Archive for the ‘Magee Marsh’ Category

SEEING RED

May 17, 2014

The Magee Marsh Boardwalk today was alive with feeding warblers as weather and insect activity brought nearly all predators down to lower levels of the forest. Most surprising were the scads of Scarlets who came down with them…Scarlet Tanagars at about fifteen feet above the ground.
SCARL-BEST

SCARL JUMP

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Our PIB tour group got twenty species of warbler in addition to many fine views of both male and female Scarlet tanagers during our hours on the Magee Marsh Boardwalk today. Magnolia, Bay-breasted and Blackburnian Warblers drew gasps of appreciation. When two Blackburnians appeared near one another I commented it was a conflagration of Blackburnians (with their flame-colored throats).

May 16, 2014

Spring here in northwest Ohio comes in many shades, from gray to grass green to brilliant red. Here are a few:
CARD-TITTufted Titmouse and Cardinal share feeder.

GRND-HOGGroundhog, known also as woodchuck. How much wood wuld a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? We await the answer.

GW-WARB1Golden-winged Warbler at Wildwoods Metropark in Toledo area. This disappearing warbler is the central figure in a conservation program headed by American Bird Conservancy.

RBWOOD1 Red-bellied Woodpecker, which has no red belly.
SOLI-SAND2Solitary Sandpiper, Ottawa NWR.

BAOR-1 Baltimore Oriole, Magee Marsh.P2000670Indigo Bunting male, Oak Openings Preserve.

All these birds seen in the first two days of the Partnership for International Birding Trip, co-sponsored by Golden Gate Audubon, to northwest Ohio for spring migration. So far we have 109 species for the two days and over 20 species of warblers seen.

KETTLES ON; KIDDIES OUTTA THE POOL

May 14, 2014

P2000598There was a kettle of immature Bald Eagles over Pointe Mouillee just south of Detroit this morning. When I first saw this phenomenon I could not imagine what was up:

BE KTTL1At one time there were six of them circling and swooping about. BE KETTLE2

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One of the eagles had a duck or coot and the others were hoping to make a steal. Here’s the successful predator carrying its prey.
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OKAY, KIDS, OUT OF THE WATER:CAGO-FAM1

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Northern Rough-winged Swallow:
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Osprey on nest, Pointe Mouillee
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Tomorrow we begin the PIB trip to northwestern Ohio, co-sponsored by Golden gate Audubon.

OAKS OPENINGS, LAPLAND AND MISSISSIPPI

May 9, 2014

Oaks openings sounds like a twee name for a 3600-acre open space preserve, but once you start birding there it could be named “Walmart” and you wouldn’t care. Great spring birding. Warblers included Canada, Wilson’s, Chestnut-sided. And these guys, as well:

btb-airBlack-throated Blue in the air, showing large white wing bars.

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bay 2Bay-breasted Wasrbler along creek in Oaks Openings.

bay-brstd1Baltimore Oriole male.
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gartr-2garter snakertwood-up2Red-headed Woodpecker,

gc thrsh Gray-cheeked Thrush at Oaks Openings.

LAPPIE FEMLLapland Longspur along Krause road where there was small flock of six, three of each gender.
In this picture note the male to the far left, with pale yellow beak.
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American Golden Plovers, part of flock of thirteen, seen along Krause Road west of Ottawa NWR.
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Rarest bird we saw all day was Mississippi Kite flying over Ottawa NWR late in the day. There are only two previous confirmed sightings in this part of Ohio for that species.

BIGGEST WEEK, DAY #1

May 7, 2014

Today was the opening of the Biggest Week in American Birding festival here inn northwest IowaOhio. The four of us from Partnership for International Birding and Neblina Tours of Ecuador have already seen 110 species. Some samples:uppy-1Evenb here the increasingly scarce Upland Sandpiper is considered a good fine. These two were walking in the grass along the road margin today. Winter here has lingered and the birds could find grass tall enough to hide in.

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bhvi-tu6Blue-headed Vireo, the eastern counterpart of our western Cassin’s Vireo.

