Showing posts with label Trumpeter Swan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trumpeter Swan. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Winter at Sauvie Island

Sauvie Island is a wildlife oasis about 10 miles northwest of downtown Portland. It may be well-known to some for its pumpkin patches and corn mazes on the farms in the fall. But many others enjoy it for its land set aside as a wildlife area. In the winter, this place is teaming with birds. Earlier in the winter, there can be thousands of Snow Geese mixed in with Canada and Cackling Geese. 


Tons of Snow Geese from December 2014

Snow Geese coming in for a landing - December 2014

Later in the winter, the Snow Geese have gone, and the island is dominated by Sandhill Cranes. They winter there in large numbers, filling the fields to the brim with their big, shaggy gray bodies. The lovely sounds of their bugle call fills the skies and grasslands. They sure are a sight for sore eyes for us former Floridians. South Florida had resident populations, and it was not too uncommon to see these guys just hanging about the wetlands or even business parking lots!


Sandhill Cranes in a field





Coon Point has a dike where you can overlook a lake and open fields. The highlight when we last visited in late February was a pair of nesting Bald Eagles. They would fly from the nest to a perch just off of the main walking trail right in front of the parking area. One could easily spot them driving down the road. The morning fog made for some moody pics of these majestic raptors.







One of the best spots to bird on Sauvie Island is the viewing platform overlooking a lake that is chock full of waterfowl. On our recent visit, there were lots of Canvasbacks (maybe the most we’ve seen in one spot?) and Tundra Swan. And among the honking of those Tundra Swans, we heard the unmistakable trumpet sounds of Trumpeter Swans! There were just a few hanging out, but we were able to locate these larger-bodied swans amongst the other white bodies in the lake. And this was the first time we’d actually heard these trumpet sounds in person, so it was quite a treat!

Tundra Swan

A couple of Trumpeter Swans

More Sandhill Cranes line the lake at this observation deck, and they fly over almost consistently. It really just never gets old seeing and hearing these guys. I could just watch them all day. They are just such a joy to be around.









Another hot spot of Sauvie Island is Rentenaar Road, or also fondly known as “sparrow road.” Some guy we ran into at a major sparrow viewing point (where people will often leave bird seed) mentioned that he had previously met a couple of ladies who counted up to 11 species of sparrow on that road! We had eight including: Song, Fox, White-Crowned, Golden-Crowned, Lincoln’s, and the hard-to-find White-Throated Sparrows, as well as Dark-Eyed Juncos and Spotted Towhees. We dipped on a Swamp Sparrow that was farther down the road that another birder had spotted just moments before we got there. And we did not get Savannah nor the elusive Harris’s Sparrow.  

Golden-Crowned Sparrow

Golden-Crowned Sparrow

Lincoln's Sparrow

White-Crowned Sparrow
Golden-Crowned Sparrow

We were super stoked about getting not just one, but THREE White-Throated Sparrows! This was an Oregon high count for this species for us. You can tell with at least the two individuals pictured below, the coloration is much warmer and muted in one, and very bright and vibrant in the other.






Sauvie Island is small in size, but you can definitely spend a full day birding out here. And when a non-rainy, winter’s day pops up, it’s a great way to take in the beautiful scenery and enjoy the sights and sounds of awesome wintering birds. 

A young Bald Eagle

Sandhill Cranes in flight

Abstract Art by a Sapsucker


Another original piece by a Sapsucker

Some fun fungi! Turkey Tails

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Welcoming Waterfowl and Snowless Snowshoeing: Winter Wings Festival, Day 1

Klamath Falls is a small town near the Oregon / California border that gave us some of our first impressions of Oregon on our drive up last April. Although we'd done our birding exclusively from the car at the time, we'd still picked up great birds like Black-billed Magpie and Common Raven. We knew we'd be back someday, given its proximity to Crater Lake, and we were happy that the occasion of our return was their annual Presidents' Day weekend birding festival a couple of weeks ago, Winter Wings.



Ruddy Duck

Common Merganser

This merganser was either practicing to be a bittern...

