my Winter Bird list is at 34 already and it’s only Dec. 10th

Atlantic Canada, BEYOND, Birds, Canada

It’s easier than you think I promise…you have to remember there are common birds like Crows, Black Ducks, Herring Gulls, and Starlings in this list  🙂

So, apparently the winter bird season runs from December 1st – February end.  I had not really thought of keeping a list but a local birder, Richard Stern, challenged me to find 100 birds for my winter list.  I do think that is an achievable goal, although that does not mean I will succeed.

I haven’t been trying very hard and I’m already up to 34 different species as of today.  I’m unlikely to try very hard during the whole two months, but will keep track just for curiosity’s sake.

People certainly do need a reason to get out in and into nature in the dead of winter.  It’s unseasonably warm this December and the migrants were late coming in the Spring and seem to be late leaving this Fall/Winter so there are a fair number of migrants still hanging around.  In fact, the Pubnico birders just got a brand new bird added to the Nova Scotia Winter Bird List, the American Pelican.  I’m not going to see that one but I am planning a trip to CSI (Cape Sable Island) next week with a few other birders so hopefully we can all add a few good birds to our life lists and winter lists.  Most of my birding is happenstance, but we’ll see about the little Mountain Bluebird.

Typically I’m not a list person but I do eBird and it keeps all that info for me with no effort.  It does not keep a winter bird list per se so I copied the info from the NSBS website into a little spreadsheet. Please feel free to download one for yourself.  I challenge you to keep your own list for fun as well.

I started birding in February of last year so I am not that surprised now by how many different birds we have in Nova Scotia during the winter but if you have never given it much thought you will probably be taken back by it.

The Bufflehead Ducks for example, are just showing up.  They are the sweetest little diving ducks you ever did see.  Well probably rivaled only by the Harlequins.  (you might have to click on links to see photos btw WordPress and Flickr seem to be having a little pissing match)

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Bufflehead Ducks at Bissett Lake there were probably about 50 there today – Dec. 10, 2015

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Personally I am more interested in seeing birds that are known to be here and not too hard to spot but these ones have all eluded me so far.  They may be around in the next few weeks.  Some will be easier to find then others but they are all possibilities I feel.

  • Evening Grosbeak
  • Redknot
  • Canvasback
  • Redhead
  • Sapsucker
  • Red-headed Woodpecker
  • Red-throated Loon
  • Pelagics of any sort
  • Longspur
  • Pine Warbler
  • Razorbill
  • Dovekie

If I could just be walking through the woods this winter and a noisy flock of Evening Grosbeaks could fly by me I think it would make it a good birding winter.  Simple goals, it’s all about simple goals.

It’s tough to have a bad time outside even if it’s cold if you are bundled up I find, a thermos full of hot chocolate ain’t  a bad idea either…I’m just sayin.

December 1st – first day of the Winter Birding Season started with 3 lifers and the madness that is a Canada Goose flock

Atlantic Canada, BEYOND, Birds, Canada

December 1st was a standout day of sunshine and good birding all over the province.  I saw many reports of great birds today (naturally many for the Mountain Bluebird in Mavilette) on the NSBS Facebook page and on eBird.

It is also the first day of the Winter Birding Season and I was fortunate enough to grab 3 lifers which is interesting way to start, and hopefully a good forerunner.

I have been watching FB posts from one of our NSBS members, Liz Voellinger, who has been doing a wonderful job finding different geese mixed into the Canada Geese flocks throughout Colchester County for the past month or so.  Her enthusiasm about them is inspiring to me, although I have not had any luck up until today.  Typically I can only work a bit of out of town birding into a sales trip and only if I can find enough daylight hours to make it all work.  And that doesn’t work out nearly as often as you would think.   And so it goes, my first stab at the Geese flocks about a month ago was pretty disappointing.   Then on Friday past I had occasion to be near Shubenacadie so gave it another try and failed at the geese, but did meet a nice farmer who let me walk through his poopy fields, and also found 8 Sandhill Cranes on the way without much effort.  You just never know they say.

 

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Today I did something I really never do, and took the day off to drive out to have another go at the geese as the ice is starting to form and they’ll head further south any day now. I made a round trip through Meagher’s Grant route for good measure and had a brisk walk in the sun on the Musquodoboit Trailways.  There were lots of Kinglets whistling about but not much else.  But stalking a Kinglet in the sunshine is a gift in December and car birding is not very good exercise  😉
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When I got to the Gay’s River Road where I had seen the big flock of Canada Geese on Friday, I was really disappointed to see the flooded fields and pond has frozen over and feared I was too late in the year.  I drove around Shubenacadie for a while with no success.  I was contemplating driving up to Masstown but really had not wanted to go that far.  Just for kicks I pulled over and checked the Recent Rarities page on the NSBS website.  Good thing, because one of our NSBS members, Bruce Stevens had done an eBird report with an exact location so I drove up and couldn’t believe my eyes to see the flock.  I parked at the head of the MacInnis Trail (a good adventure for another day) which shares a parking lot with the new to me and most wonderful Village Bakery.

