Thursday, 8 December 2011

Gill Lane, Woodbridge, EWR, December 2011

Today’s walk was curtailed by necessary seasonal preparations and I took just a short walk to allow time to fulfil my retail obligations. Gill Lane in Woodbridge, served from Newark's EWR, slopes gently northwest down towards a railway bridge (Google Earth ref;  40 33 40N 74 18 48W  ). Before the bridge, on the south side, in a damp sump, a small flock of American Robins were feeding from the ground.


 A little copse just here holds a couple of berry trees and more of the thrushes were feasting on the fruit.

The copse proved to be the most productive spot of my short walk with, Northern Cardinal, Tufted Titmouse, Black-capped Chickadee, Dark-eyed Junco and Downy Woodpecker also feeding close by.

Calls from the Blue Jay filled the air as usual and followed me under the bridge and into another copse on the far side, to the right. Carolina Wren showed here as did more juncos and a small flock of White-throated Sparrows.

Further along the road, both sides are taken with cemeteries. Song Sparrows responded well to some pishing in the maintenance area on the left, southwest, side of the road, but stayed back in the rank weeds surrounding the area of moved earth. Unexpectedly, a flock of 14 Goosanders (Common Merganser) flew over.

At the furthest point of the cemeteries, on theright, is an access road that skirts another small, wet wood. More Blue Jays and a Northern Mockingbird were seen here, but the White-tailed Deer that I was expecting did not show until I returned to Gill Lane and spotted them on the far side behind the maintenance sheds (Google Earth ref; 40 33 54N 74 19 19W ).

Birds seen; 20
Goosander 14, Red-tailed Hawk 1, Herring Gull 12, Mourning Dove 3, Red-bellied Woodpecker 3, Downy Woodpecker 2, Carolina Wren 1, Northern Mockingbird 3, American Robin 50, Black-capped Chickadee 1, Tufted Titmouse 1, Blue Jay 15, American Crow 1, Common Starling 500, House Sparrow 8, House Finch 1, American Goldfinch 3, Song Sparrow 6, White-throated Sparrow 3, Northern Cardinal 2.

Other posts from New Jersey and Newark can be found at the links below;
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2009/04/muskrats-and-misdemeanours.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2009/09/newark-woodbridge.html
http://redgannetsdragonflies.blogspot.com/2009/09/newark-woodbridge.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2011/09/merrill-park-new-jersey-sept-2011.html

Visit the dedicated USA and Canada page for more posts from the region


Gill Lane, Woodbridge,  Newark, EWR, December 2011

Saturday, 3 December 2011

Oare Marshes, November 2011

Autumn is closing in on December and the mild weather is predicted to turn wet and cold by the end of the week. The family was committed to school and other irksome duties, so I was able to visit Oare Marshes to look for some photographs to illustrate an upcoming 10,000 Birds post.


Before turning up Church Road to reach the marshes, I took a quick side trip along Oare Creek. A large white heron flew over the car and I tried to find it again to exclude Great White Egret. A leucistic Grey Heron has been seen in the county, but it could also have been a Little Egret and poor depth perception.


 The heron had disappeared so I had to make do with one of the plentiful Black-headed Gulls. The Common Redshanks were being slowly pushed up the banks by the encroaching tide and show well along this lane with the sun usually coming from behind.


Church Road bisects the reserve with the East and West Floods found on their respective sides. A lay by overlooks the East Flood enabling birders to check the small island sanctuaries there that provided roosting spots for European Teal, Common Snipe, Common Ringed Plovers and Dunlin this morning.

The lay-by provides a temporary stop for a quick assessment of the flood before moving to the main car park by the launch ramp. The tide was due to reach its peak at just before midday at a height of 6 meters, so I had a little time to explore the rough grazing meadows of the west flood. Northern Lapwings and European Golden Plovers were roosting in the fields while Ruff actively fed amongst them.


