in a meadow, surrounded by Riparian
Zone/Creek and Redwoods. At night we hear a loud, lonely sounding ?bird,
almost loon like or a loud very long hoot. We are wondering what it might
be. Do you have any ideas?


Any ideas?

Meeting Blaize!



Today was the day I went south of the Twin Cities to meet Blaize Kandler, the 10-year-old boy who got perfect scores on both parts of the state-mandated MCA-II tests last year. When the Star-Tribune interviewed him, he specifically told them to mention my book, 101 Ways to Help Birds, which is his favorite book. (The article is archived here.) Archimedes and I went to Blaize's school to make a presentation to the fourth grade classes about owls, and then I went to Blaize's house for dinner. He made a room into "Birdsville"--a little museum with all kinds of cool exhibits he created and lots of cool bird stuff. I made a few small donations to the museum--a beautiful photo of a Northern Hawk Owl I'd received this spring, a copy of Don Kroodsma's wonderful The Singing Life of Birds since Blaize is fascinated with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as well as birds, Kenn Kaufman's superb field guide, a copy of Good Birders Don't Wear White: 50 Tips from North America's Top Birders, and a carving of a Shining Honeycreeper I received in Guatemala.

I was shocked at just how much Blaize and his little brother Talon know about birds! Spending time with these wonderful boys was great fun for me, and well worth the 380-mile round trip.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Last Western Waterfront Trail spring Warbler Walk

Optimistic little wren trying to get this stick in the nest hole,

And succeeding.

Warbling Vireo nest

Common Yellowthroat

Rarest bird of the day--Common Moorhen!













What a great morning--an amazing testament to spring hormones and making babies. We watched orioles and wrens mating (boy are wrens quick!), a Warbling Vireo, House Wren, and Baltimore Oriole each working on a nest, one family of 5 tiny baby geese and another of 4 slightly older baby geese, a pair of Bald Eagles sitting out resting from what we assumed were parental responsibilities, twitterpated Hairy Woodpeckers--all in all, spring was definitely in the air! Our list of 44 species:

Canada Goose
Mallard
Blue-winged Teal
Turkey Vulture
Bald Eagle
Red-tailed Hawk
Common Moorhen
Semipalmated Plover
Killdeer
Ring-billed Gull
Herring Gull
Common Tern
Mourning Dove
Belted Kingfisher
Hairy Woodpecker
Least Flycatcher
Warbling Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
Blue Jay
American Crow
Tree Swallow
Black-capped Chickadee
White-breasted Nuthatch
House Wren
Swainson's Thrush
American Robin
Gray Catbird
European Starling
Cedar Waxwing
Yellow Warbler
American Redstart
Common Yellowthroat
Wilson's Warbler
Song Sparrow
Lincoln's Sparrow
Swamp Sparrow
Northern Cardinal
Indigo Bunting
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird
Baltimore Oriole
American Goldfinch
House Sparrow

Monday, May 28, 2007

Kirtland's Warbler side trip


Russ and I had to head out toward Oberlin, Ohio, Friday to pick up our daughter's stuff--she's moving back home Friday. We decided to take the scenic route through Michigan, and started talking about where we should stop for the night as we came up to the Mackinac Bridge. That's when it hit me--we were going to be driving right through Grayling! So of course that's where we stopped, and stayed at a Day's Inn. I got up at 6 to head to the Holiday Inn, where Michigan Audubon's daily Kirtland's Warbler tours depart every morning at 7 and 11. Our tour guide, Sean Fitzgerald, used to live in Wisconsin where he birded and posted on WisBirdNet, so it was a pleasure to meet him in real life, plus he's a splendid field trip leader! So we got several looks at Kirtland's Warblers, including one that was simply fabulous. If only it had occurred to me before we left that seeing a Kirtland's Warbler was a real possibility I'd have brought my own spotting scope and digiscoping camera. I took the above photo holding my Sony DSC-H5, a 12x extended zoom camera, up to Sean's 60mm Raven spotting scope--not the best choice for either the camera or the scope, but beggars can't be choosers and for the first time in my life, I've taken some photos, regardless of how crappy, of Kirtland's Warbler! Of course, now I've whetted my appetite and am hungry to get back there with better equipment.