I was really excited to have found the flock and was actually worried they would fly away as I walked close but they surely knew they were safe and sound behind the fence and stuck around to put on a good show as they say.  The Greater White-fronted Goose was the first thing I saw as it was brown with an orange bill and close to the side of the flock I entered on.  No sooner did I see it and it disappeared into the mix.  There were 400+ Canada Geese of differing species and none staying still for too long and so I knew trying to find the Cackling Goose would be a lot more difficult.
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Now, about these Cackling Geese – the whole idea that there are different species of Canada Geese was new to me about 5 weeks ago when all these big flocks started showing up.  I had been in Truro for the day when I saw the eBird report from Jake Walker that a Cackling Goose was spotted in a large flock in Truro so picked up a birding friend and we went to see what all the fuss was about.  Being new to this whole Cackling Goose thing we thought we saw about 40 of them.  We later learned that they were just small Canada Geese.  Oopsy!

A little web research made the whole thing seem entirely hopeless and I expect it will come as a great surprise to many of you as well.  11 species!  Well then my friend said “I hate geese now”.  LOL

Fast forward to today I was super fortunate that Eric Mills showed up with a scope.  I’d never met Eric in person and was happy just for that opportunity as he is a wonderful birder and VP of the NSBS as well.  But here is the thing, he can find that 1 Cackling Goose in his scope pretty quickly and was kind enough to let me see it and a few other birders arrived and he showed them as well.  When you get a good view of one it is true what they say that there is no mistaking them for the other races of Canada Geese.

It was an amazing learning opportunity and I’m glad I followed my instinct to take the day off and study the geese.  Meeting up with other birders only made it more amazing and fun.

I ended the day with a delicious chicken salad sandwich from the Village Bakery, and a plan to pre-order a Butterscotch Pie from Jennifer next time I’m passing through Shubenacadie.  Yummy!

PS – my list for day 1 of the Winter Bird List is:

  • Bald Eagle
  • Golden-crowned Kinglet
  • American Crow
  • Black-capped Chickadee
  • Canada Goose
  • Cackling Goose
  • Iceland Gull
  • Greater White-fronted Goose
  • Common Raven
  • Herring Gull
  • Mallard
  • Ring-necked Pheasant
  • European Starling
  • Dark-eyed Junco
  • Rock Pigeon
  • American Goldfinch

a reason to visit Cape Breton (other than the Cabot Trail)

Atlantic Canada, BEYOND, Birds, Canada

If the roads are travel worthy then take a drive to Sydney because the birding is great all year round.

Donkin is a migratory point that is only about a half hour from Sydney, with the Glace Bay Bird Sanctuary very close by.

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An easy and low kilometer route to guarantee a variety of birds is to drive out the Louisbourg Highway and cross over at Birch Grove into Port Morien.  There is a sandbar and salt marsh in Port Morien and from there you can zip on to Schooner Pond in Donkin.  They are you can hit the Sanctuary on the way home and go back through Glace Bay, maybe even hit the airport on the way home where birds seem to come in for their own landings.

The surrounding areas have lots of other hot spots but this is an easy day trip if you spend the night in Sydney.  Most of the accommodations and eateries (check out Flavors, Governors Pub, and Doktor Lukes Coffee) are going to be in Sydney if it’s a non-touristy time of the year so for a winter trip in particular this is a good route to go.  October would be the peak for everything, hands down but you have to go with the seasons to see what nature has to offer.

Cape Breton has lots of other good birding areas or course.

If winter birding is not your cup of tea, you might want to consider the fact that a good sized group of Barrow’s Goldeneye ducks hang out by the Dobson Yacht Club and in towards the Coxheath Bridge in the colder weather.

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something “different”

Birds

As a new birder, often that’s all that strikes me.  They call it beginner’s luck in birding because it seems like you are always seeing new things but in my opinion it’s because you have no idea what you are seeing most of the time so every new sound or shape you see registers as “different”.  If you are me, you snap a photo just in case and so by luck of the draw interesting things get mixed in there.