Back at the lay-by and viewing verge I was able to take a more leisurely look and found Cormorant, Shoveler and Pintail on the centre island with Black-tailed Godwit and Avocet in the distance.  More Northern Lapwing were seen with an occasional Grey Plover enhancing the appearance of their Golden Plover kin by comparison.


Three hides allow birders to scan the reserve in comfort and out of the wind. From the East Hide, which, naturally enough looks out onto the East Flood, I noticed a tiny bird in the distance and was able to pin it down as a Little Stint.


The tide was nearly up to the top of the dyke which made me think that a 6 meter tide at Oare is quite a substantial one. There was little to be seen out on The Swale, but a Little Egret, some Common Shelduck and a Eurasian Oystercatcher were seen from Sea Wall Hide.

As the tide began to ebb, small parties of birds set out on sorties to see if any mud had yet become exposed. I positioned myself on the dyke where the birds would pass overhead and tried to get a few shots of them inflight. A delightful picture that presented itself but never quite came to be was the flying birds as they passed in front of the sunlit reeds.


Dunlin, Golden Plover, Common Redshank and Bar-tailed Godwit passed over in small flocks and a few moments later returned when it was plain to them that the tide was still quite high. Sadly, each time they crossed in front of the reeds, the sun went in.


By luck rather than by minute calculation, the first piece of mud to emerge from the water was just on the other side of the dyke and less than 20 meters from where I stood. The birds responded quickly and very soon there was a mixed feeding flock following the rapidly receding water out into Oare Creek.


On returning to the car park by the launch ramp, I took a quick scan across towards Mockett’s. This is a low hill on the Isle of Sheppey, across The Swale. Above the western slope of the hill was a buzzard. Even with a scope it was very distant and I could not discern any plumage details, but Rough-legged Buzzard is often reported from that very spot during the winter. It was holding its position against the wind absolutely perfectly, but it was gliding rather than hovering. I will have to wait for a better sighting before including this one.


Species seen; 45
Little Grebe 6, Great Cormorant 8, Grey Heron 2, Little Egret 2, Mute Swan 2, Greylag Goose 15, Common Shelduck 25, Eurasian Wigeon 4, Mallard 35, Northern Pintail 4, Northern Shoveler 1, Eurasian Marsh Harrier 4, Common Kestrel 1, Common Pheasant 6, Common Moorhen 6, Common Coot 8, Eurasian Oystercatcher 6, Pied Avocet 70, Northern Lapwing 800, European Golden Plover 400, Grey Plover 15, Common Ringed Plover 20, Common Snipe 14, Bar-tailed Godwit 150, European Curlew 1, Common Redshank 500, Ruddy Turnstone 3, Little Stint 1, Dunlin 150 Ruff 40, Common Gull 3, Great Black-backed Gull 2, Herring Gull 15, Black-headed Gull 40, Common Woodpigeon 6, Eurasian Collared Dove 4, Pied Wagtail 3, Dunnock 2, Common Blackbird 3, Jay 1, Eurasian Magpie 4, Rook 70, Common Starling 30, Reed Bunting 2.


To find other posts from Oare Marshes, follow the links below;

Visit the dedicated UK Page for other posts from Kent and the UK.

Monday, 21 November 2011

High Resolution Images from October 2011

High Resolution Images from October 2011
The images in the main blog have been reduced in size to 600 pixels or less across to facilitate quick loading. It goes against all my sensibilities to reduce the resolution, so each month I shall select a few shots that warrant being seen in in hi-res.
These posts may take slightly longer to load, so please be patient.

The links will take you to the original post.

This splendid male Wood Duck was reflected in a small open patch of water in Beaver Lake, Stanley Park, Vancouver.


This Yellow-billed Pintail was seen at the end of the day in the Botanical Gardens in Sao Paulo.

This Common Snipe was one of the few that didn't flush on sight from the shallow ponds at Long Valley, Hong Kong

Other galleries can be found at the dedicated High Resolution page.

