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February 27, 2006

L.G.B.'s (Little Green Birds)

Painted Bunting (f)
Painted Bunting (f) Friday was the first day that I noticed her at the mixed seed feeder though I only got a fleeting glimpse. I had suspicions, but she got away before I had the chance to get some magnification on her. It was the same the next couple of days: a quick glimpse then off to the bushes not to be seen again that day. Later in the day on Sunday I saw another LGB fly into the oaks on the east side of my property which cast a little doubt on the ID of the LGB I'd been seeing at the feeder because there was not doubt on my mind that LGB #2 was an American Goldfinch. WIng bars were the clue there.

This morning LGB #1 showed up again and this time I got a look with some magnification: Female Painted Bunting! First PABU that I'd seen in the yard in 2 years. (The pic is a PABU, just not the one has been visiting the house the last few days - click on her for a larger view.)

Update Fri. March 3 - Had 2 females at the feeder this morning right at sunrise. They'll probably be gone by the time I get back from Homer, AK . . .

February 24, 2006

The Hawk & The Egret

The other day a co-worker came walking up with a stack of prints saying "You've got to see these!" I took them from his hand and reached for my reading glasses because at first I wasn't quite sure if I was seeing what I thought I was seeing. Truth be told, the objects of my attention on the first print I looked at couldn't have been more that 3/8" tall - not much area in something as small as a 4x6 print. There were four in the series and this one was the closest of them:

Hawk and Cattle Egret
The Hawk and the Egret (photo courtesy Daytona Beach International Airport - click to view large)
After closer inspection I was able to determine that the victim was a Cattle Egret. That was the easy part. I still haven't come to a final decision as to who the predator is and had been leaning towards juvenile Cooper's Hawk but there are just some things about it that don't fit. I've checked most of the resources I have available and the best I can come up with now is a Red-shouldered Hawk that is possibly in an intermediate molt (from juvenile to adult, perhaps?). Time to ask the experts, no?

It was a couple of days before the airport came to pick their photos up and, when they did, I asked permission to use them here on the blog. I think they must have been taken with a cheapo point-and-shoot with 800 speed film since they are terribly grainy under about 10X magnification. Needless to say I wish I coud have been there to see this with a long telephoto. Here's a tight crop from the full frame image above:


Hawk and Cattle Egret

The Hawk and the Egret Cropped

You know, it is not the least bit difficult to imagine a Cattle Egret being taken by a Bald Eagle.

But this?

Nature never ceases to amaze.

February 19, 2006

Island #3 - They're Back!

Island #3 (click to view larger)
Island #3 (click to view larger)
Port Orange is just south of Daytona Beach and one of the fastest growing cities in Volusia County, Florida. The main east-west route is Dunlawton Avenue and at the eastern end if you continue driving you'll wind up in the Atlantic Ocean. Before you get wet, however, you will have to cross the Port Orange Bridge. And just a few hundred feet south of the bridge, clearly visible as you travel eastbound, lies a mangrove island known on the charts of the Intracoastal Waterway as Island #3. Beneath the bridge is Causeway Park where you will find fishermen, boaters and, five or six times each Fall, Winter, and Spring, a fairly large collection of birders attending an outing with Halifax River Audubon.

It is a pretty good place to bird, really. On any given day one can easily bank on upwards of 20 species and not even have to move from from the spot where you are standing. The best days are when the tide is low and the sandbar west of Island #3 is exposed. Great, Snowy, Reddish, and Cattle Egrets. Great Blue, Little Blue, Tricolored, and Green Heron. Both Night-herons are possible, on rare occasions a Spoonbill will fly over. White Ibis, Brown Pelican, Double-crested Cormorants, sometimes an Anhinga. Willets, Turnstones, Black-bellied Plovers, American Oystercatchers. Laughing, Ring-billed, Herring, and occasional Bonaparte's Gulls. Royal, Caspian, Forster's, and Least Terns. Common Loon and Red-breasted Merganser. Toss in a few passerines: Red-winged Blackbirds, Boat-tailed Grackles; Cardinals, Mockingbirds, and, in Winter, Palm & Yellow-rumped Warblers. On a really lucky day you might see a Bald Eagle snatch something off the island (once one flew off with a Snowy Egret!). Or maybe see a Peregrine dining on a hapless gull.

Brown Pelicans on Island #3
Brown Pelicans on Island #3 (click to view large)

The island itself has been a rookery for as long as anyone around here can remember. I'm told it began life as a spoil island which was, luckily for the birds and birders alike, overcome by Red Mangrove. Brown Pelicans and Great Egrets seemed to rule the roost, nesting side-by-side on the upper branches of the mangroves. Beneath them were Snowy Egrets, Tricolored Herons, Little Blues, Cattle Egrets, and White Ibis. A shell bar extending out from the north side would always find a few nesting Oystercatchers each spring.

