FRANKLIN'S GULL, BREWER'S BLACKBIRD IN HARFORD COUNTY
rick (rblom@blazie.com)
Fri, 9 Oct 1998 22:16:34 -0400
I spent from 8:00 - 10:30 a.m. at Harve de Grace marina today. The
tide is low in the morning now and there were a large number of birds.
Pied-billed Grebe 25
Double-crested Cormorant 40
Great Blue Heron 22
Canada Goose 250
Green-winged Teal 4
American Black Duck 2
Mallard 50+
Northern Shoveler 8
Gadwall 2
American Wigeon 6
Turkey Vulture 1
Bald Eagle 2 (imm)
American Coot 50+
AMERICAN GOLDEN-PLOVER 2
Killder 18
Greater Yellowlegs 2
Lesser Yellowlegs 2
Dunlin 1
DOWITCHER 7 (2 probable Long-billeds but positive ID not
possible: would be county 1st)
Laughing Gull 12
FRANKLIN'S GULL 1 (winter adult)
Ring-billed Gull 300+
Herring Gull 30
LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL 1 (adult winter, 1st of year)
Great Black-backed Gull 110
Caspian Tern 30
Common Tern 1 - 3 (only 1 at a time, may have been more)
Forster's Tern 175
Rock Dove 3
Mourning Dove 15
Belted Kingfisher 3
Downy Woodpecker 1
Northern Flicker 6
Tree Swallow 400
Crow sp. 15 (only Fish heard)
Carolina Wren 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
American Robin 5
Northern Mockingbird 1
European Starling 200+
Yellow-rumped Warbler 6
Sosng Sparrow 3
Red-winged Blackbird 50
BREWER'S BLACKBIRD 1 (adult male)
Commomn Grackle 200
House Finch 15
House Sparrow 50
The FRANKLIN'S GULL was first seen sitting on the flat and then
feeding on the thick grass mat to the right of the marina at distances of
less than 100 yards. It was watched off and on for nearly an hour. It was
very easy to pick out because it is a small bird, halfway in size between a
Forster's Tern and a Ring-billed Gull, has an nearly complete hood, very
black except for the front of the face, big white spots on the primaries,
and a substantial white bar separating the black tips of the primaries from
the rest of the wing. It was in the same scope field as the Lesser
Black-backed Gull or about ten minutes.
The BREWER'S BLACKBIRD, a county first I think, was calling from
the tops of the trees around the parking lot. it was in the company of
seveal Starlings some of the time, alone the rest. It was very active,
moving rom on end of the marina to the other, occasionally on the ground
near the entrance to the Promenade, and last seen on the ground near the
playground.
The tide will be low at dawn tomorrow and I will be at the marina
sometime fairly early in the morning. Details on rarities to follow.
Rick
"Everywhere I go I'm asked if the university stifles writers. My opinion is
that they don't stifle enough of them. There's many a bestseller that could
have been prevented by a good teacher." Flannery O'Connor
Rick Blom
rblom@blazie.com
4318 Cowan Place
Belcamp, Maryland 21017
(410)575-6086