Showing posts with label World Shorebird's Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Shorebird's Day. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

If Wishes Were Horses

1. horse-kab There is an old nursery rhyme that says:

“If wishes were horses, beggars would ride,

If turnips were watches I’d wear one by my side.”

~Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes

Well, if wishes were jaegers the bird below would be one. But it is not. It is an immature Laughing Gull. I wanted it to be one, but wanting does not make it so. I use to tell Chris Rohrer this all the time when he and I first started birding together. I really do want to be accurate in my bird identifications. I realize this is and always will be a learning process. Once again I have had to correct my records after too hastily jumping on the hope that this bird was a jaeger. I received much help from the Facebook Group, Maine Birds, especially from a young man named Kyle Lima and Dough Hitchcock, the Regional eBird Reviewer and head of Maine Audubon, who pointed out that this bird’s bill and neck were too long and narrow for a jaeger. I also learned that Laughing Gulls do have a darker breast with a white belly and a dark terminal band on the tail. But with this mystery solved, I still have another one on my hands…

2. laughing gull-kab Immature Laughing Gull 9-6-2014 at Wharton’s Point

I am still trying to figure out these sandpipers. I realize these photos are  not the best, so I have posted the originals, and then a duplicate that is lightened and cropped to see if that helps anyone help me. I went back to the eBird checklist for this location on this day and looked at all the possibilities. I’ve narrowed it down to these choices:

    • White-rumped sandpiper
    • Baird’s Sandpiper
    • Red Knot
    • Stilt Sandpiper

I have eliminated Stilt Sandpiper as an option because the neck and legs are not long enough, the head is not small enough. That leaves me with White-rumped, Baird’s and Red Knot. Baird’s is more rare than the other two, so I am not even considering it at the moment, but would listen to any arguments as to why it could be that species. Both the White-rumped and the Red Knot have a white eyebrow. White-rumped has wing tips that extend beyond the tail, but it looks like red knots do the same, though it does not say that in the bird guides. Red knots have dark tips to their wingtips, but in some images, so do White-rumps. White rumps have a more scaly appearance, and so do these birds, but Red Knots are larger and these birds look large to me, especially when compared to the yellowlegs in the last photo. As you can see, this is what one has to go through when learning a new species and trying to identify a bird. I have pulled out several bird guides and still have not come to a conclusion and I am reluctant to add a species to my eBird list until I am sure. These photos were all posted in the previous post. I am going to share this around the internet again and see if I can get some definitive answers on these sandpipers!

So scroll on down to see what you can see. Any help would be greatly appreciated, but please tell me why you think it is that species!

(We have an answer! See update posted below!)

Disclaimer: I know these photos are bad, but they are all I have!

DSC_0191 

DSC_0191a Same photo as above but cropped even more and lightened.

 

DSC_0193 

DSC_0193a 

DSC_0194 

DSC_0194a 

DSC_0195 I am not sure this is one of the above sandpipers, but I think it is. It has the same time stamp. I included it to show the bird’s posture and the shape of its bill, which seems to droop slightly at the tip. It also shows the overall scaly appearance to the feathers on the back.

DSC_0195a 

After seeing this photo of a Red knot on the world Shorebird’s Day post I am thinking these are Not Red Knots! What say you? Follow the link to see what I mean and vote if you want to:

DSC_0199 Mystery Sandpipers and yellowlegs 9-6-2014 at Wharton Point

***Update 11:35 AM: After posting to The Facebook Bird ID Group of the World  and Maine Birds the Conclusion is these are Semi-palmated Sandpipers!

A great Big THANK YOU to everyone who helped with this ID!

Saturday, November 15, 2014

World Shorebird’s Day Challenges me with some Mystery Birds

1. Yellowlegs-kab Yellowlegs in Flight at Wharton Point 9-6-14

I’ll make no bones about it. I am still learning my shorebirds, so when I went out to count birds on World Shorebirds Day at Wharton’s Point in Brunswick, Maine, wouldn’t you know I would encounter some bird species I could not identify. This is, of course, an excellent opportunity to learn, but I think I need some help with some of these. I could tell they were different, but have yet to figure out who they are! However, I do know Black-bellied Plovers and Double-crested Cormorants when I see them!

DSC_0164Black-bellied Plovers with Double-crested Cormorants in the bay.

 

DSC_0166 Double-crested Cormorants in Maquoit Bay 9-6-14

These Snowy Egrets below were pretty easy to figure out!

DSC_0167 In spite of the tall grasses, their white feathers are a beacon against the green and gold!

But then I spotted this fellow bobbing in the waves!

DSC_0170 Mystery Bird #1

Notice the way is rides in the water. It is different than a gull.

DSC_0168 This is it in comparison to some gulls. The mystery bird is on the right.

Suddenly the bird took flight and I snapped some shots.