These trips are really a wonderful opportunity to see a splendid, and critically endangered, species. If you're interested in seeing Kirtland's Warbler, check out the US Fish and Wildlife Service's web page: Kirtland's Warbler Tours. And if you want to see my photos, there are several even worse ones of the bird but also some of the cowbird trapping setup, the habitat, and Sean at Laura's Pretty Pathetic Kirtland's Warbler photo gallery.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Peregrine Watch!


It's that time again! There are four baby Peregrine Falcons in the nest box on the Greysolon Building in downtown Duluth. They're going to be banded next week. And with luck and funding, we'll soon see Julie O'Connell's smiling face back downtown, showing off the most popular family in Duluth to passersby. If you want to keep track of the news, check out the Yahoo Peregrine Watch group!

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Splendid morning!


Black-bellied Plovers

Dunlin

Semipalmated Plover

Common Tern

This may be a Least Sandpiper, but the yellow legs we saw in the field don't show up--that may make it a Semipalmated Sandpiper.


The goslings have hatched!

Herring Gull

Two plumages, same species

Song Sparrow

Two photos of a Lapland Longspur


Female Redhead

Tree Swallow

We saved dessert for last! Red-headed Woodpecker (there were two by the parking lot!)
****************

Today was one of the DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDs--those dull, dark, dank, drippy, drizzly, Duluth days that birders delight in. The light was poor for identifying warblers, but we still had a nice variety, and had a smörgåsbord of shorebirds who were apparently enjoying a smörgåsbord of their own in the form of a dead deer washed up on the beach, along with the array of tasty maggots and other bugs gathered on it. We didn't get close enough for a photograph of the feast, which may be a good thing or a bad one depending on your sensibilities and point of view.

We didn't surpass Tuesday's 60 species, but came pretty close with 59:

Canada Goose
Mallard
Blue-winged Teal
Redhead
Greater Scaup
Red-breasted Merganser
Common Loon
Pied-billed Grebe
Double-crested Cormorant
Black-bellied Plover
American Golden-Plover
Semipalmated Plover
Killdeer
Lesser Yellowlegs
Spotted Sandpiper
Ruddy Turnstone
Sanderling
Semipalmated Sandpiper
Least Sandpiper
Dunlin
Ring-billed Gull
Herring Gull
Common Tern
Mourning Dove
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Red-headed Woodpecker
Downy Woodpecker
Northern Flicker
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
Least Flycatcher
Eastern Kingbird
Blue-headed Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
Blue Jay
American Crow
Tree Swallow
Barn Swallow
Black-capped Chickadee
Red-breasted Nuthatch
House Wren
American Robin
Gray Catbird
European Starling
Cedar Waxwing
Tennessee Warbler
Yellow Warbler
Magnolia Warbler
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Palm Warbler
American Redstart
Common Yellowthroat
Wilson's Warbler
Canada Warbler
Song Sparrow
Lapland Longspur
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird
Baltimore Oriole

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Oh, wow--the Bronze Passenger Pigeon Award!


At some point in my 20s, I made a list of goals I wanted to attain by the time I got "old," which at the time I pretty much defined as hitting 50. I'm half a decade past that, but oddly enough, I've achieved a surprising number of these goals--and I don't even feel particularly old yet! One goal was to be published in Audubon magazine--I hit that when I wrote an article for them about the birding trail along the Mississippi River. One was to take a photograph of a bird that would be printed in a magazine--and the last issue of Birder's World had SIX of my photos!! One was to get my North American lifelist up to 600--this goal was inspired by Roger Tory Peterson's Bird Watcher's Anthology, which had an essay about the "600 Club." I accomplished that in 1999, and my Number 600 bird was a wonderful one--the Florida Scrub-Jay.

