Thursday, May 24, 2012

5th May

Up early this morning, which was to be rather a feature of this week come to think of it. We grabbed a coffee in the foyer and drove the short distance up to the Fire House Woods at Braddock Bay, ready for the expected warbler fest! Maybe we'd been building this up a bit too much though. Although there were some nice things to see here, including Warbling Vireo and Northern Flicker, as well as our existing warbler trip trio of Yellow, Yellow-rumped and Palm, there were otherwise thin pickings. OK, so maybe it was not all that easy.

We then drove the short distance along to Island Cottage Woods. This also required some work, but eventually there were some rewards for our efforts. After notching up a few trip ticks like Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Red-bellied Woodpecker, Black-and-White Warbler and Blue-grey Gnatcatcher, I eventually scored with four lifers: Swamp Sparrow (not great views though), Magnolia Warbler (brief, but bibrosalo!), Black-throated Green Warbler (also brief) and Brown Creeper (yawn). I also found a Great Crested Flycatcher ("wheep") and tons more Yellow-rumped, including the confiding individual photographed here.

So, a bit of success and we went back to the hotel for a surprisingly crap breakfast! Then out again up to Braddock State Park. The Cranberry Trail was also not dripping with birds, but some fine Red-bellied WPs, Yellowthroat and a tick Least Flycatcher. Back by the raptor count platform we had a useful chat with Luke Tiller who gave us loads of useful gen - thanks Luke. Raptor passage was very slow today (just a few TVs) but other local birds included Northern Harrier, Bald Eagle, Caspian Tern, Brown Thrasher (only one of the trip), Swamp Sparrow, Northern Mockingbird, American Kestrel, Eastern Kingbird, Bonaparte's Gull and Field Sparrow. A Camberwell Beauty (aka Mourning Cloak) was also seen.

One good bit of gen of Luke's was where the nearest shop was for drinks and chocolate, i.e. at the end of the road, so we headed up there, stocked up and looked out onto Lake Ontario. We were somewhat surprised to see loads of Long-tailed Ducks and Red-breasted Mergansers as well as Great Northern Diver and Slavonian Grebe (also known as ... oh forget it, this is an English blog!) I was also interested to see lots of Red Dead-nettle and Ground-ivy, which I presumed were probably introduced weeds. [Googling just now, I presumed right!] After this we went off to check out our planned motel for the night, at Brockport, although we got somewhat misdirected by a roadsign for a B&B which apparently didn't exist.

Anyway, after checking out the motel for the night, which looked fine (and far less fancy and expensive than Rochester), we headed back up to the coast. First stop was a jetty on the north side of Braddock Bay, where we added Forster's and Common Terns (good opportunity to compare them!), along with a pair of Lesser Scaup and a Ring-necked Duck. We then birded the West Spit at the mouth of the bay. Late afternoon and fairly quiet, but we did manage to identify (somewhat by process of elimination) our only Prairie Warbler of the trip, plus two mega-skulky Lincoln's Sparrows, another Luke tip, and a useful one. The next Luke tip was somewhat less spectacular though - he'd told us of three restaurants nearby at Salmon Creek. We ended up a Nick Tahoe's which is apparently legendary for being dangerous, as well as dreadful food. We survived, but the food was very slow in arriving, and rather rubbish. Not only this, but I failed to exploit a perfect opportunity to employ the legendary Rick Andrews beer line (Waitress: "do you want a pitcher of beer"; Customer: "no it's OK, we know what beer looks like"). Feeble of me, I blame lack of sleep.

Eventually, the food arrived, we bolted down what we could stomach, then legged it up to the Owl Woods at dusk. We yomped through the woods to the open area (where they catch raptors for banding, and where we indulged in the apparently traditional pursuit of tripping over the strings...) A guy here told us how there'd been 8-9 Whip-poor-wills the previous night, but these had obviously continued migrating. However, we couldn't really complain on seeing a perched/flying Great Horned Owl, 3+ crazily displaying American Woodcocks, and hearing a single (but ultra-distinctive) burst from a Whip-poor-will. Fantastic stuff. We returned to the car and drove to the motel to crash out.

Trip list 97: lifers 10 today, 15 total.


Baltimore Oriole, Cranberry Trail - pretty, maybe a bit too gaudy?!