DSC_0173 Notice the gray to brownish breast, the white belly, the dark legs, and the gray to brown terminal band on the tail. I cannot find a picture like this in my bird guide, except maybe a jaeger? Perhaps a shearwater? But I could not find one colored like this.

DSC_0174 Here’s another shot as it banked and turned.

 

DSC_0175 This is hugely cropped, but this is the best view from below.

Any ideas anyone?

Update: I now believe this is a Parasitic Jaeger and have added it to my eBird checklist for this day! (see correction below)

11-19-14 **Double Update: This is an immature Laughing gull!  

I have now deleted Jaeger from my eBird checklist and added Laughing Gull. Thank you Doug Hitchcock and Kyle Lima for your help!

DSC_0179 This Greater Yellowlegs is much easier to identify!

 

DSC_0182 I love to watch them feeding in the water by sweeping their heads back and forth!

You can see that those long legs are very useful!

 

DSC_0184 Front view of the Greater yellowlegs in the surf.

But then there were these two to baffle me again.

DSC_0191 They are about the size of a Black-bellied plover, but the bill isn’t right.

 

DSC_0193 

DSC_0194 

DSC_0195 Any ideas anyone with more shorebird experience than me?

In the shot below you can see their size in relation to the yellowlegs.

Once I get this figured out I will post the answers here.

World Shorebird’s Day sure was fun as well as a challenge!

DSC_0199 Now that winter is almost here, all these shorebirds are long gone.

But the good news is, we have our winter birds returning!

DSC_0200

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Barnes Landing-a photo essay

1. Barnes landing-kab

Barnes Landing is a little known and little visited cove on the shores of Middle Bay in Brunswick, Maine. I went here on September 6th to count birds for World Shorebirds Day. As the clouds and mist rolled in and the wind sprang up, I felt I was alone in the world in a wild place where the lines of Longfellow’s poem sprang to mind about “the forest primeval” and such. It is the sort of place where one feels the need of a weathervane or compass to guide your way, where all nature is close and ready to offer you gifts if you are receptive to her voice.

2. weathervane-kab Weathervane

3. barn and lawn 9-6-14 The Old Farm at Barnes Landing

4. 9-6-14 rocky shore at Barnes landing Barnes Landing

5. least snadpiper-kab Least Sandpiper

6. horseshow crab-kab Horseshoe Crab exoskeleton

 

7. sandpiper in eeel grass-kab Least sandpiper among the eel grass.

 

8. sea mat-kab Grass mat growing down to the tide line

9. shells-kab Seagull leftovers

 

11. rocky ledge9-6-14 Rocky ledge

12. seashells and seaweed 9-6-14 Portrait of the rocky shore

13. shoreline-kab Low Tide at Barnes Landing

14. gifts from the sea 9-6-14 Gifts from the sea

15. Least Sandpiper-kab Least Sandpiper

16. barnes landing-kab Middle Bay

17. barn-kab

Friday, November 7, 2014

Portrait of a Least Sandpiper

1. least Sandpiper-kab Least Sandpiper at Barnes Point 9-6-2014

On the first weekend of September this year we celebrated the first ever World Shorebirds Day. For three days that weekend people were encouraged to go out and count shorebirds wherever they were. One of the places I counted birds at was Barnes Landing in Brunswick, Maine. I found three Least Sandpipers feeding in the eel grass on the rocky shore. I have more photos and info to come, but I figured it was time to get some birds back on this Birding Blog!

2. LESA in eel grass-kab 

3. running least sandpiper-kab This photo really shows the yellow-green legs and slightly down-curved bill of the Least Sandpiper.

You can see more photos on the

Birding is Fun blog!

(Just click on one of the links above!)

Thursday, September 4, 2014

World Shorebirds Day

1. World Shorebirds Day label 

Tomorrow is World Shorebird’s Day!

It’s actually three days (September 5-7) to count and appreciate all the world’s shorebirds which are busy migrating right now! Just yesterday I saw Semipalmated Sandpipers and Semipalmated Plovers at the Boat Launch, as well as a Greater Yellowlegs! Other than a Spotted Sandpiper seen there a week or so ago, they are the first shorebirds I have seen at the boat launch since moving here! I have registered to count shorebirds at four sites close to me, with the Mere Point Boat Launch being one of them. Below are just a few of the shorebirds I saw two weeks ago when I went birding with Cynthia Cage here in Maine. More on that to come, but for now…I need to get ready to bird! See links below for more info!

2. black-bellied plover-kab Black-bellied Plover 8-21-14 Pine Point, Scarborough, Maine

3. dowitcher-kab Short-billed Dowitcher 8-21-14

Links:

These are my register sites:

(Click on the links to see the most current eBird list of sightings at these eBird Hotspots.)

4. shorebirds-kab Mixed Flock of shorebirds at Pine Point, Scarborough, Maine