I think my biggest goal was to do something with my life that would be worthwhile enough that I'd one day earn the Bronze Passenger Pigeon Award from the Wisconsin Society for Ornithology, an award given "For significant contributions to Wisconsin Ornithology." I'd joined WSO in 1976, the year we moved to Wisconsin, and although we moved to Minnesota in 1981, I've always felt like Wisconsin is home in a very real sense. It's where my favorite birding spots in the world are--the places I've known most intimately and fondly: Picnic Point in Madison and Port Wing, where my mother-in-law lives and where I've made the same long hike over the same route year after year since 1975. And WSO has been my concept of the ideal state birding organization, whose membership runs the gamut from truly accomplished, top-tier birders (people who way more than me deserve to be included in Good Birders Don't Wear White: 50 Tips from North America's Top Birders) to novices. WSO members include those whose passion may be technical identification and/or distribution of birds, conservation, education, social birding, or birding at any level and angle. And many of my real heroes have been part of WSO--people such as Joseph Hickey, Sam Robbins, and Noel Cutright. As with every organization, there are strong egos, but overall WSO people don't boost their own egos by cutting down other people. It's an organization that is truly large enough for everyone. That's why when I finally had enough money, I became a life member of WSO. And it's why the one recognition I ever coveted was the Bronze Passenger Pigeon Award.

So imagine my shocked delight when Daryl Tessen called me last month to see if I was going to be able to attend the WSO Convention, and told me I was going to be honored! I couldn't make the convention--I was committed to the Manitowish Waters North Lakeland Discovery Center's annual birding festival. But today the plaque arrived, and I had to keep myself from floating skyward when I held it in my hands. Bettie Harriman from WSO asked me to get a photo with it for the archives, so here it is. And all I can say is, WOW. This is one mighty happy and proud 55.5-year-old woman!

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Warbler Walk today





Brrr! The temperature hovered barely above 40 for most of today's warbler walk, and the chill was exacerbated by the dampness--it was foggy and windy and, well, darned chilly. But it was nice that the number of species exceeded the temperature, and fairly significantly, with a total of 60! I'll get some photos up ASAP, but here is the list:

Canada Goose
Mallard
Blue-winged Teal
Great Blue Heron
Turkey Vulture
Merlin
Semipalmated Plover
Killdeer
Greater Yellowlegs
Solitary Sandpiper
Spotted Sandpiper
Semipalmated Sandpiper
Dunlin
Ring-billed Gull
Mourning Dove
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Belted Kingfisher
Downy Woodpecker
Hairy Woodpecker
Northern Flicker
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
Least Flycatcher
Eastern Phoebe
Blue-headed Vireo
Warbling Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
Blue Jay
American Crow
Tree Swallow
Black-capped Chickadee
White-breasted Nuthatch
House Wren
Veery
Swainson's Thrush
American Robin
Gray Catbird
Brown Thrasher
European Starling
Yellow Warbler
Chestnut-sided Warbler
Magnolia Warbler
Yellow-rumped Warbler
American Redstart
Northern Waterthrush
Common Yellowthroat
Wilson's Warbler
Canada Warbler
Chipping Sparrow
Song Sparrow
Lincoln's Sparrow
Swamp Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
Northern Cardinal
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird
Baltimore Oriole
House Finch
American Goldfinch

Monday, May 21, 2007

Singing Painted Bunting video



47 seconds of a Painted Bunting singing in Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge on May 12, 2007. This species was the #2 Most Wanted Bird in a recent Birder's World poll!

Black-capped Vireo songs!


I just posted a minute-long recording of a Black-capped Vireo singing near a dam in Oklahoma. The dam was pretty noisy, but for the most part it's in the background. Please don't use this recording for "playback" in the field! I just posted it so you can appreciate the cool, complex, varied song of this exquisite species. I was only able to get recognizable photos of one individual, but you can see what little I have at my Black-capped Vireo photo and sound gallery. Oh, darn--looks like I'll have to go back to the Wichita Mountains again.