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Sheraton Hotel, Lagos, Nov 2011

If this were to be a perfect day, it would have to be sometime next week. Next week, my exams would be over and with any luck this hangover will be gone too! I had left the big camera at home as I knew that if I brought it to Lagos, it would draw the attention of the Security Manager and I would be distracted from my revision.

As it happens, the revision was going fairly well until I noticed ripples coming from a puddle on the flat roof outside my window. Luckily I had packed the small camera and some binoculars, ‘just in case’. The bird hopped up onto the wall and showed itself to be a Shikra. This was just the distraction that I needed and I dropped my books and took myself out to the gardens for a quick once round before dusk.


In the area beyond the razor-wired wall a Double-spurred Francolin stood atop a cinder block wall. Peter told me of the francolins’ habit of burying their eggs, but leaving one above ground to remind them where the nest is. I can’t find any supporting evidence for this, but if anyone has any special knowledge of this bird, it would be interesting to know.


Peter was the security guard who had been tasked to keep an eye on the gardens and he joined me for a lap around the path that serves as a jogging track to some of the more active guests. He did not object to the camera, so I assumed that its smaller size was acceptable.


Birds stayed high and silhouetted, out of range of the Nikon, but some dragonflies stayed put just long enough to have their pictures taken. The one above is a Lucia Widow and below is a potential Red Basker, Urothemis assignata.


Bird Species; 10
Cattle Egret 2, Black Kite 4, Shikra 1, Double-spurred Francolin 1, Red-eyed Dove 2, Laughing Dove 3, Rose-ringed Parakeet 2, Western Grey Plantain-eater 4, Common Bulbul 4, Splendid Glossy Starling 1.
Sheraton Hotel, Lagos, Nigeria, LOS,

Other Lagos posts can be found at the links below;
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2010/05/sheraton-hotel-lagos.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2011/05/sheraton-hotel-in-lagos-just-one-lap.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2010/04/to-pish-or-not-to-pish-dire-warnings.html

Visit the dedicated Africa Page for more posts from Nigeria, West Africa and the continent

Saturday, 12 November 2011

Different day, different boys.

If you participate in a hobby or pastime, it is only natural that you should aspire to reach a level of competence that will enable you to mix and confer with other adherents to your chosen pursuit. Until, that is, you meet ‘Doug’. In every hobby where single, middle-aged men gather together in the spirit of gentle competition to follow a mutual interest, there is a ‘Doug’; someone who raises the bar and makes the most basic concept of competence seem a distant prospect. Doug is an “absurdly good birder” who appears to eat, breathe and talk…and talk and talk birds and birding.

It was a real experience to join him and Corey from 10000 Birds, for a day’s birding along the barrier islands of Long Island. I had sent Corey a wish-list of birds that would enhance my life list and he had enlisted the help of Doug to plan a military-style campaign to wring every potential bird from the day and so it was that I found myself trailing in their wake as we launched an assault on the birds of Sussex, Nassau and Queens Counties, New York. The day passed in a blur. We were in and out of the car, striding along beaches and boardwalks, criss-crossing car parks and county lines, visiting and revisiting sites with a commendable sense of urgency. Do we need the scope? What are we looking for here? Shall I bring the camera? Have I had my breakfast? All this just to find me a few birds; I felt very honoured until I found that this was the normal pace of a walk out with Corey whose outings have been likened to “route-marches”.  

I cannot give directions to any of the sites, as I had no input into where we went or how we got there, but I have identified a few on Google Earth and given the coordinates with each one. Cut and paste the co-ordinates and it's almost like being there yourself.

There was much discussion about where to start, but the decision was made to go to the nearer Jones Beach State Park and look out from the Coast Guard Station there (Google Earth ref; 40 35 23N 73 33 10W). A small sand bar, conveniently located close to a shady pagoda and viewing platform, held a few waders, such as American Oystercatcher, Sanderling and Black-bellied Plover with a few Herring Gulls  and an American (Buff-bellied) Pipit flying over. On the water were plenty of Brant Geese, a couple of Horned Grebes and a Common Loon.

