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Tue, 13 Jul 2010 16:18:05 -0400 |
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I'd planned to be at Dead Creek from 9ish until 11 - but couldn't
leave till almost 2:00. The BOD (Bird of the Day) was actually four:
first one, then three, then four Short-billed Dowitchers in the same
binocular frame! The first one confused me because it was much more
reddish than any I’d ever seen, with the red extending farther down
the belly than I thought was right for Short-Billeds. However, three
of us soon agreed that they were indeed Short-Billeds. (Thanks to
Kyle Rosenblad for finding the first bird, and to him and Peter
Manship for helping with identification.)
There’s a great deal of mud between the main road and the Brilyea
Bridge, so shorebirding might just keep getting better and better.
Other birds feeding on the mud flats today:
Many Killdeer, possibly as many as two dozen
At least 2 Spotted Sandpipers
At least 2 Greater Yellowlegs
At least 7 Lesser Yellowlegs
At least 6 Semipalmated Sandpipers
At least 12 Least Sandpipers
A few distant and quickly-glimpsed mysteries – including a possible
Solitary Sandpiper
Larry Haugh helped me determine that what looked like a fuzzy
Semipalmated Plover was an immature Killdeer. The picture of the
downy young killdeer in the big Sibley guide is perfect.
Also seen (starting with birds that elicited a “wow”, “yay” or “what
the…???” response)
One lone Snow Goose visible from the viewing area on Route 17
4 Caspian Terns – one adult, two juveniles, and one undetermined
1 immature Common Merganser – probably – The bird didn’t hang around
for long.
1 Brown Thrasher enjoying an energetic dust bath
1 Red-tailed Hawk with something in its talons, being chased by
several furious red-winged blackbirds
2 Osprey
2 Great Blue Herons
Marsh Wrens – as always, audible but invisible
2 American Black Ducks
6 Mallards
Ring-billed Gulls
Herring Gulls
Mourning Dove
Eastern Kingbird
Warbling Vireo
American Crow
Common Raven
Tree Swallow
Barn Swallow
American Robin
Gray Catbird
European Starling
Yellow Warbler
Common Yellowthroat
Savannah Sparrow
Song Sparrow
Northern Cardinal
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
American Goldfinch
House Sparrow
This list has been entered in eBird.
Maeve Kim
Jericho Center
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