Nesting loons and more!




I spent this weekend in Manitowish Waters, Wisconsin, at one of my favorite birding festivals of all, hosted by the North Lakeland Discovery Center. This year there was a lovely reception on Friday night, and then a VERY full day on Saturday--I led two field trips, gave a breakfast keynote talk about climate change and birds, and then presented two talks about Whooping Cranes. After all that, I was exhausted--fortunately, I got to spend both nights at the wonderful Timberline Inn. The owner, Rich, came out before I was even out of my car with my key--he remembered me from the past two years, and that's the friendly kind of place this is. Each room has a balcony looking out into feeders and forest where a bazillion birds were singing. I love staying here!

Sunday morning it was only 34 degrees, and I drove home in snow flurries. In a couple of places I didn't know if I was looking at trees covered with apple blossoms or snow! Spring weather, like spring birds, is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're going to get.

Anyway, I didn't take a lot of photos, but posted the ones I have on my 2007 Discovery Center bird festival photo gallery.

Partial albino hummingbird!

Gaige and Linda from over by Lake Louise sent a couple of photos of a splendid partial albino adult male Ruby-throated Hummingbird! You can read about albino hummingbirds at Lanny Chambers's wonderful hummingbirds.net page. Photos are copyrighted 2007 by Gaige and Linda Wunder.


Not about birds...


This isn't about birds, and I'm not into fancy wedding dresses, but this one, from 1947, which is in the Smithsonian's American History Museum collection, was made from nylon from the parachute that saved the groom's life in World War II! Read about it at the Smithsonian's site.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Trumpeter Swans



I took this video on a field trip for the Discovery Center Birding Festival Saturday. The swans flew off at the end toward another pair--they're apparently still working out territorial boundaries.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Scissor-tailed Flycatcher



Best State Bird of all! I wish I could have gotten photos of them in flight--they're spectacular when they show off the salmon wing linings and flare that tail!

Manitowish Waters, here I come!

For the past three years I've been involved in the annual birding festival for the Discovery Center in Manitowish Waters, Wisconsin. It's a great and sincere little festival, filled with fun activities and learning opportunities in a beautiful part of Wisconsin--even if I weren't the keynote speaker this year, I'd strongly encourage you to attend. There's a reception tomorrow night, and most of the activities take place on Saturday. Check it out! (scroll down)

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Oklahoma superlatives

Wow--I've been looking through my photos and it's going to take forever for me to get them all "up." But here are a few of the superlatives of the trip:

  • Most sardonic look by a prairie dog:
  • Most dead animals on roadsides: turtles, especially red-eareds and snappers.
  • Most dead mammals on roadsides: armadillos (at that end of I-35. As I approached my end of I-35 today, it was porcupines.)
  • Most unexpected adventure: being awakened from a sound sleep in my car by Refuge people to get my car to higher ground and me and Photon to a safe spot during a tornado warning and torrential downpour.
  • Most thrilling adventure: When Joe Grzybowski and I came upon a diamondback rattlesnake in Blaine County. Joe wanted to get the snake safely off the road before any other cars came along, which rather pissed the snake off, but a bit farther down the road we came upon a dead diamondback sans head and tail--"collectors" (there should be an uglier word for them) can be brutal.
  • Scariest moment--I don't think I was even mildly scared the whole trip.
  • Nicest stranger--the lady at the Pizza Hut in Watonga, who kept calling me "sugar" and "sweetie."
  • Kindest act: After patiently allowing me to tag along on a cowbird monitoring day, and thereby learning full well my limitations, Joe Grzybowski let me tag along on a Black-capped Vireo monitoring day, too. It's up and down on rocky terrain--stunningly, breathtakingly beautiful country, but I'm neither experienced on that kind of terrain nor in as good shape as I should be. Joe went up and down the rocky slopes as nimbly as a mountain goat. I suppose I was rather like a goat too, in the sense that I had to scramble up more than a few rocks on all fours. But Joe would wait up and then have some cool and interesting story to tell and not even let on that he was really just giving me a chance to catch my breath. As it was, we covered one mountain and 11 vireo territories in what seemed like a full day to me. But on a REAL full day, Joe covers three times that! I should have worn this shirt:

