There certainly is an invigoration factor birding in a good spring
nor'easter! Highlight for Ron Payne and me were a cluster of shorebirds
in the bottom of a breached, retired manure lagoon 0.2 miles south of
the Panton store. They were somewhat out of the raucous, buffeting
wind, and had what appeared to be some good foraging.
We tallied two sewing machine Short-billed Dowitchers, two White-rumpted
Sandpipers, six Semipalmated Sandpipers, 27 busy Least Sandpipers, and
two Killdeer in this one small enclosure.
Elsewhere, views of many growing ponds in cornfields with four-inch
stalks of new corn, in Weybridge, Bridport, Addison, and Panton, yielded
but a single Horned Lark and the occasional Red-winged Blackbird.
..................................
At one point the aerial sound of another bird from my distant past drew
my gaze upward .... the unmistakeable dull, throaty roar of a classic
radial airplane engine. Unbelievably, there only a couple of hundred
feet above the treetops was the ghostly form of a 1940's Cessna 190
clawing its way northward in slow motion in the teeth of the gale force
winds, driving rain, ridiculously low hanging clouds, translucent mists
and fog -- visibility was no more than a mile. Was I seeing what I was
seeing I wondered, or just a mirage ... these were no conditions
whatsoever to be flying in, as our shorebirds were attesting to. Who
might the pilot be making this journey in such trying conditions? To
what story does this ghostly flight belong? And just as effortlessly as
its form emerged from the mists, those mists enveloped it again, and the
sky returned to its quiet but for the howl of the wind.
Ian
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