End Of May (The month with more year birds than April)

An early (9:15) start for me this morning got me up to Merritt Island NWR to see the beautiful breeding plumage Red-necked Phalarope on south easternmost pond on Bio Lab Road.  Before studying the phalarope, I noticed two poor Semipalmated Sandpipers that had some sort of deformity in the facial region.  This is at least the third species I have seen this year that has a structural error.  Fun stuff.  For over an hour the Phalarope swam around the pond catching bugs like it would on its breeding grounds.  After the phalarope was photographed and sketched sufficiently I went off to Dixie Crossroads since I got word there were very few shorebirds on the refuge.
Red-necked Phalarope

Phalarope hunting for bugs

Ugly Semipalmated Sandpipers

I hit Viera on my way home, and found a good concentration of shorebirds.  8 Greater Yellowlegs, 12 Lessers, 25 Stilts, 48 Semipalmated Sandpipers, 2 Short-billed Dowitcher, 2 Stilt Sandpipers, and a handful of Spoonbills, Glossy Ibis, and Black-bellied Whistling Ducks were present in both of the Click Ponds.  One the way down from the Rockledge exit there was a pair of Ring-necked Ducks at a Golf Course. 
 
Having gone the whole day without seeing a storm-petrel, I figured I could make the fifteen minute trip to the inlet before heading home.  When I got out there, I could see two people on the south jetty.  The one I hadn’t been on all week, but when I scoped over there an Arctic Tern was flying over their heads.  I assume they also had excellent looks at a Brown Noddy that several tried to turn into Florida’s first Swinhoe’s Storm-petrel.  The Noddy really liked the south side but headed up to Brevard for a brief time before retreating to Indian River County.  One Wilson’s Storm-petrel was seen off the north jetty doing a kangaroo-like hop rather than walking on the water.  Later in the day I went back down to meet up with a few people on the south jetty where we saw at least 1 Common, 2 Arctics, and two birds that looked like Arctics.  The Noddy also gave us really close views before flying north to the better county.  Late in the evening two Arctics came close to the jetty before heading south.
Brown Noddy in the great Brevard County

Northern Gannet

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Sebastian Inlet, East Winds and Pelagics

Yesterday Coconut Point had a flyby Leach’s in the hour I was there, but I figured since it was staying in the surf, it would be better to go to the Sebastian Inlet where there was a jetty.  While I pulled up to the parking lot at the inlet I could see an Arctic Tern working its way from the bridge to the end of the jetty.  Before I reached the end of the jetty there were two Wilson’s Storm-petrels sitting in the water.  In the hour and a half I spent at the end of the jetty, Leach’s (4) and Wilson’s (2-3) would occasionally come up close to the jetty and work their way offshore in the rough water flowing into the inlet.  After a while they might have circled back, or moved elsewhere.  The closest one ever came was a Leach’s that looked like it was within 20 feet of the jetty.  There was also a young tern that looked like an Arctic that had a dark bill, half dark head with a few small dark spots on the forehead.  The tail was fairly long and white, the wings were slightly gray, and only the tips of the primaries were dark.  There were also two manatees off the end of the jetty.  I will be back out all week to see the Storm-petrels some more.

Arctic Tern

Today a few people made it out to the inlet today to witness the recent pelagics.  The storm-petrels were slower than expected, with only two Leach’s with only one of them approaching the jetty and allowing photographs.  This bird stayed around for a few minutes before heading north, unlike all of the other ones I have seen this week.  Commic Terns put on a good show with between 2 and 5 Arctics and 2 Commons.  A young Arctic worked the jetty for about 20 minutes.  Other than these, Northern Gannets were fairly regular, about fifty today, with a majority being first year and lesser numbers of second year birds.  I saw a third year either yesterday or today.  Three Least Terns were seen feeding north of the jetty.  Manatees continued to be seen well, with at least six off the jetty today.  The tidal area had Eastern Willet, Sanderling, Ruddy Turnstone, and Great Black-backed Gull.

Leach’s Storm-petrel

Manatees

Ohio Young Birders Conference

We had a good weekend in Ohio where the first ever Ohio Young Birders Conference was held at Ottawa NWR.

Here is a link to a recap of the conference: http://www.ohiobirds.org/blog/blog.php?/archives/295-Ohio-Young-Birders-Conference.html#c748

Highlights in Ohio included some cooperative Yellow-bellied Flycatchers, Mourning Warbler, Olive-sided Flycatcher, Franklin’s Gull, Connecticut Warbler, Lark Sparrow, and a Cerulean Warbler x Northern Parula.

A group of four kids and three adults decided to take a spur of the moment trip to Michigan to see the Kirtland’s Warbler as well as a few other breeders.  We found a singing male Kirtland’s east of Mio.  Later in the day we were treated with Evening and Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Purple Finch, and Red-breasted Nuthatch at feeders near Grayling. 