  • Best bird: Well, duh! The Black-capped Vireo! I think my favorite was the one at the Quannah Parker Lake Dam who let me photograph and record him.

  • Biggest tragedy: I think it was stepping on a cricket frog when I was trying to get a Lark Sparrow out of the women's bathroom.
  • Most painful moment--crashing into a sharp corner wall in the shower room at the Refuge campground when I slipped on the wet floor on Sunday. I smacked my face right where my skull juts out at the eyebrow, and gave myself rather a shiner--the blood pooled on my eyelid like a sickly blue eye shadow. The other woman in the shower room was actually a registered nurse, who made sure I didn't have a concussion. The best thing about being 55.5 years old is that people never look too closely at you, and either no one noticed at all or anyone who did notice didn't say anything.
  • Most beautiful flowers: I can't decide whether it was the prickly pears, the barrel cactuses, the Indian blankets or just the generic fields of prairie flowers in full bloom because of all the rain.
  • Most respiration-compromising situation: not the climbing, but seeing so many Scissor-tailed Flycatchers and Mississippi Kites the first day. I'd be watching in joy and awe and suddenly realize I was holding my breath. I guess after a few days I started taking all this beauty for granted, or leastwise I kept breathing when I saw such gorgeous things.
  • Most amazing song: the mockingbird who was up at the Quannah Parker Lake Dam. I can't get over the imitations that bird made. The video I took is on my video camera rather than my regular camera, so it's going to take a bit for me to figure out how to get it on my computer, but I'll post it ASAP.
  • "Toothiest" goose (click for enlargement and look at the serrated bill--also notice the feathered eyelid):

  • Most intriguing nighthawks--the ones I saw with Vic Fazio when we went out to Hackberry Flats. These were apparently functionally illiterate, and hadn't read the books that say they rest on fence posts, horizontal branches, and other fairly wide structures.

  • Silliest occasion I marked--turning 55.5 on May 11. And I just did the calculations--sometime during the evening of June 1, I'll turn 55.555. Should I call that a quintessential occasion or a cinco-pated day or what?
Lots more stories, photos and videos to come.

Rattlesnake videos (very short)



Iowa rest stops and other logistical matters

I'm at the first rest stop in Iowa. Iowa is one of the most civilized states--they provide free wireless Internet at their rest stops! Which reminds me that I should mention a few logistical matters I might forget about the trip. If you ever find yourself in Watonga, OK, the Watonga Motel was very nice--the people were warm and welcoming, they allowed Photon to not only stay, but to stay in my air-conditioned room all day when I was out in rattlesnake country, and it was a really nice room for $42.99 a night, with a refrigerator and everything. And if you are going through there, the Pizza Hut is the best one ever. The waitress was extremely friendly, calling me sweetie and sugar and making interesting conversation while I waited for my pizza to go. It was like being with Queen Latifah herself!

On the other hand, I didn't like the DQ in Chickashaw. I usually order a small "chocolate-dipped strawberry blizzard" for me and a tiny vanilla cup for Photon, but this was my breakfast so I broke policy and ordered a medium. Big mistake--at this DQ, they do the blizzard the stupid way, with the tiny thin chocolate pieces rather than the thick ones, which spoils the whole thing. I wish Dairy Queen would standardize their definition of "chocolate dipped strawberry blizzards"--they're splendid when made with the big chunks. Plus that store doesn't put tiny ice cream orders in a dish--they said Photon's had to go in a cone, and then they put the little ice cream cone in a dish. Not that Photon doesn't like cones, but it seemed silly to insist that the cone had to be there. So I won't be visiting that DQ again.

