Tuesday, February 26, 2013

2013 My San Diego County Big Year - Weeks 7 & 8



Though I did a little bit of writing I didn’t manage to get out a blog post. Enjoyed the three-day Presidents Day holiday weekend filled with birds and friends.

Feb 12
Black-and-White Warbler
Today I finally had a successful lunchtime trip to the Rancho Santa Fe Polo Field with good looks at the reported Pectoral Sandpiper.  I think was made possible because my wife had joined me which is a rare treat.  Headed to Balboa Park after work and Lady Luck was still on my side: found the wintering Black-and-White Warbler.

Torrey Pines State Beach 

Pectoral Sandpiper, Black-and-White Warbler 

Species to Date – 228


Feb 16
Baltimore Oriole
Back in Balboa Park, but in a different area from where I saw the Black-and-White Warbler earlier in the week, I found myself staring at a tree reported to be a favorite of a Baltimore Oriole.  Sure enough, it arrived at sunrise.  Off to Pantoja Park (again) and this time I was finally able to photograph the Chestnut-sided Warbler that had eluded me many times since its arrival.  What a great start, but the day quickly slowed down after that.  I did add a Green-tailed Towhee before leading a 5-mile walk along the outer dikes of Salt Works.  We had fantastic weather and saw great birds but nothing new for me on the walk or at the few other stops I made afterward before calling it a day.

Balboa Park, Pantoja Park, Tijuana Estuary Visitor Center, Salt Works, Nancy Jane Park, El Cajon Cemetery, J Street Marina

Baltimore Oriole, Chestnut-sided Warbler, Green-tailed Towhee

Species to Date – 231


Feb 17
Manx Shearwater
I joined Jay K and Doug A on Dave P’s boat this morning.  Dave probably has spent more time birding on the water than anyone else I know so it is always a pleasure to be able to join him on his boat.  Along the jetty as we were heading out of San Diego Bay was a Surfbird among all the rocky shorebirds, cormorants and pelicans.  Now the real work was about to start.  We headed south and found a raft of Black-vented Shearwaters and began searching for a very special bird that Dave and a few others had seen earlier in the week.  After looking at what felt like a million birds (we estimated the Black-vented flock at around 200 minimum) Jay called out “look at this one.”  And there it was, sitting on the water right in front of the boat, my lifer Manx Shearwater!  This is mainly an east coast species but every few years a few are seen on the southwest coast of California.  It’s not often that a pelagic chase works out, and in a way this one didn’t.  Even though we went out searching for a previously-reported Manx Shearwater, many people think the one we found is a different individual than the one photographed a few days earlier.

Happy and tired, I went home and took a nap, which I am finding out is a luxury during a Big Year.  When I woke up, my wife surprised me by asking if I wanted to head out to the desert and grab a room. On the way to the hotel in Borrego Springs we made a few stops and I added Purple Finch as a consolation for a missing a different desired species.

Offshore, San Diego Bay, Cuyamaca Mountains

Surfbird, Manx Shearwater, Purple Finch

Species to Date – 234


Feb 18
Western Meadowlark
Close to sunrise my wife and I met Barbara C and Paulette A for some thrasher chasing.  Though resident, these birds are typically very difficult to find unless they are singing and today they were mute.  Maybe we were out a bit early or maybe the nearly-freezing temperature worked against us, but for whatever reason, we didn’t have much luck first thing.  But a bit later Barbara C caught a glimpse of a bird and called everyone over.  All of us heard (and some of us saw) a Le Conte’s Thrasher, the only one of the three thrasher species I had hoped for today.  Despite the disappointment at the lone thrasher, I was cheered somewhat by adding a good number of birds on my first desert trip of the Big Year.

Borrego Springs, Anza-Borrego Desert SP

Black-tailed Gnatcatcher, Verdin, Le Conte’s Thrasher, Sage Sparrow, Gambel’s Quail, Common Ground-Dove, Greater Roadrunner, Great Horned Owl, Northern Rough-winged Swallow, Brewer’s Sparrow, Ladder-backed Woodpecker

Species to Date – 245


Feb 23
Yellow-headed Blackbird
Over the years Jay K has developed a relationship with the Otay Landfill manager, who gives him access to the landfill during the Christmas Bird Count.  He asked if a few of us could go in today to check for any wintering gulls and, although the crews were working, the manager made a special exception for us and we were warmly welcomed.  The clear, sunny and windless day would normally be fantastic weather but such conditions are not what you want when searching inland for special gulls.  We saw one: an immature Thayer’s Gull passed over our heads and continued heading inland, most likely to Lower Otay Lake.  Jay has discovered that the landfill probably holds the largest wintering flock of Tricolored Blackbirds in the area with at least 300 birds and I think we saw each and every one of them.   