Retracing our steps back past the car and close to the Coast Guard’s gate was a patch of scrub that I heard referred to as the West End. Apparently good for migrants and sparrows, it was well stocked with Song and Savannah Sparrows today with approachable Golden-crowned Kinglets feeding in the verge and grass by the pavement.

Further along at the western-most end of Jones Beach Island, Doug pulled a few Black Scoter females from a flock of Surf Scoters. Looking back, I am ashamed to have questioned him, but he set up the scope and sure enough, the pale cheeks of the female Black Scoters and the more delicate bill were apparent. I suspect that he had finessed them with an experienced eye for size and habit and nevermore did I call his identifications.

To the east is an open air stadium sponsored by Nikon, accessed by an underpass beneath the freeway. A flock of Boat-tailed Grackles were seen here with a female sitting nicely and this may also have been the spot where we saw the Merlin chasing grackles. Nearby but, I think, on the ocean side of the barrier island, a Common Tern was seen at the water’s edge.

Next, on to Robert Moses State Park on Fire Island, characterised by the parkway and some huge parking lots. Doug became very excited by a ringed American Kestrel perched on a sign here.

There is a hawk watching platform (Google Earth Ref; 40 37 49.48N 73 13 29.51W), used to monitor migrating birds of prey and the low scrub and ocean give access to a whole lot of sky to watch, interrupted only by the Fire Island Lighthouse. We approached it along a very birdy boardwalk with more sparrows, House Finch and a Cooper’s Hawk seen from it. The hawk watchers had had very little success, but a Sharp-shinned Hawk passed low as we left.

Perhaps it was about now that we returned to the Coast Guard station to check the sand bar again. The tide had been coming in all morning and was nearing its highest point now, bringing lots of wading birds in with it. The bar was now covered with birds.

Dunlin, Red Knot, American Oystercatchers and Black-bellied Plovers were especially abundant with a single Marbled Godwit and a few Semi-palmated Sandpipers. Doug called a Western Sandpiper which accommodatingly went to roost beside the Semi-palmated and I am sure that the differences are obvious to the trained eye. Actually, I had to ask and found that the slightly bigger Western Sandpiper (on the left) roosts with a slightly more upright posture than the Semi-palmated Sandpiper.

These two images were digiscoped, a discipline that I have yet to master, but thanks to Corey for giving me a go. I tried and failed to get a shot of Doug’s Yellow-billed Cuckoo that came in off the water into the bush at the top of the sand bar.
We may have achieved a sub and a drink on the go before reaching a rather fetching salt marsh, the Marine Study Nature Area (Google Earth ref; 40 37 11N 73 37 16W), with a boardwalk running through it. We were hoping for some Ammodramus sparrows here, but had to content ourselves with some Brant Geese and a Great Egret. The theory as I understood it is that the sparrows would be driven to the dry ground in the margins as the tide flooded the salt marsh, but we may have missed the top of the tide and the sparrows could have retreated back into the long grasses.

And so onto Fort Tilden (Google Earth ref; 40 33 55N 73 53 05W) with an eye for a Vesper Sparrow. One had been seen recently in the community gardens, or allotments as they would be known in the UK, but it appeared to have moved on. Corey published a couple of pictures of the said chunky sparrow on 10000 Birds and I could recognise the stump and the car on which it had posed for him, but of the bird itself, there was not a feather to be seen.  An overgrown patch close by was popular with the Song and Savannah Sparrows again with a Northern Cardinal putting in a brief appearance too. Corey had found some White-footed Mice under some corrugated moulding and in so doing added Peromyscus leucopus to my mammals list.