Northern Flicker, Fire House Woods

Question Mark Polygonia interrogationis (I think), Cranberry Trail

Yellow-rumped Warbler, Island Cottage Woods - one of my favourite birds!



Sunday, May 20, 2012

4th May

Big overseas trips don't happen to me very often, so definitely worth one blog post per day. I was travelling with BTO colleagues Andy Clements, Iain Downie and Karen Wright to visit our US counterparts at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology in Ithaca, upstate New York on a three-day fact-finding mission. However, we'd allowed ourselves a couple of extra days at either end for sampling some New England spring birding. Warblers were very much the target!

We flew Heathrow to Detroit, watching The Big Year on the way to get us in the mood. At Detroit, just picked up a few Purple Martins, Barn Swallows and Starlings around the terminal, then three Killdeers as we taxied along the runway again to make the much shorter hop to Syracuse. From here, we picked up a hire car and set off west again, noting a few common species along the way, including Turkey Vulture, Osprey and Great Blue Heron amongst others; also a few Groundhogs by Syracuse airport, of which we saw very few more later on.

In about an hour we made it to Montezuma National Refuge, at the north end of Cayuga Lake. We were to be coming here later in the week, but it was a good stop-off, and an opportunity to get some birding under our belts before dark. As would be expected, a fair blizzard of birds proving almost overwhelming at first - so many alien sounds! I had recorded most of the species elsewhere previously, although it was great to reacquaint myself with Cedar Waxwings, Tree and Rough-winged Swallows, Song Sparrows, Eastern Bluebird, Yellow Warbler and White-crowned Sparrow. Baltimore Oriole was my first lifer of the trip - these proved to be common during the week, but always spectacular. The second tick was a real lucky one though; I picked up two American Bitterns in an extended flight across the huge reedbeds here - brilliant!

There were some decent pools with a selection of waterbirds. Amongst numerous Green-winged and Blue-winged Teals, there were a few American Wigeon and a single female Bufflehead. Waders included mostly Lesser Yellowlegs and Dunlin, but also a single Greater Yellowlegs, several Spotted Sands, two Pecs and two long-overdue lifers: Least Sandpiper and Solitary Sandpiper. Other good birds along the wildlife drive included Northern Harrier, Double-crested Cormorants, Belted Kingfisher, Bald Eagle, Pied-billed Grebe, Wood Duck and Marsh Wren. A few Muskrat nests were visible too.

At the northwest corner of the marsh we found a hedge that had some warblers in it. Really exciting as we found our first Palm Warblers, a good number of storming Yellow-rumped Warblers and a single Common Yellowthroat. By now it was getting dusky, and we were getting tired with the jet lag. We drove on to Rochester on Lake Ontario and had an Italian-ish meal, although this is now rather hazy as we were very tired. No obvious cheap places to stay so we had to use the Holiday Inn. Very overpriced, particularly as we weren't planning on staying long. But good to be able to crash out at last!

Red-winged Blackbird at Montezuma, one of the most numerous birds of the trip. They don't half make a lot of noise, and can be surprisingly tedious very quickly!

30th April - 3rd May

Thu 3rd - set off to London for Living Landscapes meeting, then afterwards went to hotel near Heathrow, rather than coming back in the evening before a mega early start. Not a great night's sleep though in the end.

Wed 2nd - London all day for meetings about Buzzards. Had to get packed up for the the trip to New York...

Tue 1st - 3 House Martins now at home, inspecting nests here and next door.

Mon 30th - 2 House Martins back around the house and Whitethroat singing by the ford. Also in the garden, lots of Sloe Bug, Orange-tip, German Wasp, an early nymph Dark Bush-cricket, Eristalis pertinax and a few bees t.b.a.

Eristalis pertinax, Tendaba

23rd-29th April

Sun 29th - the boys and I had a walk around the whole Strumpshaw loop in the rain in the morning. Best bird got away - just as I looked out of the reception hide, I picked up a distant ringtail harrier that I couldn't pin down to species - gut feeling was Hen but good date for Montagu's obviously. A few year-ticks though - Reed and Garden Warblers and Common Tern.  In the late afternoon, I walked around the village when the rain stopped and was rewarded by a Hobby over Hawes Green - brilliant!