In late summer of last year something very interesting was discovered about Island #3 when a little known fact about it came to light: In 1961 this little island (along with some other islands in the Halifax River to the south) were officially declared the Port Orange Wildlife Sanctuary. Many current members of Halifax River Audubon were ecstatic over this bit of news - especially in light of the fact that a huge condo was being planned just to the west of the island. The existence of the sanctuary may not ultimately affect construction of the condos, but may at least slow things up (like we need another multi-story eyesore around the area). Led by conservation chair David Hartgrove, the chapter was working with the City of Port Orange, Volusia County, and the state's Division of Inland Waterways to get signs erected about the Sanctuary. All the parties involved seem to be supportive of these efforts.

Then along came the Christmas Bird Count and David discovered something very disturbing: Island #3 had been totally abandoned. Not a bird in sight - at least as far as the island itself was concerned. There were still birds around but they were avoiding the island like the plague. A little research turned up a few raccoon tracks though that hardly seemed like it would be enough to drive hundreds (if not thousands) of birds away. Various experts were contacted but no real answers were forthcoming. This was late December.

Brown Pelican on nest
On the Nest - Island #3 (click to view large)
Around the end of January a few Great Egrets suddenly began to return and establish nesting territories. Over the next couple of weeks their numbers increased. Slowly. In mid-February a few Brown Pelicans began to appear, but then they seemed to go away for a couple of days before returning again. Yesterday I decided to check again (as I have every few days for nearly 2 months) and what I found was an island practically covered from one end to the other with Great Egrets, Cormorants, and Brown Pelicans. I cannot say if the return of the birds is (or ever will be) complete since I haven’t been there at the right time of day to see White Ibis or Cattle Egrets flying to or from the island in flocks of 100 as they often do.I keep telling myself that it is a little early for them to nest so they may stay away a little longer. Time will tell.

It is nice to know that in this area - where habitat is disappearing as fast as you can say "stop the sprawl" - something has been set aside for the birds. At least for the time being, anyway.

February 18, 2006

Etc.

First a couple of bird watching notes: It has been an odd winter for me regarding migrants. I didn't see many this fall and, except for a huge flock I saw during the Christmas Bird Count, I've seen very few Robins. That is until a couple of days ago. When the last cold front moved through I saw several hundred southbound as I stood in my yard. Then, yesterday, while walking the dog I saw another huge flock (again in the hundreds) in some trees near the park where we were hanging out. At least until the falcon ran them off. Unfortunately I had only a fleeting glimpse - it was probably a Kestrel but can't rule out Merlin (I'll never know the answer to that mystery). This morning Robins were moving north over my house - easily over 1,000 of them!

This evening I was on my way to the store when I caught sight of a black and white bird next to a pond as I drove past and was completely baffled. I turned back around, stopped in a legal but precarious spot next to the curb and immediately realized that I had never seen a Hooded Merganser out of the water before today though I easily seen hundreds of them. His "hood" was down which is not exactly unusual, what had thrown me was the white feathers on its breast. I'll know next time.

Traveling around the blogosphere I happened upon a new one for me, Crows Really Are Wise, an interesting and informative blog written by an ornithologist. The newest entry when I visited was a great piece, Wind Farms and Migratory Birds which is all about a plan to place wind farms off the Texas Gulf Coast - right in the path of northbound Neotropical migrants. Going back through previous posts I found one titled How did bird migration evolve?. This blog isn't totally about birds, either; the Wise Crow also writes about music (like this piece about Jackson Browne) and other topics. Take a look when you have the chance . . .

February 13, 2006

Black-backed Gulls

A ride down the beach south of Daytona yesterday afternoon yielded hordes of gulls - mostly Ring-billed, Laughing, and Herring - including several Great Black-backed and one possible 1st year Lesser Black-backed (LBBG). I say possible because "Lessers" are not a common gull for this part of the world and, in first year plumage, can be difficult because they are similar in size to the much more common Herring Gull (HERG). From the 2nd year on the Lessers have yellow legs making them easier to distinguish from the Herring which have pinkish legs as do the 1st year Lessers. The only field mark that really sets them apart is the "dirty" white head on the Lesser, the Herring Gulls being more uniformly brown all over.

