Showing posts with label Red Phalarope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Red Phalarope. Show all posts

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Walk on the Beach: Red-legged Kittiwake


I was eager to get out of town and do some birding after an eternity of heavy storms and a tree falling on my house (all okay).  I was hoping for a window to get down to Corvallis and explore the EE Wilson WMA and look for some longspurs south of there.  However I was also thinking of hitting the coast to see the stormy seas.  I decided on the coast after I saw a gap in the weather at 10 am today, Sunday the 13th, and a low tide. Also a challenge was thrown down by a coastal birder to get out and to see what could be found along the beaches.  Clatsop County was being well covered today by the Seaside/Astoria gang, the fine folks in Tillamook currently have their beachfront a few miles inland of where I usually go.   So that left my second favorite beach town on this planet (next to Barnegat Light), Newport, Oregon.  

I arrived right at 10 am as the rain let up.

I tried to go out onto the South Jetty but the gate was locked.   I decided to go to South Beach State Park and to attempt to walk the beach north back up to  the South Jetty.   It would be a short walk , but good enough with the tide rising on a log-strewn beach under storm conditions.

When I got to the beach, I saw a group of birders up north.  I knew they were looking for a Mountain Plover that has been on beach for a number of days.  They found it before I got to them.  Good thing, I would have walked right by it as they had when they first looked for the bird.





The decline in the population of Mountain Plover has been dramatic.  Or has it?  I always wonder about politics and scientific reports at government agencies.  Do they bounce species on and off watch lists at a whim or is it real science.   Based on info available at the time, O'Brien, Crossley and Karlson in The Shorebird Guide (2006) said there were less than 9,000 birds alive.  By 2011 , the Fish and Wildlife Service said there were actually 20,000 birds and that local declines did not represent overall condition of the species.

Latest info I could find.








I started walking up north to the jetty, I saw a flock of gulls on the beach.  I had not noticed it yet, but note the bird sitting off to right.  It is at the bottom of a line of  gulls. From this distance ( at full zoom) I did see the Black-legged Kittiwake to the front and left of the bird.




I was studying a number of Black-legged Kittiwakes in the group. 



While I was tracking the Black-legged Kittiwake in the center, I noticed the small black-backed gull off to the right.  It also had short legs!  Short red legs to be exact..


It spent all the time cleaning itself, the wind was howling right in my face and I could see a serious squall heading my way.  But I could see the all dark primary tips on the underside of the wing and the darker back than the Black-legged, so I went quickly to a Red-legged Kittiwake.  I wanted to see a tiny pale bill but it did not cooperate. 






While I had my camera on it, it stopped once and turned its head a bit.  A tiny pale bill.




Back to cleaning it went. I was having trouble getting a perfect shot in the wind. I decided to swing-wide and move up wind of it to get a face shot before all hell broke loose with the coming squall.  I did not move in time, I was blasted by hail, I had to cover my face and get myself and my dog, Huck,  to cover.  A tidal surge, helped along by the wind blast, sent water roaring up the beach and all the gulls were gone. 

This is Oregon's 11th Red-legged Kittiwake, the third if you do not count dead and dying birds. It is the first living Red-legged Kittiwake (assuming accepted) found on land in Oregon.  The other two were off-shore sightings.  Lifer!




I have read about Red-legged Kittiwakes in case I ever found one, I knew they were darker than Black-legged Kittiwakes, but I never bothered to compare them to Western Gulls.  I thought I would be seeing a bird slightly darker than a Black-legged Kittiwake.  According to Howell's Gulls of the Americas, the Red-legged has a back that is Kodak 8.5 to 9.5, Black-legged are 6.5 to 8, Western Gulls are more variable, but from 8.0 to 9.5 for our northern subspecies.  This Red-legged was obviously the darkest gull on the beach except for a few Westerns.  Below is one of the Black-legged Kittiwakes that was sitting by the subject, taken in same light with same settings on camera.   Much paler bird.

I saw 6 Black-legged Kittiwakes in the area.


I saw 6 Snowy Plover.  I tried to capture the bands on all.  Here is what I was able to get:

Left leg: Red-Yellow-Red  Right leg: Dull yellow?