Keys Breeders

It had been way too long since I had a new bird for the year, so I started off summer vacation with a trip down to the keys.  When I picked up Alex Harper it was raining down on the coast.  Perfect conditions to hit Bill Baggs.  We walked down the nature trail and after a few Redstarts and a Blackpoll Warbler were spotted, a Connecticut Warbler flew across the trail.  Searching for about five minutes produced satisfactory views before it flew away.  Our biggest flock had two Northern Warterthrushes, five Redstarts, a Black-throated Blue and a Blackpoll or two.  Seawatching did not produce much of interest, except a possible Sooty Tern that was too far out to positively say anything about. 
 
Birding in the keys was pretty much the same as always.  We would pull up to a spot, not see too much, then move on down to another spot that looked good.  The Green Turtle was the best stop for migrants with a Connecticut, several Yellow-throats, a few Redstarts, and a Black-throated Blue.  Before birding Boot Key, we figured a quick Roseate Tern tick would break the year birdless streak since the Connecticut at Baggs.  The terns were not there.  We walked all around the building, finding Mynas and plenty of Least Terns, but no Roseates.  On our way to the back of the building we found another Connecticut, but this time it was a dead one.  After forty five minutes, a pair of larger, whiter terns flew over.  It was not too long before the birds were out of sight.  Next it was off to the trash piles of Boot Key where we worried about getting stabbed in the jaw as we found more Redstarts.  No Connecticuts at this stop.  Since there was time before the nighthawks would be out, we played a Mangrove Cuckoo tape.  The only excitement that brought was the faint sound of a background bird on the tape.  Unlike most years, the nighthawks at the airport seem to be towards the northern end.  Our only sighting at the south end was a fly over that called once.  With a scope, we could see two birds up near the main airport building.  Even though there was plenty of water, no shorebirds were present at the airport.
Connecticut Warbler at the Tern Colony

The Connecticut Warbler

Alex on Boot Key

 
I was out early the next morning searching for Cuckoo.  Searching everywhere on Card Sound road.  None were found.  Vireos were at most stops, Chuck-will’s-widows and Common Nighthawks were common before the sun came up, and Gray Kingbirds were everywhere.  I did have one bird fly over at the Key Largo Botanical Site that looked like a cuckoo, but nothing definitive.  The back of the Carysfort neighborhood was loaded with Blackpoll Warblers, at least twenty, and up to five in one binocular view at a time, and had smaller numbers of Redstarts, Common Yellowthroats, Black-throated Blue, and two western Palm Warblers.  For all of you county listers, this is a good spot for Carolina Wren.  This and the back of Rainbow Drive are the only spots I have heard them in the keys, but Bear Lake Trail also has them.  On my way back home I hit the pier in Ft. Lauderdale.  With the strong winds I would have expected more pelagic species.  I did manage to see a few terns, Bridled, Sooty and Black.  There were no gannets, a bird we did see somewhere in the keys. 
 
The year list is at 321.

Sebastian Inlet

I birded the Kirtland’s Warblerless Inlet today.  Unfortunately, I was at the World Series of Birding when this little bird showed up ten minutes from my house.  The migration was still pretty decent today.  Six Blackpoll Warblers of various plumages were seen throughout the park, and one gave me a little scare when all I could see was the tail and it flicked it a few times.  There was one bird that looked like it was about half of a male, and a few things were wrong with it.  Crawling around the ground only produced 2 Common Yellowthroats, 4 Ovenbirds, and a lot of bugs.  Mark your calendars for the Kirtland’s the week of World Series in 2009.

World Series of Birding

Now that the Hermit Thrushes that took fifteen minutes from our route, or the Nashville Warbler that prevented our 30 warbler day, or that Gull Tower that we could not find are not fresh in our minds, we can write about the World Series experience that keeps amazing participants year after year. 

 

The participants for this year’s team, the Nikon Space Coast Blue Oystercatcher Cult consisted of the four team members Andy Bankert, team captain from Florida who arrived up north late on Thursday and only scouted for the dry run in the north, Craig Bateman, first year participant who was told the week before the event that his three days of scouting were to be spent in four counties in the south rather than just Cape May County, Erik Enbody, who participated in 2005 on another team and scouted the north for three days and lived in the amazing community that the hotels in Milford, Pennsylvania become for one week out of the year, and Danny Williams, another first timer who was scheduled to scout the south for a week prior to the event, but due to a lacrosse injury did no scouting.  The two drivers were both DVOC members Debbie Beer, who is the conservation chair of the club, and Win Schafer, who changed our stereotype about the athleticism of people too old to compete in the youth division.  This event would also not be possible if it weren’t for the help of numerous people we did not encounter on the big day.  Our parents who sent us to the competition, sponsors Nikon, who provided our optics and covered almost all of the expenses of the trip, and the Space Coast Birding Festival, which picked up the rest of the team’s expenses, as well as the organizers of the event and New Jersey Audubon all played a role even more important than scouting. 