Gulls can be either "3-year" or "4-year" depending upon how long it takes them to reach adult plumage (and sexual maturity). I was able to find 3 different winter plumages of Greater Black-backed Gulls on this outing and have included them here. The only one I did not see was the 3rd winter plumage, given more time and more beacch it would have been nice to get that one too. The "Greats" really stand out in the crowd because of their sheer size - they are about 2/3's the size of a Bald Eagle at 30" in length. They also seemed to be less tolerant of humans approaching with long telephoto lenses than the rest of the gulls and frustrated me a couple of times when they bolted before I got the shot . . .
1st winter Great Black-backed Gull
Great Black-backed Gull, 1st Winter plumage.

2nd winter Great Black-backed Gull
Great Black-backed Gull, 2nd Winter plumage.

Adult Great Black-backed Gull
Great Black-backed Gull, Adult plumage.

1st Winter Lesser Black-backed Gull
Lesser Black-backed Gull, 1st Winter plumage.

For comparison here's a first Winter Herring Gull:
1st Winter Herring Gull
Herring Gull, 1st Winter plumage.

February 11, 2006

Not Looking Back

After last year's Daytona 500 I vowed to concentate fully on nature photography and said I wouldn't be going back. I skipped last summer's races and, though I felt a touch of nostalgia listening to cars practice for the Rolex 24, I don't miss a thing.

As it turned out, back in December when I decided to lead a workshop at Fort DeSoto I didn't even realize that the Rolex was scheduled the same weekend. And the workshop was far more rewarding personally than any race could have been. I really enjoyed myself - not that I haven't before on other workshops but this was (by far) the largest group with which I'd worked.
fote7894.jpg
Forster's Tern landing at Fort DeSoto Park

I'm looking forward to Alaska in just a few weeks and the chance to do it again. Before then I'll be judging bird photos at the Southeast Volusia Camera Club for their monthly competition, teaching more Photoshop for the Shores Camera Club, and, on the 28th, giving a presentation of Beautiful Nature, Beautiful Music at West Volusia Audubon. Just a few of the things I enjoy doing (just ask anyone what happens when I start talking about photography or birds).

While I'd much rather be out in the field with my camera today, I'll just sit here at my computer working on assorted projects - cozy, warm, and, most importantly, dry - instead of being at the speedway running for cover in a cold February rain. Nope, don't think I'll miss it one bit.

February 07, 2006

Here We Go Again . . .

The first email has arrived - this one from The Wilderness Society - and I'm sure my inbox will be flooded over the next couple of days with more. Just a week after his big speech in which he talked about America's addiction to oil and the need to develop energy alternatives, Mr. Bush has submitted his budget request to Congress. In it he asks for funding to - you can probably guess this one - drill in the Arctic National WIldlife Refuge. WTF?

I just don't get it. Is there a test given to Republicans who run for office and they are asked if they understand the word "no"? And if they reply in the affirmative they are not allowed to run?

Ever since Jimmy Carter established the refuge the Repugnants - led by tha old dinosaur Senator Ted Nelson of Alaska - have been trying to push this through. And every time they get swamped with calls and letters, hounded by lobbyists, and, when the American people are asked in polls, ignore the something like 70% who keep saying "NO!" Whatever happened to the "will of the people" in such matters?

The part that makes me laugh is that anyone with half a brain would realize that, even if it were to pass, millions of dollars will almost certainly be spent by the Justice Department (courtesy of taxpayers like you and me) defending against the spate of lawsuits that will be filed (either jointly or individually) by every environmental group from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Millions of dollars that would be better spent in the search for alternative energy sources. What a concept.

With that in mind I have a couple of requests:

First, contact your Senators and Congressperson and tell them you don't want a provision for drilling in ANWR in any bill they pass.

Second, do not purchase products from Exxon/Mobil. They are the only major oil company that currently supports Arctic Power, the lobbying group that keeps pressure on Congress to drill in the refuge (among a multitude of other sins committed by Exxon/Mobil). If you need more reasons to avoid this company visit the ExxposeExxon website.

Thanks!

(This is such a hot issue with me that I've posted it in on both blogs . . . )

February 06, 2006

What Birds?

A trip to Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge yesterday was about the least productive, photographically speaking, I've ever experienced there. Couple that with the lack of birds at the Fort DeSoto workshop and it almost has me wondering where they all went since they don't seem to be in the normally reliable places I visit. In the case of Merritt though it may be that it was quite windy, cool, and there was a lot of traffic on Blackpoint Wildlife Drive.

The one positive if I were much of a 'lister" is that I saw my first ever Snow Goose in the state of Florida. They are rare here, somehow getting lost while migrating. It was hanging out for the most part in a raft of coots, not well placed for decent photography either. Here it is anyway:

(click for a larger view)