C-S WAR1 Chestnut-sided Warbler gives me the eye.

eaki-1-2014Eastern Kingbird

eso-2014aYou know how much I love owls if you read my blogs. Eastern version of Screech-Owl.

oven1Ovenbird feeding on the forest floor.

puma sitzPurple Martin atop martin housing development at Ottawa NWR. They are big and aggressive e enough to drive off the real estate greedy House Sparrows.

swth-tu2014Swainson’s Thrush along the Magee Marsh boardwalk. All these birds are within a mile of the south shore of Lake Erie where the winds comes whipping off the waves.

TIS THE SEASON

March 30, 2014

HOUS-SHPPING
It’s not just about the nest box, but where that nest box is placed. This one happens to be in a patch of oak savannah at about 3000 in the western foothills of the Oregon Cascades. It’s surrounded by open meadow and rolling hills that drop sharply down to a year-round stream. No humans live within a mile of the place and it’s back from the highway. No pesticides, no toxics. Just the sort of neighborhood where you’d raise your family if you were a bluebird.
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This nest box is on the fence of a tiny garden behind a row of town houses. It faces a busy sidewalk next to a busier parking lot adjacent to a dog park full of noise-making carnivores. Just the sort of avian slum where you’d expect the hardscrabble House Sparrow to eke out a living on bread crumbs and seeds.
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This drumming Red-breasted Sapsucker is still advertising for a mate. House-hunting will come later.
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This pair of Flickers seem well-matched. She sits up and listens to his drumming. What more could a male Flicker ask for? And later in the day I saw them checking out nest holes in Lithia Park, Ashland, Oregon. Location, location…
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GHO-NESTING1 (1280x960) Look carefully to the left of the female Great Horned Owl. You’ll see the round, white head of an owlet and its dark eye-rings. This is at least the fourth straight year a pair of GHOs have used this nest near Ashland. Whoever first built that nest did a great job; owls don’t build their own nests but “borrow” or squat in what they can find.
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PIB will be present at the Magee Marsh bird festival again in early May. Here are some nest pictures fro last year. This female Woodcock nested in a weedy strip along one side of the very busy parking lot.
woodcock nestShortly after they hatched before a group of wondering birders, mother Woodcock led her quartet of newly dried fuzz-balls into the nearby Magee Marsh woods where they quickly vanished from view.P1570600

Finding a place to raise your children is always emotional. This pair of Ohio Tree Swallows is a case in point.TRSW SCREAM

And, finally, this location seems perfect for Great Blue Herons. It’s at least the third straight year the nest has been used. It sits high in a cottonwood above Neil Creek, facing Oak Knoll Golf Course southeast of Ashland.

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HERE IN ASHLAND, OREGON, THE KLAMATH BIRD OBSERVATORY IS SPONSORING OUR FIRST-EVER MOUNTAIN BIRD FESTIVAL. IT IS MAY 30-JUNE 1. WHITE-HEADED WOODPECKER, CALLIOPE HUMMINGBIRD, WESTERN SCREECH-OWL, SANDHILL CRANES ON NESTING GROUNDS, BOTH EAGLES, NESTING OSPREY, ACORN & LEWIS’S WOODPECKERS, MOUNTAIN BLUEBIRD AND CHICKADEE, HERMIT AND MACGILLIVRAY’S WARBLER, CASSIN’S FINCH AND VIREO, BAND-TAILED PIGEON, BLACK TERN, RED-BREASTED AND WILLIAMSON’S SAPSUCKERS, GREEN-TAILED TOWHEE, LAZULI BUNTING, AMERICAN DIPPER, WRENTIT, TOWNSEND’S SOLITAIRE–SOME OF THE BIRDS WE EXPECT TO SEE. WITH A LITTLE BIRDING MOJO WE CAN ADD GREAT GRAY OWL, SOOTY GROUSE, MOUNTAIN QUAIL, NORTHERN PYGMY-OWL, SWAINSON’S HAWK, EVENING GROSBEAKAND NORTHERN GOSHAWK.