Sat 28th - a quick look at Whitlingham produced my first Swifts of the year. A male Whitethroat was present all afternoon in the garden, but the rain kept it from singing - presumably the one that subsequently set up territory. Little Egret on the common was a mild surprise - thought they'd all gone.

Fri 27th - a long-awaited Nunnery tick as a male Marsh Harrier flew north over as I arrived for work - no. 154 for the Nunnery! Another very poor night for moths at home - singles of Red Chestnut, Clouded Drab, Early Grey and Shuttle-shaped Dart.

Wed 25th - quick walk into Smeeth Wood for the Nightingale survey - again none, but nice to see some Ramsons here plus Wood Sedge and Wood Sorrel.

Ramsons, Smeeth Wood

Mon 23rd - got up early to whizz round three tetrads for the Nightingale survey. No luck with the target species, as expected, but I did see a Cuckoo at Postwick. Later, lots of female Anthophora plumipes nesting in the wall at the Nunnery, plus Sedge Warblers and House Martins at the Nunnery Lakes. In the evening, an in-house micro moth proved to be the tineid Nemopogon cloacella.



Sunday, May 13, 2012

16th-22nd April

Sunday 22nd - took Duncan to play rugby at Browick Rd in Wymondham which gave me the opportunity to try out my new found bee skills. Collected a fair few but will now need to find the time to work through them (not managed three weeks later, at time of writing!) Did identify Anthophora plumipes, Bombus pascuorum, Bombus lapidarius, Andrena fulva, Incurvaria masculella, Orange-tip, Brimstone, Sloe Bug and variety of other things I really should be able to put a name to. In the afternoon, a scout meeting in Fressingfield, Suffolk, produced a nice Nomada bee for later identification (hopefully!) In evening, a Stoat on the common.

Saturday 21st - Swallow on Shotesham Common, first back here - also Reed Bunting still singing. Then went up to Sheringham Park for a super day learning how to identify solitary bees. Dull weather so not many active, but was shown Andrena nitida and A. dorsata. At least one singing Firecrest here too was a bonus. On the way home, a Peregrine flew over by Caistor Fort. In the evening, relocated the case-bearing micro Luffia ferchaultella in the village on the wall opposite All Saints. Feeble night in the moth-trap - one Hebrew Character!

Friday 20th - three Stone-curlews in the Brecks.

Wednesday 18th - two newly arriving migrants at the Nunnery Lakes: a Whitethroat and five House Martins. Also 30 Swallows and a Cream-spot Ladybird. Early Forget-me-not by the office (checked with microscope).

Tuesday 17th - put some pitfall traps in garden and identified the centipede Lithobius forficatus and the woodlice Porcelio scaber, Philoscia muscorum and Armadillidium vulgare. All dead common. At work, netted the hoverflies Syrphus ribesii and Cheilosia urbana (previously C. praecox) - the latter a new one for me. Back home, Small-flowered Cranesbill found on verge (5 out of 10 stamens with anthers).

No photos yet - some still to add though when/if I get round to it...

9th-15th April

Oh dear, getting a bit behind again. I want to write about my trip to the USA, but I also want to keep up to date with the other stuff. Right, April might be a tad abbreviated...

Sunday 15th - around Shotesham, Orange-tip, D-e Bee-fly, Yellow Archangel etc

Saturday 14th - 94 rook nests at the bottom of Shotesham Common - also 17 Linnets, a Little Egret and a Chinese Water Deer by Hawes Green/Eastells Lane. Moth trap pretty dull overnight - 11 moths of 6 species.

Friday 13th - a leafhopper from the garden looked at in microscope - family Cicadellidae as has spined tibia. No idea what species though. Elsewhere, Wood Anemone in flower in the Great Wood.

Thursday 12th - a garden hoverfly keyed (with microscope now!) as female Platycheirus albimanus - this seems to be common, as I keyed lots more of these over the coming days.

Wednesday 11th - now 7 Chiffchaffs and 3 Blackcaps on my run round Shotesham.

Monday 9th - walk around Shotesham looking at plants, getting confused by using sepal lengths to separate Common and Early Dog-violets. I'm sure it's obvious, once you know...

No photos of interest this week.