After visiting the landfill, Jay and I met up with a friend and headed to the open spaces between Jacumba and the Mexican border but we didn’t find anything of note.  Moving on through Pine Valley and the Cuyamaca Mountains, we found some additional birds including loads of Turkeys foraging out in the fields along the roadside and a handful of Fox Sparrows, a bird that I miss some years due to its habitat choice.

Otay Landfill, Pine Valley, Cuyamaca Mountains, Jacumba

Thayer’s Gull, Yellow-headed Blackbirds, Chipping Sparrow, Wild Turkey, Fox Sparrow

Species to Date –250


Feb 24
Yellow-throated Vireo
Today I wanted to find a Mew Gull.  I’ve been told that they leave early and return late so I shouldn’t expect to find one next winter.  Coronado Beach holds a small population in the winter so I met with Dean T this morning to begin the hunt.  Plenty of Ring-billed Gulls were around as were many Red-throated Loons but no Mew Gull.  Before leaving Coronado we decided to check on a seldom-seen wintering rarity in the   further south, we decided to head north a bit to see if there was a Mew Gull along the San Diego River.  No Mew Gull, but we did find an early-arriving Elegant Tern.  They normally don’t start arriving until after March 1, but last year one was found on February 23 and now we’ve recorded one on February 24.  So far I’ve had a noteworthy day but haven’t found a Mew Gull.  Sometimes that’s just the way birding goes so I have learned to roll with it.

After spending some time in Nestor without finding anything that I wanted, we decided to head up along the Sweetwater River to look at a Eurasian Wigeon and see what else may be around.  The tide was out so we walked further west along the path than I have previously gone and followed the birds that had moved with the lowering water.  I noticed a few smaller gulls sitting in the water and started to scope them when I noticed a small yellow bill.  The Mew Gull!  I got my buddy on the bird then we moved closer.  It permitted us to get directly across from it and seemed unfazed by our presence on the path.  So my lesson is that if you want to find a Mew Gull, you need to stop looking for it and search for something else.
Mew Gull

On the way home I stopped by Lake Miramar where Jay K had found an immature Glaucous-winged Gull and it was sleeping right where he had last seen it.  We usually have a good handful of these birds each winter but this year not too many have been seen this far south.


Coronado, Robb Field, Nestor Park, Sweetwater River, Rohr Park, Lake Miramar, Scripps Ranch Library Pond

Yellow-throated Vireo, Elegant Tern, Western Tanager, Mew Gull, Glaucous-winged Gull

Species to Date - 255

 

For a full list of species seen to date click here

 

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

2013 My San Diego County Big Year - Week 6



Feb 8
The winds were really strong today so at lunch I went to Torrey Pines State Beach in hopes of finding an offshore bird that had been blown towards the shore.  Unfortunately there were very few birds but I did find a lone Caspian Tern.  Not what I had hoped for but a year bird nonetheless, so I didn’t return to the office empty-handed.

Torrey Pines State Beach 

Caspian Tern

Species to Date - 214


Feb 9
Scripps's Murrelet
Yes, a day out on the sea.  I organized a whale & bird watching trip through work.  Many local birders joined my co-workers and friends on a 5-hour trip to the Nine Mile Bank and back.  The seas started out a bit choppy from yesterday’s storm but overall the weather was nice.  Most of the people on the trip were out to look for whales and not only did we find three California Gray Whales, including a newborn calf, but had nice looks at a Humpback Whale.  Those of us on the lucky side of the boat got a nice but brief look at a Fin Whale too.  The bird side of the trip didn’t have any rare birds but I still saw some pelagic birds and added one to my year list.

Little Blue Heron
After getting off the boat I was joined by my wife.  We relocated a Pacific Wren that had moved from its original location in Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery.  The day was winding down so I decided it was time to find a Whimbrel, long overdue for the year list.  Far from being a hard-to-locate bird, I simply had not run across one until we headed down to Robb Field along the San Diego River.  A behavior that I have only seen at this spot was on center stage for my wife.  Some of the Snowy Egrets act like loyal dogs by following right on the heels of people who are tubing for Ghost Shrimp in the mudflats.  They’ve learned that they can get easy treats of tasty shrimp that are missed by the tube pumps and sometimes the people are so amused by a bird’s antics that they throw shrimp right to its bill.

