Sunday, May 20, 2018

Westport Pelagic May 19, 2018


I went out on my second pelagic of the year out of Westport yesterday.  Calm winds and easy seas were forecast. We headed out to where some fishing boats were going for hake. With the huge numbers of birds and the great seas, it was an epic pelagic trip.



Hard to get a good shot of Pacific White-sided Dolphin with a zoom lens.




There was a major push of migrating Sabine's Gulls.  Totals approached 2500, I think that was a record for the Westport Seabirds survey.




On the way out we encountered large groups of Sooty Shearwater, for the second time this year we flushed up a Manx Shearwater, it avoided my camera once again.  Sotty Shearwater are easier to capture.




We had near record numbers of Black-footed Albatross.  Close to a total of 1700 were seen.  Many different age classes were seen.  This is a young bird, it lacks any white in undertail.





Most Northern Fulmars are nesting up in Alaska, we did find a few  These birds are not nesting this year.




We did see one Laysan Albatross, I think one.  We saw bird and was racing after where it flew, I spotted it on the ocean as we raced by.  We got up to where everyone thought the bird went.  It flew in from the direction this bird was sitting, so not sure if there were two or one in area.




No bands were detected, I would still assume it is a Mexican bird.




The numbers of birds around the fishing fleet was amazing, here is one of two main processing boats in area.  The hake were down near the bottom, it is about 600 feet deep here if I recall correctly.




The true fun of pelagic birding is scanning through flocks of birds like these. Black-footed Albatross, Sooty and Pink-footed Shearwater, Cal Gulls and others, Sabine's Gull and a few Fork-tailed Storm- Petrel.  




California Gull.




I always like to look at all the molt patterns, Sooty and Pink-footed were both in heavy molt.  The white bases to the feathers can be seen when the coverts molt.




When Sooty Shearwater take off, they often tuck their wings back in an odd dash across water.



We achieved the skua slam, all four seen.  Long-tailed, Parasitic, Pomarine Jaegers and South Polar Skua.

Here you can see how falcon like a Parasitic Jaeger can look when it is chasing a Sabine's Gull. Parasitic are very aggressive and do not give up the chase easily.  I assume it was trying to get gull to upchuck its food.



The Sabine's did a upward swoop.  Then dove to dodge the jaeger.




South Polar Skua chasing a California Gull.





A short chase and the skua left bird alone.




Look at those nasty talons on a skua.





We also had numerous passerines fly by the boat.  I felt bad for them with all the gulls, jaegers and skuas in the area.  These two pals were trying to make it back to land when a Western Gull flew into area, the birds dashed over to our boat for some security.  Pine Siskin and Orange-crowned Warbler.  We had a few Wilson Warblers, a Yellow-rump, kinglets (I missed these) and a pewee type bird.




Several flocks of Red-necked Phalarope were seen, a few Red were seen as well.




The extensive black to tips of primaries and the large head made me think this was a Common Tern. We saw Arctic Terns in the morning, Common on way back in.




Some final group shots, a great day with great birds.





Another cool thing we saw was a Salmon Shark. It swam up to the boat, I thought it was a small shark based on dorsal fin, but when we looked under the water we saw the massive body of the shark, very fun.  Need to figure out how to use a gopro or some such thing for some underwater shots.

Thanks to Bill, Scott and Mike, and thanks to Phil, Chris and Monte Carlo for getting us out to the birds.

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Fox Sparrow hunt in Wasco


On Saturday 5-12-18 I wandered out to Wasco County to see what I could find in the Mt Hood Nat Forest.  I was hoping to find some Fox Sparrows.  I started out at Fivemile Butte.  The shrubs on the top are great for the sparrows.  This is a photo from last October just to give you an idea of the habitat.




I quickly found four Fox Sparrows, all singing from the top of their own pine tree.  The large bills, no wing bars, spotted inverted Vs on the underside, head and back gray-brown and location all led to Thick-billed Fox Sparrow.





No wing bars





I have loaded Raven onto my computer (the free version)  I took this spectrogram from the above bird, see video below.  I can't figure out how, if possible , to load what I see play in Raven onto a blog.  What I had to do was to go to a website that strips the video down to an audio file, then you load it into Raven and you can see the spectrogram. All rather cool, the website strips it for free, but then offers ads to you, I just closed the site every time I used it and ignored all the ads.




Here is the video from my camera.  I know it wanders, just close your eyes.




Another Thick-billed, the associated spectrogram and original video.









Bird's song.  BTW I heard zero call notes, just singing.





Just for comparison, here is a spectrogram of a singing Fox Sparrow, thought to be Thick-billed from the Steens, bird was in sagebrush.




And last two Fox Sparrows seen up on butte:






All sparrows dove for cover at one moment, I looked around and spied this Sharp-shinned Hawk approaching. Darn good eyes on these sparrows!




Mt Adams, right, and Mt Rainier, left, looking good.




And Mt Hood.




Lots of Dusky Flycatchers were seen all day.




Helping out were Mo,



Tess




And a shaved for the summer, Huck.




Singing Dusky Flycatcher, Olive-sided Flycatcher, Cassin's Finch and a typical Hermit Warbler.at bout 8 sec.  Lots of Hermit were singing all day, found a few Townsend's when I tried to get out to a sparrow patch on Flag Point (too much snow).



Pine Siskins were dashing around at all sites visited.



Western Tanager



On the road out of Fivemile Butte, this MacGillivray's Warbler was singing away.




Last site visited was this partial clearcut I like to visit, late in day, so did not see a bunch of birds.  But Western Bluebird, Cassin's Finch, and Dusky Flycatchers were still active.




Map of area.




Here are some links that have info on Fox Sparrows in Oregon:

Ebird Fox Sparrow paper

Bird Guide Fox Sparrow

Thanks for the visit!  Pelagic next week then Lake and Harney County!

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Skipanon River and Clatsop County 5/5/18



I thought I would throw together a quick blog about the Skipanon River. This area was once accessed from King Ave, that road is blocked.  I am not sure, I think this is state land leased to Port of Astoria.  That might be wrong.  In any case, I go out there and other folks go on walks out there.  No signs say it is closed.  Hunters use it in winter.

It has been pointed out and I agree, this area is not a park and not managed for public access. The area out to the bare sand is mostly owned by Port of Astoria, area from sand out to bay is state land, some areas are leased to LNG site organizers.  And note, I did mark one homeless camp.


A map for your use:






On very low tides I walk out the red line, depending on sand bars, to get to shorebirds out on the flats.  

A look from dry land out onto flats.




Dunlin and Western Sandpipers


















13 seconds of peeps.




Other birds seen today:

Only Mew Gulls I saw were all first summer birds.



Marbled Godwit




Black-bellied Plover


Least Sandpiper, obvious longer toed and smaller.




Least Sandpiper compared to Sanderling



Red Knot