Our target on Saturday was a smith's longspur which had been found, disappeared, and then reappeared at Stone Harbor Point.
The first Saturday after it had been reported over a hundred birders had descended on the park and all left disappointed. No doubt the horde scared the bird away. So our plan was to get there first thing before the expected throngs arrived. We were delayed by the bird on the wire. Still, we got there before the crush. And before the bird had been found. We, along with perhaps a dozen or two others, spread out across the dunes checking every bird that moved. A key field mark is the very obvious white outer tail feathers. As we walked and flushed up birds we were repeatedly disappointed until, "There it is," Patty and I cried in unison. We, along with another searcher, had found the bird. It flew 20 or so meters ahead, and another 20 as we approached. After which it settled down eating among the reeds as the crowd around it grew.
Then my camera battery died. Of course the bird was at the bottom of the island, the "point" in Stone Harbor Point. I trekked back to the car retrieved my backup battery and read a text from Patty, "It flew." So I started back, the urgency in my step gone. Another text, "re-found". D'oh, pep back in my step. By the time I got back it had been lost again. We re-spotted it but it flew off starting another round of searching.
The search would eventually be successful, but along the way we found this guy, a lapland longspur.
Unlike the smith's, this guy had started to transform into his more colorful breeding plumage. A third of the group stopped to get good looks at this guy and several others in the area. A third went after the smith's (new arrivals that hadn't yet gotten good or any looks?). And a third decided that it was time to go find breakfast.
After wandering about a bit more and chatting with friends and acquaintances, we decided to move along as well. As did this american bittern, who flew over on its way elsewhere.
Our next stop was the Avalon sea watch for the scoter show. We had visited a few weeks prior and there had been a thousand or so scoters, black and surf. The calls of the amassed ducks had been very cool and eerie. Alas, the surf was rough and the ducks were elsewhere (perhaps with the bittern?). So we had to satisfy ourselves with purple sandpipers.
It was then off to Cape May Lighthouse State Park but along the way we received a text about a ross's goose in a field off of Seagrove Ave, which was on the way.
As we drove up we found a group observing the bird. Now geese are almost never found alone. Even birds well away from home will find the local geese to associate with. But not this one. One large white bird in an otherwise empty field. Quite unusual. After a quick look in a scope already set up, we went back to the car for our scope and cameras. the front door of the house we had parked outside of opened, "go ahead and walk down the driveway to get a better look," she called. We said "thanks" and did. This was my second lifer of the day.
It was then off to the state park, where we ran into another acquaintance who told us that there were red-necked grebes on the first two ponds, close enough for good photos. So off we went. But to the wrong ponds.
We did get to see the mute swans chasing any and all canada geese.
While scanning for the grebes a friend came up to tell us that he thinks he had relocated the common teal (aka eurasian teal) that had been reported. It was tucked into the reeds on the far side of the lake and after a bit of searching we were able to find and confirm his ID. We all then headed off to find those grebes, but not until after the ross's goose flew over.
We would spot three red-necked grebes in Cape May. Two at the state park and one just up the road at Lily Lake.
The first was clearly transforming into breading plumage, the eponymous red neck obvious.
The second was not as far along, the neck not all that red.
The third somewhere in between.
After the grebes we walked along the beach hoping for a snowy owl or snow buntings. We saw neither. We then went across the street to try for a painted bunting that had been in the area for several weeks. "It was here about an hour ago," we were told. We waited awhile and saw a number of birds, including some cedar waxwings.
But no bunting (we had seen it last time we were in town, so it wasn't that bad a miss). After stopping to see the third grebe we headed off for lunch, soup and fried clams and scallops at the Lobster House. Very yummy. And then back home.
The next morning we were again up much to early to find the second of the principles in the title, a barnacle goose that had been reported at Rahway River Park, in north Jersey. The reports noted that the bird left its night roosting lake by 7:30 each morning. We arrived at 7:00. We weren't first and there was a scope on the bird and we got nice looks. Lifer number three for the weekend for me.
The bird was distant and the light wasn't great so neither were the photos. Barney is the leftmost bird up against the snow, white faced looking directly at us. It should be in Europe. But has apparently been in the states long enough for at least two hybrid canada x barnacle geese to have made it through at least one winter. The two hybrids are visible in the picture, starting from the barnacle goose and going to the right, they are the first and third birds along the snow (note the white forehead patch on the third bird). The other geese in the picture are all canada geese.
We then headed to Forsythe NWR where we saw the two snowy owls and the peregrine on the sign.
The last bird of the weekend was this one, which flew in front of us as we were leaving the refuge.
A red-shouldered hawk.
This weekend we slept in.
We then headed to Forsythe NWR where we saw the two snowy owls and the peregrine on the sign.
The last bird of the weekend was this one, which flew in front of us as we were leaving the refuge.
A red-shouldered hawk.
This weekend we slept in.
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