Offshore, Fort Rosecrans, Robb Field

Scripps’s Murrelet, Pacific Wren, Whimbrel

Species to Date - 217


Feb 10
Evening Grosbeak
Today I headed out with Jay K who set the San Diego County Big Year record (again) last year.  Besides being a great guy he’s one hell of a birder blessed with the best ears of anyone with whom I’ve birded.  “You hear that?” he asked me shortly after we arrived in Jacumba.  All I heard were House Finches at the feeder we were watching plus a blackbird or two.  We started walking around the block and he asked me the same question again.  This time I could hear what he was hearing.  Up in the top of a tree was a bird I had spent at least 5 hours searching for in this neighborhood, an Evening Grosbeak!

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron
Off to Pine Valley and we immediately found a flock of at least 60 Band-tailed Pigeons, easily the largest flock I’ve seen in San Diego.

In the Clairemont area of San Diego we found a Harris’s Sparrow that had recently been reported.  This is one species that isn’t found every year in the county so I was pleased with being able to photograph this one.

Earlier in the day we had received a call about a first county record of a bird found near Imperial Beach in the morning.  Unfortunately it had flown immediately after being photographed.  Many birders had spent hours searching for the bird and we decided to head down and join the masses in the Search for the White Wagtail.  We searched in all sorts of locations but no one was able to re-find this rare bird from Asia.  But as a second-place prize I did add three more new species.
Harris's Sparrow

Jacumba, Pine Valley, Clairemont, Imperial Beach

Evening Grosbeak, Red-naped Sapsucker, Black-throated Sparrow, Band-tailed Pigeon, Harris’s Sparrow, Golden-crowned Sparrow, Yellow Warbler, Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, Lawrence’s Goldfinch

Species to Date - 226

 

For a full list of species seen to date

 

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

2013 My San Diego County Big Year - Week 5



Jan 29
White-winged Scoter
After work I headed straight out to Coronado Island in hopes of finding a reported rarity.  My biggest worry was if I could make it there before the sun set.  The traffic goddess was on my side today, allowing me to find the White-winged Scoter feeding not far offshore with enough light to snap a few photos.  Heading home I didn’t mind the rush-hour traffic as much as I normally do.

Glorietta Bay

White-winged Scoter

Species to Date – 208


Feb 2
Ferruginous Hawk
My wife and I started the day by heading out toward the mountains.  Just as we were about to hit the freeway I got a call from Matt S about a bird that had been hidden in a restricted area but was now viewable from the outside perimeter.  So we changed directions, headed south, and ran into a few birders who had just seen the Long-tailed Duck.  Within minutes we had the bird in the scope.  Great way to start off the morning but unfortunately it wasn’t an omen for the rest of the day.
We stopped at a birder’s house in Jacumba and waited around without success for almost an hour and half for the target bird to come in to his feeder.  We spent the rest of today outside of San Diego County missing on another target.

Imperial Beach 13th Street, Jacumba
Prairie Falcon

Long-tailed Duck

Species to Date – 209


Feb 3
Once again my wife and I were at Pantoja Park looking for some reported birds that I had yet to see.  Many other birders were there but the birds stayed hidden. 
Barbara C then joined the two of us and we headed back into the mountains.  We went out through McCain Valley in search of some high-quality birds but unfortunately the reports were fly-by sightings and the birds were nowhere to be found.   Really nice area that I plan on visiting again.  Although I didn’t get the targeted birds, I did add two species to my year list, including a Prairie Falcon.
Townsend's Solitaire
We made another stop in Jacumba and watched the same feeder that attracts the Evening Grosbeak, but only attracts it when I’m not there.  On the way home we made a couple of stops.  The best one was the last, where we were chasing a rumor about a bird that I had never seen in the county.  Just off the freeway there is a nice little canyon that I have driven by many times but never looked into, until today.  The three of us were scouring the canyon when Barbara yelled “BJ, get your scope.”  She quickly got the bird in the scope and when I peered in I saw one of my county nemesis birds, a Townsend’s Solitaire.  What a great way to finish off an otherwise slightly unproductive day.

Pantoja Park, Jacumba, Cuyamaca Mountains, McCain Valley

Phainopepla, Prairie Falcon, Townsend’s Solitaire, Downy Woodpecker

Species to Date - 213

 

For a full list of species seen to date