Showing posts with label Anna's Hummingbird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anna's Hummingbird. Show all posts

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Kicking Around Campus

Yesterday (Saturday) Maureen had to work for a little while. With nothing better to do, and since we could head over to Finley NWR right after, I commuted down to Corvallis with her, and spent a couple of hours lugging her camera with me all across campus. There's nothing terribly exciting to see here, but I also didn't want these photos to just go to waste, so here you go!

I'd actually planned on reading while I waited (The Wilderness Warrior, by Douglas Brinkley), but a pair of Spotted Towhees started cavorting around me as soon as I was about settle on a bench. Once I actually grabbed the camera, though, I ditched the Towhees in favor of an Anna's Hummingbird that perched right in front of my face. Such a prima donna.




By the time the hummer and I had finished with one another, the Towhees had flown out toward the street. This time it was a White-breasted Nuthatch that stole my attention away. Overhead was a flock of Cedar Waxwings, and I couldn't pass up the opportunity to admire them more closely than most sightings generally allow.







Trying to relocate the Towhees, I saw a whole lot of activity in a nearby parking lot, so I wandered over to investigate. A couple dozen Dark-eyed Juncos had invaded a bush chockablock with bright red berries and were gorging themselves silly. Even though the Towhees had started the whole series of events, I never actually got a decent shot of them.





At Finley NWR, we headed straight for the prairie overlook, where some good birds had been reported recently. Our main target was White-tailed Kite, which we hadn't seen since a day-trip we'd taken to Galveston, TX in December, 2010. In the interim, we'd worked up quite an appetite for them. Maureen eventually spotted one just as we were about to give up and walk back to the car. The other raptors weren't quite as shy: Northern Harriers, Rough-legged Hawks, Red-tailed Hawk, Red-shouldered Hawk, Bald Eagle, and American Kestrels who all made an appearance over our nearly two hours at the overlook. Distant raptors on an overcast day doesn't make for great photography, but I'll leave you with a this Golden-crowned Sparrow that was more than happy for a chance in the spotlight.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Winter at the Coast

I really can never quite get enough of the coast. It seems like we go at least once if not twice a month. We’d probably go more often if it weren’t a bit of a drive. But when we get there, it’s totally worth it. We have yet to explore more of the northern coast and any of the southern coast of Oregon, but we’ve been very happy with the central coast in our usual spots in Lincoln County. (And we're totally psyched about an upcoming pelagic trip!!! But more of that another time.)

One cool Surf Scoter

Rocky cliffs at Depoe Bay

We usually make a run to three nice birding spots – the Hatfield Marine Science Center estuary trail, the jetty on the Yaquina River, and Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area. And we’ll also pop over to a few of the many bays and state parks along Highway 101 if there’s time.

Northern Pintails coming in for a landing

Pintails and Brant

The last time we headed over to the coast, we were on a mission to find a lifer and a state bird. The first was a reported Ross’s Goose that had been hanging out in a little lake at Beaver Creek State Natural Area. I looked at every “big white bird,” but all I could find were Great Egrets. We waited awhile and checked out a little fussy Marsh Wren and the other geese and ducks around. Finally, in a big flock of Canada Geese that rose up and over to the little lake, I scanned and found THE big white bird I was looking for! The Ross’s Goose was too far to get good photos, but he’s on our list, and that’s what matters.

Marsh Wren in the reeds seeing what all the fuss is about

Although nothing else new at this spot, we did get a great view of a Fox Sparrow and a reliable little Anna’s Hummingbird that zipped by us and politely posed while at the feeder at the nature center at Beaver Creek.

Fox Sparrow looking foxy

Male Anna's Hummingbird



(by Nicholas)

Onward we went to Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area where a Burrowing Owl has been hanging out since about November. Although they are not rare for the state, they are rare on the coast. They usually hang out in Eastern Oregon, but this one has strayed away, but seems content. We dipped or missed finding him our trip to the coast the time before, but with a little help from one of the naturalists on staff at the nature center, we were able to locate the Burrowing Owl in a little nook in the rocks. We have a special place in our hearts for Burrowing Owls as they are the mascot of our grad school alma mater.

Digiscoped pic of the Burrowing Owl

Although the coast of the Pacific Northwest is amazing, one thing I miss about birding the beaches of Florida and Georgia is seeing dolphins just about every time we went out. Luckily, I can get a marine mammal fix with the Harbor Seals and California Sea Lions here. The Harbor Seals are especially adorable and playful. And who couldn’t swoon over an adorable seal pup? Seals and sea lions seem to really know how to live the beachy life – lounging around in the sun or splashing around for fun in the water.

Harbor Seal



Harbor Seals frolicking



The waters have been dominated by black and white and gray this winter, with a splash of brown and buff every so often. We’ve enjoyed watching and hearing the odd sounds of Brants along the estuary trail. They are such dapper geese indeed. And we’ve also picked up a long sought-after duck this winter – the Common Goldeneye. We’ve seen both male and females, but the females usually seem to swim closer. They aren’t as flashy as their male counterparts, and not nearly as devious as their James Bond character-like name suggests. ;-)

Brants





Female Common Goldeneye

I have also loved seeing so many grebes – Eared, Horned, Red-Necked, Western, and good ole Pied-Billed. Of course they’re not showing off their spectacular breeding plumage right now, but still a treat to see so many out and about.

Eared Grebe

Two Horned Grebes and One Eared Grebe

Western Grebes up front, Red-Necked Grebes in the back

The Loons have also been awesome to see so close. The first time we ever saw one was for a split second on a pelagic trip, and other times we saw them off of the beach in Savannah, but far away and not very numerous. But this winter, we’ve seen them fairly close, and up to about a dozen of them along the jetty. Again, their keeping things muted with their winter plumage, but who can complain when they show off the way they do?

Common Loon Splashing about

Common Loon

*Common Loon

And then there are gulls – the bane of my birding life! Well, we recently attended a gull ID workshop to try to get a better handle of the multitude of gulls we see here in the west, which has helped a great deal. But then there are those pesky oddballs that make me pull my hair in frustration! (Figuratively, that is). The parking lot at the jetty is a great place to look at gulls that sit still for you while you study them as they wait for food to fall to the ground.

Brown Pelican 

"Look into my staring lemon eyes!"

We could easily identify an adult Herring Gull with its “staring lemon eye” as stated in Gulls of the Americas by Steve Howell and Jon Dunn. And we were almost sure we had a first cycle Thayer’s Gull in our midst. But when we posted the photo below to a North American Gull ID Facebook page, we caused quite a stir amongst gull experts. Amongst the seventeen comments, some were fine calling it a Thayer’s Gull, others say that the field marks visible were not completely reliable, and then there was the proposition that it was a Glaucous-Winged x Herring Gull Hybrid… WTF?!?! Ugh, I give up! Ok, I don’t really. But gulls are and will probably always be an enigma.

Thayers or Glaucous-WingedxHerring Gull Hybrid… Eh, who knows for sure!?