Twice in a week in two different locations I’ve photographed Lincoln’s Sparrows mixed in with large groups of Song Sparrows.  At the time I didn’t even know I was viewing Lincoln’s but what registered in my mind was that something about it was different and I should snap a photo of that one.  I wish both times I had called it out to the birders I was with who would have loved to have seen one of those birds, but at the time I didn’t even know it was there.  Lincoln’s are uncommon (or just really shy) so you don’t expect to see them and from a distance it would be very hard to tell what they are, but a 50 zoom camera snapping “different” things will pick up a lot and make you look like a much more experienced birder then you are sometimes.  And my camera’s birding abilities currently far exceed my own.

And so it goes that there is a lot to know and a lot to see and it takes a lot of knowledge to see all that is there.  After being exposed to a particular bird many times eventually you will actually know without having to confirm with photos and without a doubt most of the time.  But even the experts can’t always agree so don’t beat yourself up for not knowing everything and arm yourself with as much field experience as possible.

On another note, it’s amazing I’m ever right about IDs with how often I’m wrong.  In fact just the other day I was thrilled to see 40 Cackling Geese which turned out to be small Canada Geese.  Hey what do I know? But from spending time with more experienced birders its clear there is no other way to learn.  You have to put in your 10,000 hours I guess.   And with so many birds you might have to put in 10,000 per bird really.  I mean to really know something you have to give it more than a glance in a field guide or match up a photo.  In the end whatever birds you watch the most you will know the most about, and you can learn as much about them all or a few of them as you choose in as many settings as you fancy.  It is limitless and provides a lifetime of learning and for that I am grateful to be on-board.

I recently started reading the Kaufman Field Guide to Advanced Birding and it starts more or less by saying this (which was a huge aha moment for me) and an immense amount of in depth birding info I’m just starting to sort through.  So clearly I am not the first person who thought any of these things.  They are just the stepping stone to the world behind the bird that matches the picture on the internet or in the book.  It’s a realm I truly look forward to.

Honestly I will probably not recognize the next Lincoln’s Sparrow I see in the field unless it is alone and stays put for an extended period of time and clearly matches the example in my field guide.  Although I have had 3 sightings of 3 different specimens in 3 different locations that nowhere near classifies being an expert on Lincoln’s Sparrows.  But I might be able to master Robins or Starlings or those tricky little Song Sparrows.  And someday will master that Lincoln’s too.

I don’t expect to be bored by birding anytime soon.


My favorite shots of new to me birds from my past couple of birding adventures in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

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a week in New England…with no time to bird Sept/Oct 2015

Birds, Travel, United States

I spent last week travelling through New Brunswick and New England (Maine, Connecticut, and Massachusetts). I had high hopes that I would be able to spend evenings birding when my work was done but it was dark early, and I was on the road late so there was very little birding to be had. In fact, I think my heart broke a little more each of the 4 times I drove by the Oxbow National Wildlife Refuge and could not stop.

However, when you drive thousands of miles you are bound to see something right?

I had 4 new to me birds that were spotted incidentally, the best find being the Rusty Blackbird on the first night I spent in St. Andrews by-the-Sea.

Driving though Maine I spotted a flock of Eastern Bluebirds flying in a farmer’s field so stopped to have a peek.  Those little guys are so cute, and not very common back home.

It would turn out that I was so scared driving in the i-95 toward NYC, that once I reached my stop in Greenwich I vowed to never drive on it again and took the backroads out of the city.  And so, I ended up in one of the richest neighbourhoods in North America.  Like think Dupont family rich.  Well, I’m sure it went over like a ton of bricks when I stopped to photograph this Turkey Vulture, but hey you only live once.  Would have been awesome to have had time to visit the Babcock Preserve which is known for Hooded Warblers…will do in the Spring I guess.  I’ll take the Turkey Vulture for now.

Mother Nature must have a sense of humor because later that evening I happened upon a family of Wild Turkeys, first ones I’ve even seen.

The Ferry ride is about the closest thing to a pelagic trip I’ll get in some time but all I saw was Northern Gannets and Surf Scoters. It’s pretty neat to watch the Gannets hours from land though I must say.

Although I had no time for birding in New England, my ferry was due to land in Yarmouth at 8am on Saturday morning so I had planned to visit Cape Forchu to look for Warblers and Kinglets once back in Nova Scotia. However, the ferry landed 7 hours late. Even though I know this would be a terrible time to visit Cape Sable Island for the first time (and it was blowing a gale to boot) I made a stop to see it for the first time at least. Gorgeous habitat for birds can’t wait to get there someday to do some real birding. I did finally get to see a female Belted Kingfisher at least, so not a total wash.

Overall, it was the least birdy road trip I’ve been on but I have great ideas for where to stop when I visit next time. Nothing worth having comes easy they say.