weekend birds
GREGORY.B.MILLER@bge.com
Sun, 1 Feb 1998 15:19:30 -0500
I finally made it out of my cubicle for some *power* birding
(26 days in a row at work and I was going bananas...).
Hooray! What a great feeling to be birding again!
Saturday, 1/31/98
Ocean City Inlet:
9:45am-12:30pm. Exciting birds. 15 Common Eiders, 2 King
Eiders, 9 Harlequin Ducks, 60-70 Am. Oystercatchers, lots of
Purple Sandpipers, Ruddy Turnstones, a Red Knot,
Red-throated Loons, Common Loons, Black and Surf Scoters,
Oldsquaws, Great Black-backed, Herring, Ring-billed, and
Bonaparte's Gulls, Sanderlings, a Northern Gannet,
Boat-tailed Grackles, and a Peregrine Falcon on the water
tower.
West Ocean City Pond:
12:45pm-1:30pm. Several hundred Canvasback and Lesser
Scaup, 6 Gadwall, 4 Am. Widgeon, 2 Shovelers, 10 Black
Ducks, 5 Ruddy Ducks, 8 Mallards, Am. Coots, a Great Blue
Heron, and 3 Black-crowned Night-Herons.
Indian River Inlet:
2:15pm-2:30pm. Devoid of usual birdlife. The regular gulls
(Great Black-backed, Herring, and Ring-billed), a female
Black Scoter, a Common Loon, and an Oldsquaw.
Silver Lake:
2:45pm-2:50pm. A quick scan of the ducks produced hundreds
of Canvasback and Lesser Scaup, Ruddy Duck, Black Duck,
Mallard, Bufflehead, and Am. Goldeneye.
Cape Henlopen St Park:
3:00pm-4:15pm. Red Crossbills were reported on the 30th,
but I did not see any on the 31st. Found a "Pink-sided"
Dark-eyed Junco on the East side of point parking lot.
70-80 Brant, lots of Sanderlings, and a few Dunlin were on
the West side. There were several small flocks of Snow
Buntings (one group was about 120 individuals) near the
point. Did not see an Savannah "Ipswich" Sparrows in the
dunes...
Finished the day by driving to Westminster to spend the
night in close proximity to Liberty Reservoir.
This morning, I got to where I thought Pine Knob should be
around 7:30am. Of course, I had the *wrong* location
<grin>. After driving around aimlessly for 15 minutes, I
returned to the upper Deer Park location.
Sunday 2/1/98
Deer Park (upper locale--lines supported by metal thingies)
7:45am-8:00am. A fly-over Pine Siskin was calling as was a
Hermit Thrush from the woods. Chickadees, Titmice, and
Red-breasted Nuthatches were also present. Oh, and
thousands of crows (Sorry, I did not check these for rare
crows <grin>)
Deer Park (lower locale--lines supported by wooden thingies)
8:00am-11:30am. At 9:50am, I saw two adult male Red
Crossbills (one was a fly-over and one lit on top of a tree
affording me a sterling 2-minute view before dropping down
on the backside of the tree and then melting into the
woods...before anyone else got to see them...). A good
surprise was a Black-capped Chickadee giving it's
slower-paced, 2-note whistle. Other birds included Black
and Turkey Vultures, Black Ducks, Gadwalls, Common
Mergansers, Carolina Wrens, Carolina Chickadees, Dark-eyed
Juncos, Mockingbird, White-throated Sparrows, Red-bellied
Woodpecker, a Sharp-shinned Hawk, and the ever-present
Red-breasted Nuthatches.
Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant (CCNPP) - Visitor
Overlook
1:45pm-2:00pm. Not many birds present. 15 Oldsquaw, 2
Bufflehead, 1 Common Loon, 10 Ring-billed Gulls, 4 Herring
Gulls, 1 Great Black-backed Gull. Surprise here today was a
fly-by Northern Gannet.
2:00pm. I'm back at work again. I am much happier though
and quite a bit more tired after logging 500+ miles in a
day-and-a-half...
It was a pleasure meeting a few of you out in the field
yesterday and today. And, of course, birding was [as
always] a pure joy...
Greg Miller (spastic birder)
Lusby, MD