Left leg: Orange-Green  Right leg: Green


Left leg: Green-Yellow  Right leg: Dull Yellow?


This was a different bird, had a green over yellow, but never saw other leg.



Same here, could not see leg without disturbing bird, but looks like top band was purple or light blue?



The beach was littered with stressed-out-but-seeming-to-be-doing-okay  Red Phalaropes.




Nice thick-billed Red Phalarope.




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Typical view if you go on a pelagic, minus the waves and a bouncing platform.




A number of Harlequin Ducks were hugging the jetty.  I pointed this one out to some storm watchers, much to their delight.




The tip of the north jetty.



The bar had huge breakers coming across.



The Coast Guard swept by, these beaches are dangerous as the tide comes up.  One big wave and you are in a death dance with all the moving logs.




The beach had little room for the expired.  Not many located.

Expired Cassin's Auxlet.  One seen.



Red Phalarope.  One seen.


Western Grebe.  2 seen.



I did stop by EE Wilson on the way home, just to give Huck a longer walk.  Not much activity. A heron wondered why I was out in the rain.


Thanks much for the visit.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Columbia Estuary CBC Sandpiper

Today (12/14/14)  I went down to Seaside to participate in the Columbia Estuary Christmas Bird Count.  I was looking forward to birding the south jetty of the Columbia River.  Below is a map of the area I covered.  I walked the woods and beaches from Parking Lot B to D.  The weather was clear but very windy.  Gusts in the area were in the 25-30 knot range.  That was enough to kick up lots of sand and knock my tripod over with my scope on it. No damage done, but I had to be careful walking on the jetty with the wind pushing me around.





While I was walking along the river beach I saw this sandpiper.  I have not cropped the picture at all.


It is a bit to the left of center behind the seaweed on the beach.  This is through my full zoom lens, so with my digital camera , that is about 750 mm effective zoom, or I think that makes it 13x.  You need to appreciate how hard the wind was blowing.  Blasts of sand are coming across the beach.  I can barely see through my spotting scope and I am hunkered down on my knees behind a stump to get out of the direct wind.  The reason the bird caught my eye was that it appeared a bit bigger than the other Dunlins on the beach in comparison to the gulls that were nearby.  The bill seemed to have a distinct even curve to it. I was fighting the wind to see the bird, I figured I might have better luck taking some pictures then cropping the heck out of them to see what it was.  After I took these pictures I went back to trying to hold my scope steady so I could see the bird.  At that point the gulls flushed the bird.  I tried to get back up on my feet to track the bird, the shorebird that I saw fly by had a very bright white wing stripe and seemed to have extensive white on rump but I would not say rump was entire white.  In my notes I said it showed a lot of white on  upper side compared to other Dunlin.  Of course I was using my 10 power binoculars at this time and was looking at a flying object perpendicular to the wind,  my eyes were watery and I was being pushed around by the wind. I lost sight of the bird and could not find it, or I should say all that I did find were Dunlin.  Below are a few of the photos I took cropped in get a better view.  The first shows the curved bill, it seemed more curved than this shows.  I could be the angle.  All the birds had to sit straight into the wind.  Any poor little Sanderling trying to feed was quickly pushed down the beach. So the bird never really moved and I could not view it other than straight down wind.  I did  not see a brighter supercilium and the bird seemed to be  light brown, lighter than a dowitcher.  The darkness of the breast was hard to judge. I would not call it chunky.






I was thinking I had a Curlew Sandpiper, but I decided, barring better views , it was a Dunlin with a more evenly curved bill.  I would like to see it again.

Otherwise it was a fun hunt but no great finds, I did flush a Short-eared Owl at the ponds near Parking Lot C .  And a Peregirne Falcon was doing its best to catch a phalarope there as well.  I thought it was an interesting strategy by the Red Phalarope to survive.  Rather than fly away and let the falcon give chase, the phalarope hovered in mid-air and just dodged the swoops by the falcon.




Here is a nice brown-backed,  clean-sided Dunlin. They were in a mixed Sanderling flock on the ocean beach.


Ruddy Duck at Parking Lot C.