Overall, people at gas stations, restaurants, and food places I've stopped at along the trip have been friendly and warm. And with our long drive today, I'm sure at some point Photon and I will wend our way to a DQ and a good blizzard will wash away that one negative memory for good.

But back to the rest area--the whole time I've been typing this an oriole has been singing away! Hardly new for my I-35 list, but what a lovely sound.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Whew! Heading home!

Little Dog on the Prairie

Photon and I have had such a wonderful time in Oklahoma! There was a bit of rain (well, 7 inches in 2 or 3 hours one night when a tornado touched down on the north side of the mountains, meaning refuge staff had to come and wake me up and evacuate me. That was an adventure--especially because they brought us to the environmental education building, where Photon got to investigate a bunch of cool stuffed animals!). But all the rain made everything about as beautiful as it could possibly be.


(Diamondbacks viewed through 12x camera aren't quite as close as they appear.)




And the pièce de résistance:

I'll have a bazillion more photos, and some videos of a singing Painted Bunting and the most versatile mockingbird I've ever heard as soon as I can get them up.

Sunday, May 6, 2007

Oklahoma, here I come!


I'm so excited I could pop! I'm in Des Moines, Iowa, after driving since noon, and barring fierce storms should be in the Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma tomorrow! Scissor-tailed Flycatchers! Mississippi Kites! Painted Buntings! Summer Tanagers! Chuck-will's-widows! And, most thrilling of all, Black-capped Vireos! Plus on Tuesday, again barring fierce storms (well, maybe even rain) I get to tag along with Joe Grzybowski while he goes about his spring vireo work!

The drive today wasn't very fun bird-wise--it was cloudy and the wind was ferocious. There were a few red-tails and one Cooper's Hawk, but I didn't spot a single kestrel perched on a wire along the whole drive! One Western Meadowlark was singing away at a rest stop--I'd have recorded him but the wind and traffic were too loud. Lots of red-wings, one distant egret, and a dead prairie chicken complete the list--a pretty short one, and I hate seeing dead prairie chickens.

I had a crosswind through Minnesota, making it hard to steer and it really hurt my gas mileage--I only averaged 46 miles per gallon. And by the time I got into Iowa, it had shifted to a full headwind, and boy did that do in my mileage--it was barely over 40 by the time I got this far. The wind is noisy through the window in my motel room, too. Other than the crappy miles per gallon (and non-hybrids would have gotten way worse!) the Prius seems to be working out great for this adventure. I have one side of the back seat down, with an air mattress and my sleeping bag set up on that side, and managed to fit my tent and other camping gear (including a small stove and my coffee maker), food, luggage, audio recording equipment and all that stuff easily, while keeping the front passenger seat free for Photon. She's been having a jolly day--she met some golden retrievers, another bichon, a couple of yorkies, and some other dogs here and there at rest stops, and here in our room she seems to be delighting in the two double beds. They're exactly far enough apart that jumping from one to the other seems like a challenge, while close enough together that she can actually make the jump. So she's jumped back and forth at least 20 times so far. On days like this, I love a self-exercising dog!

Keep your fingers crossed that the weather cooperates this week. If it's too rainy, I can always sleep in my car, and I have plenty of stuff to do if it's too rainy to be outside. But boy do I hope I can take pictures of the Wichita Mountains and its splendid birds!

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Pleasant morning, sort of lackluster birding

Can you pick out the Lesser Scaup?



I'm not sure if I'm remembering all the birds we saw this morning, but my total is only 30 species. But we had some splendid looks at them--pretty close up views of a small flock of Greater Scaup with one lone Lesser among them, a gorgeous if uncooperative Horned Grebe (they apparently do not approve of paparazzi!), a nice little Brown Creeper, and, perhaps most beautiful of all though it was pretty far away, a huge flock of terns--I'm 90% certain they were Common Terns--banking and wheeling and twinkling in the sun. It was cold and windy--only 36 degrees when I left home, so people were pretty shivery by the end of the morning.