In what proved to be my favourite part of the day we stopped at the southwest corner of Fort Tilden, looking out to sea. Close in were a few more Black Scoter and I was able to get a good look at the yellow-knobbed bill of the male. There were three species of scoter flying by further out and Doug happily called my attention to a slightly smaller bird here or a more defined line and pattern of flight there to indicate the differences between them. One day, one day.

The light was fading now and Corey made a last dash for Jamaica Bay’s West Pond where a good head of Ruddy Duck was seen. Other species mixed amongst them included a Shoveler, an American Wigeon, Greater Scaup, Pintail, some Bufflehead and some Red-breasted Mergansers. Laughing Gulls were seen in higher numbers here than at any time during the day and a huge flock of Boat-tailed Grackles came to roost in the reeds.
I am indebted to Corey for inviting me along, organising the day and driving us around and to Doug for his boundless expertise. Thanks for a great day out guys. The list below reflects only my misty memory of the numbers of birds seen and is certainly wildly inaccurate. Doug took copious notes during the day which I had hoped to cheat from, but forgot to ask at the end of a long day. To separate the sites with a list for each would be impossible at this stage with no notes, so the whole day has been melted into one big list.
Species seen; 73
Red-throated Diver 1, Great Northern Diver 4, Horned Grebe 2, Northern Gannet 80, Double-crested Cormorant 80, Great Egret 1, Black-crowned Night Heron 1, Mute Swan 4, Canada Goose 50, Brent Goose 2000, American Wigeon 1, Gadwall 4, Green-winged Teal 2, Mallard 25, American Black Duck 60, Northern Pintail 3, Northern Shoveler 1, Greater Scaup 600, Common Eider 1, Black Scoter 8, Surf Scoter 150, White-winged Scoter 6,Bufflehead 10, Red-breasted Merganser 30, Ruddy Duck 3400, Sharp-shinned Hawk 1, Cooper’s Hawk 2, American Kestrel 1, Merlin 2, Peregrine Falcon 1, American Coot 20, American Oystercatcher 370, Grey Plover 60, Marbled Godwit 1, Willet 2, Red Knot 330, Sanderling 50, Semi-palmated Sandpiper 2, Western Sandpiper 1, Dunlin 500, Ring-billed Gull 15, Great Black-backed Gull 15, Herring Gull 60, Laughing Gull 35, Common Tern 1, Mourning Dove 2, Yellow-billed Cuckoo 1, Downy Woodpecker 2, Northern Flicker 1, Eastern Phoebe 3, Tree Swallow 150, Buff-bellied Pipit 1, Northern Mockingbird 6, Eastern Bluebird 1, American Robin 12, Hermit Thrush2, Golden-crowned Kinglet 15, American Crow 20, Common Starling 150, House Sparrow 8, House Finch 2, Yellow-rumped Warbler 12, Palm Warbler 2, Chipping Sparrow 4, Savannah Sparrow 8, Song Sparrow 25, White-throated Sparrow 15, Dark-eyed Junco 26, Snow Bunting 1, Northern Cardinal 1, Red-winged Blackbird 15, Boat-tailed Grackle 450, Common Grackle 15.

Actually, I have just found how to access Doug’s notes from e-bird www.ebird.org but if I compare what I recall with what he recorded I begin to wonder if we were looking in the same direction, so I have selected a few pertinent counts and relied on my own inadequate memory for the rest.

To find more posts from New York, New York; follow the links below;
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2009/03/hooded-merganzer-lophodytes-cucullatus.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2009/10/central-park-new-york.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2010/03/approach-to-broad-channel-train-station.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2010/04/central-park-new-york-new-york.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2011/01/out-of-towners-central-park-new-york.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2011/06/central-park-new-york-xena-and.html
http://redgannet.blogspot.com/2011/08/new-york-new-york-so-good-they-sent-me.html

Visit the dedicated USA and Canada page for more from the continent of North America

JFK, New York, Jones Beach State Park, Black Scoter