 

Some of the most exciting and laid back birding of the big day takes place at night.  Great Swamp holds almost all of the night birds, as well as the chance to talk to many teams moments before the competition begins.  The air was filled with the sounds of various frogs, toads, bitterns, and rails as the team waited for midnight to hit.  Once one of the cell phones read 12:00 the level of seriousness increased.  It soon decreased to the normal fooling around as the team cruised through the swamp ticking off the first birds of the day, then pretending to hear birds with other teams near by.  High spirits fell came crashing down in the hour-long search for Great-horned Owl that turned into a competition to make the most obnoxious owl calls.  A Great-horned finally sounded off, but in the team’s less serious mode we ran away for fear of howler monkeys that we thought we heard off in the distance.  The night was successful, but dawn couldn’t have come sooner.  On the other end of the day, darkness came too soon.  A Chuck-will’s-widow was our first nocturnal species at Brigantine.  After that, only two new species were found, but they were good species.  As the thunder rolled into the party of teams at Jake’s Landing, an American Bittern and Black Rail rounded off our day list.  Once the rain hit we gave up for the day and retired to the finish line. 

 

Nighttime stops only accounted for ten percent of the species on the big day.  Most of the species are tallied when the sun is up. Common Sense.  The grasslands were a precursor for the rest of the north.  All the species were found, but in a little more time than allotted for.  Breeding sparrows came easy, but five minutes for Phesant, and five minutes for White-crowned Sparrow, sometimes it seemed too long, but the birds would always call.  Unlike previous years, the team sped to spots then spent time on each target.  Sapsuckers were amazingly easy this year, outnumbering every other woodpecker.  Warblers were ticked off left and right as the four team members and non-driving adult hung out of the van windows.  The few stops out of the van were quick and productive.  It was the first time two of the team members got to traverse the infamous asshole bog.  Home of the Canada Warbler.  A few species, Hermit Thrush, Brown Creeper, Blue-headed Vireo, and Louisiana Waterthrush took more time than expected.  The front of the team’s shirt read “Don’t Fear the Creeper,” but after a few minutes at a nest there was a sense of fear.  The bird finally came to the nest, but only after a bonus Bay-breasted Warbler caught the team’s attention.  No risks were taken by skipping roads.  Van Ness did not hold many species, so skipping it was an option.  One White-throated Sparrow, Black-billed Cuckoo, Lincoln’s Sparrow, and Golden-winged Warbler later, everyone felt it was a good decision to keep it in the route.  A few more species, as well as gas to last the rest of the day, were picked up, and I-80 was crossed at 10:19 with 127 species. 

 

The south is a different land than the north.  Binoculars and scopes replace ears as the best way to locate new species.  The south consists of many spaced out stops, unlike the flowing north.  One problem that the team faced was a rushed schedule to get to Brigantine for ducks.  A group of birds that the south was hurting for this year.  An encounter with DVOC made Bobwhite an easy day bird.  Unlike past years, songbirds came easy.  Blue Grosbeak, Summer Tanager, and White-eyed Vireo all took minimal effort.  Duck and shorebird diversity was in short supply at most stops.  The team used the best of its knowledge from scouting and previous years to get what it could in the short time.  Concentration for getting to Brigantine cut out some sexy species like Piping Plover, Red-headed Woodpecker, and Curlew Sandpiper, but these could also suck huge amounts of time away from teams.  All of the warblers that would be seen were seen before entering Cape May County.  “The County” gave the team a good boost in the day list with highlights being Roseate Tern, Parasitic Jaeger, and Long-tailed Duck.  But these bonus birds were just as important as the lone Oystercatcher or Yellow-crowned Night Heron.  All birds are worth one point. 

 

The magical 200 mark was well within reach when the team pulled up to Brig.  They saw the Gull Tower, but did not know what it was, or go there.  Later they would find out this held two species missed on the big day.  The refuge was loaded with ducks and shorebirds, but very few new species.  Gadwall, Gull-billed Tern, and Little Blue Heron were all added before it got too dark.  199.  The team did not know its total, but they knew they were close, or they knew they had 200.  A Wilson’s Snipe was two hundred.  Black Skimmer was the last day bird before it got too dark to see.  Then it was up to the forest where the Chuck-will’s-widows call. 

 

In the end, 204 was good enough to win the youth division, but Cornell impressed all by scoring 230.  The Blue Oystercatcher Cult raised over 4000 dollars for conservation causes in Florida and Michigan, and its three eligible members will return in 2008 to defend their youth division title.