… or a rock star

This was only the second birding festival we'd attended, and it was considerably smaller than Florida's massive Space Coast Birding and Wildlife Festival. Even so, there were some great events scheduled, and the Klamath Basin is a helluva playground. We had one trip booked for our first day, but we started off our morning at lake in town at Veterans Park, just the two of us. Right away, we knew we were going to have a fantastic weekend. We got excited at the very first Common Goldeneye, which we can find in small numbers along the coast where we regularly visit, but not as close as this. Another popped up right beside it -- a female. Then another -- a first-winter male. Then another and another.

Common Goldeneye


1st winter male Common Goldeneye
Nicely illustrating the three plumages shown in Sibley. Why can't all birds do that?


Overhead, 15 or so Black-crowned Night-herons were either coming from or going to their roost site. It had been so long since we'd even seen one, so a whole flock at once was a real treat. We crossed the road, leaving the park, and hit the night-heron jackpot: their roosting site, right in someone's backyard (oh, to be so lucky) housing at least 50, and probably more. Not only that, but lots more Goldeneyes… BOTH kinds! Barrow's Goldeneyes were our first of several lifers this trip, and we saw enough of them to forever put us past our anxiety of figuring out which Goldeneye is which (I hope).

Black-crowned Night-heron


Barrow's Goldeneye

Male and female Barrow's

As for the field trip, unfortunately it largely fell casualty to our uncharacteristically mild winter. This was billed as a snowshoeing hike, with an emphasis on identifying wildlife tracks, but instead of the anticipated 3' of snow they usually enjoy, we had to settle for tramping around in the mud. It was still fun, but we'd been looking forward to snowshoeing, which would have been new for us. There were plenty of scat, bones, and hoof prints along the way, although the only mammal we actually saw was a lone coyote tracking across a field. One other notable find was a swarm of Thatch Ants that Maureen spotted. These ants can apparently construct impressively huge mounds of plant material, which we didn't manage to come across.

Mt. McLaughlin

Coyote

Lichen-covered snag

I forget which ungulate this belonged to. I want to say Elk

Thatch Ant

On the way to the snowshoeing / not-snowshoeing trip, we'd passed a lake that seemed to have hundreds, if not thousands, of Tundra Swans. We filed it in the back of our minds for future use, and headed straight there once we left the return bus. Besides swans, Upper Klamath Lake was chockablock with Northern Pintails, Greater White-fronted Geese, and assorted other waterfowl. Maureen somehow managed to find a Eurasian Wigeon. I picked out a swan from the multitudes that looked bigger than the surrounding Tundras, with no yellow on the lores, that I tentatively called a Trumpeter. So far nobody's contradicted us, but feel free shatter our illusions if you see fit.

With 10 Bald Eagles patrolling the premises, its no wonder the waterfowl were jittery

Tundra Swans and Greater White-fronted Geese

Trumpeter Swan (back left) with Tundra Swans

The #1 field trip we wanted to attend at the festival was the Klamath Falls Owl Prowl. Oregon has everything from Great Gray Owl, to Northern Pygmy, Northern Saw-whet, Spotted, Flammulated… The only owls we've managed to see here in the past 9 months are species that are common enough back East (Barred and Burrowing Owls), so we were hungry for something new, and this would have been our best shot for rounding up a whole bunch of Oregon's owls in one fell swoop. Even though we registered for the festival on only the second day, the trip had already maxed out. This was a bummer, obviously, but we managed to get the inside scoop on exactly where the trip had been successful a night earlier, and we decided to head there ourselves.

Astoundingly, we'd neglected to bring a flashlight with us, so tracking one down was our first priority. Next, the drive from Klamath Falls to Klamath Marsh NWR was unexpectedly long, and we were getting nervous, since we had no assurance that we weren't going to run into any locked gates or No-Trespassing-After-Hours signs. Fortunately, neither difficulty manifested, and we took the long, straight Silver Lake Rd. into the refuge. Along the way, our car flushed a large bird from the side of the road while we drove, which took off across the dike, and over the marsh. My first throughout was night-heron, but as Maureen expertly got the light on it, we knew we had a Short-eared Owl. We'd flush three more on the way to the refuge. Try as we might, we never turned up any other species once we got to the refuge, but for us, we were happy to count our owl excursion an unqualified success!