Tuesday, August 9, 2022

June-July Recap

Yup.
  • 198. Clay-colored Sparrow
  • 199. Common Gallinule
  • 200. Canada Warbler
  • 201. Green Heron
  • 202. Horned Lark
  • 203. American Kestrel
  • 204. Lincoln's Sparrow 

Summer is definitely slower in terms of new species and, eventually, bird activity in general. I really noticed this year when the dawn chorus stopped, effectively signalling the end of breeding season for 2022.

However, August brings with it the beginning of fall migration (yes, really; as soon as nesting finishes some birds are already on their way south, so it starts much earlier than most would think and stretches out over a far longer time period than spring migration does). And fall also tends to be better around here for shorebirds since water levels are typically lower in late summer, providing better foraging habitat along shorelines. So while I've been kind of taking a break from birds the last little while, I expect that the coming months will tempt me back out again.

Monday, May 30, 2022

Migration Madness

I took a short trip to Point Pelee in early May, like I've been saying I was going to do since I came back from my first trip there... five years ago now? More? I had what felt like a very good trip, and saw all of the species that I had hoped I was going to. Then, of course, two days after I came home, I happened to read the park birding report where they were like: best day at Pelee ever! So many birds! Weird rare species galore! So, clearly I mis-timed by trip by two days ;)

Mid-May there was the Great Canadian Birdathon fundraiser, which involved a full day of intensive birding in my home region. Then at the end of the month, I did the Carden Challenge again - actually in Carden for the first time since 2019! - for another 24 hours of intensive birding (mixed with hunting for other critters too, of course). Plus my usual volunteer migration monitoring at the Eramosa site started up again in May, plus field season really ramped up at work.

So I guess what I'm trying to say is:

  • 126. Sharp-shinned Hawk
  • 127. Wood Thrush
  • 128. Grasshopper Sparrow
  • 129. Bobolink
  • 130. Ovenbird
  • 131. Gray Catbird
  • 132. Common Yellowthroat
  • 133. Black-throated Green Warbler
  • 134. Northern Waterthrush
  • 135. Black-and-white Warbler
  • 136. Dunlin
  • 137. Baltimore Oriole
  • 138. Great Crested Flycatcher
  • 139. Prothonotary Warbler
  • 140. Northern Parula
  • 141. Rose-breasted Grosbeak
  • 142. Orchard Oriole
  • 143. Red-headed Woodpecker
  • 144. Warbling Vireo
  • 145. Nashville Warbler
  • 146. Cape May Warbler
  • 147. Least Flycatcher
  • 148. Yellow-breasted Chat
  • 149. Ruby-throated Hummingbird
  • 150. White-eyed Vireo
  • 151. Blue-winged Warbler
  • 152. Magnolia Warbler
  • 153. Blackburnian Warbler
  • 154. Chestnut-sided Warbler
  • 155. Black-throated Blue Warbler
  • 156. Indigo Bunting
  • 157. Black Tern
  • 158. Marsh Wren
  • 159. Least Sandpiper
  • 160. Spotted Sandpiper
  • 161. Greater Yellowlegs
  • 162. Lesser Yellowlegs
  • 163. Willow Flycatcher
  • 164. Eastern Kingbird
  • 165. Scarlet Tanager
  • 166. Purple Martin
  • 167. Red-eyed Vireo
  • 168. American Redstart
  • 169. Eastern Wood-Pewee
  • 170. Chimney Swift
  • 171. Bay-breasted Warbler
  • 172. Wilson's Warbler
  • 173. Swainson's Thrush
  • 174. Philadelphia Vireo
  • 175. Veery
  • 176. Alder Flycatcher
  • 177. Yellow-billed Cuckoo
  • 178. Black-billed Cuckoo
  • 179. Tennessee Warbler
  • 180. Wilson's Snipe
  • 181. Common Nighthawk
  • 182. Blue-headed Vireo
  • 183. American Bittern
  • 184. Common Tern
  • 185. Eastern Whip-poor-will
  • 186. Barred Owl
  • 187. Blackpoll Warbler
  • 188. Golden-winged Warbler
  • 189. Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
  • 190. Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
  • 191. Mourning Warbler
  • 192. Upland Sandpiper
  • 193. Loggerhead Shrike
  • 194. Least Bittern
  • 195. Vesper Sparrow
  • 196. Yellow-throated Vireo
  • 197. Hooded Warbler

Yeah. I'm not really worried about getting to 200 anymore? There's two species, at least, that I'm 100% sure I can get this summer locally, and more that are a bit harder to find but I definitely have a chance at. Beyond those, it's possible to keep climbing but I know I'd have to work a bit harder for it. I mean, there's a finite number of birds that it's possible to see, and we've already run through winter --> migration --> summer so now we're just going to do the same in reverse. Still, it'll be interesting to see how far I can actually get.

Saturday, April 30, 2022

April Roundup

 Heck yeah, April.

The Willet was a lifer, but the Yellow-throated Warbler is the one I want to talk about, because it's an extremely ironic bird. When talking about my goal of 200 species for the year, Yellow-throated Warbler is the example I used multiple times for a bird that I would specifically not get in 2022. "Oh, I'm going to have to get really lucky in order to beat my previous record, because there are birds I saw in 2021 that I just have no chance of getting in 2022, like that random Yellow-throated Warbler in Burlington in the fall." (For context, I previously had to travel to West Virginia to see one; they are a bird that stays south of here.)

Not only did one show up right in my home city this month, there was apparently another one the next city over that was found just a few days later. Typical migration weirdness, or expanding ranges? Only time will tell.

  • 81. American Woodcock
  • 82. Wood Duck
  • 83. Blue-winged Teal
  • 84. Turkey Vulture
  • 85. Willet
  • 86. Bonaparte's Gull
  • 87. Northern Mockingbird
  • 88. Double-crested Cormorant
  • 89. Green-winged Teal
  • 90. American Wigeon
  • 91. Common Loon
  • 92. Eastern Phoebe
  • 93. Brown-headed Cowbird
  • 94. Eastern Towhee
  • 95. Sandhill Crane
  • 96. Eastern Meadowlark
  • 97. Cooper's Hawk
  • 98. Pileated Woodpecker
  • 99. Hermit Thrush
  • 100. Belted Kingfisher
  • 101. Tree Swallow
  • 102. Chipping Sparrow
  • 103. Winter Wren
  • 104. Osprey
  • 105. Yellow-rumped Warbler
  • 106. Pied-billed Grebe
  • 107. Yellow-throated Warbler
  • 108. Virginia Rail
  • 109. Sora
  • 110. Swamp Sparrow
  • 111. Ruffed Grouse
  • 112. Ruby-crowned Kinglet
  • 113. House Wren
  • 114. Savannah Sparrow
  • 115. Pine Warbler
  • 116. Northern Harrier
  • 117. Broad-winged Hawk
  • 118. Brown Thrasher
  • 119. Palm Warbler
  • 120. Barn Swallow
  • 121. Tufted Titmouse
  • 122. Northern Rough-winged Swallow
  • 123. Cliff Swallow
  • 124. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
  • 125. Yellow Warbler