I'm leaving town for a couple of weeks, so Larry and Jan Kraemer, who are excellent birders and have a splendid Swarovski spotting scope, will be leading the Warbler Walks till I get back. This year I didn't get around to sending out any press releases, so attendance hasn't been too big and they've been lots of fun! Come and join us--Tuesdays at 6:30 am at the Western Waterfront Trail parking lot across from the zoo and just west of the TappaKeg Inn and Bar on Grand Avenue, and Thursdays at 6:30 am at Park Point at the big parking lot by the soccer fields and recreation building.



Canada Goose
Mallard
Blue-winged Teal
Greater Scaup
Lesser Scaup
Red-breasted Merganser
Pied-billed Grebe
Horned Grebe
Double-crested Cormorant
Merlin
Killdeer
Ring-billed Gull
Common Tern
Mourning Dove
Northern Flicker
Blue Jay
American Crow
Common Raven
Tree Swallow
Black-capped Chickadee
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Brown Creeper
American Robin
European Starling
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Chipping Sparrow
Song Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Finding heaven on a Sharp-tailed Grouse lek

Oh, wow! I got up at 3:30 this morning to head down to Solon Springs to the Sharp-tailed Grouse viewing blind. It was the best ever! The full moon was obscured by clouds until just before it sunk in the western horizon. Being May, the temperature was pretty survivable--45 degrees instead of the 20s or lower 30s as it's been when I've come down the past two years. And I saw at least a dozen males and no fewer than four females at a time. It was really splendid. I brought my son Tom's video camera and got some great footage, but I don't know if I'm going to have time to go through it this week. I've got a few more things I have to finish today, a talk at our local Barnes and Noble tonight, a field trip tomorrow and several more things that need to be done, and then Friday I head to the Twin Cities for an all-day school program and then am speaking for the Ramsey County Birding Festival's kick-off spaghetti dinner Friday night. Archimedes will be along for those. Then Saturday Photon and I are off for Oklahoma!! We're going to be camping in the Wichita Mountains and learning about Black-capped Vireos--I'm so excited I could pop! Plus I'm going to get bazillions of photos and video of them and other cool birds. I'll be gone until the Manitowish Waters Discovery Center Birding Festival, on May 18 and 19th. My eyes are really tired now--that blasted Bell's Palsy has really done a number on my eyes! After a little nap I'm going to get back to work.

But meanwhile, until I get the video up, I did post a bunch of new pictures, all digiscoped, on my Sharp-tailed Grouse photo gallery. Some of my best Sharp-tailed photos ever!

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Another great Warbler Walk

We had another lovely day for a warbler walk, and 43 species, not even counting the peacocks and peahen that were perched up high at the zoo!


Many people got to see this pair of flickers mating--here they are sitting about. You can't tell for sure if the male is smoking a tiny cigarette behind that trunk.
These two male cowbirds were spending quite a bit of time displaying to the female. As with most female cowbirds, she seemed attracted to both.
Green-winged Teal!


Canada Goose
Gadwall
Mallard
Blue-winged Teal
Green-winged Teal
Ring-necked Duck
Lesser Scaup
Common Goldeneye
Common Merganser
Pied-billed Grebe
Double-crested Cormorant
Great Blue Heron
Turkey Vulture
Bald Eagle
Northern Harrier
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Broad-winged Hawk
Merlin
Greater Yellowlegs
Ring-billed Gull
Mourning Dove
Belted Kingfisher
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
Downy Woodpecker
Hairy Woodpecker
Northern Flicker
Blue Jay
American Crow
Common Raven
Tree Swallow
Black-capped Chickadee
White-breasted Nuthatch
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
American Robin
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Song Sparrow
Swamp Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
Northern Cardinal
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird
Pine Siskin