a drive up to the most Northern tip of Newfoundland June 20th 2015

Birds, Travel

This week I have to work in Newfoundland visiting pet shops all over the rock so the diversions are extra awesome.  Not all birding of course since when you bird here the wild and rugged beauty of the landscape often takes over.

The ferry docked early Saturday morning and my task for the day was to drive almost 700km all the way up to the Northern tip to Saint Anthony.

A short drive from the ferry was J.T. Cheeseman Provincial Park which has a protected area for Piping Plovers so I made my first stop.

A quick look didn’t turn up any Plovers, but I did get my first lifer (maybe 2) of the trip, a Common Tern.  I have seen Terns before at Keji but I count my lifers as the ones I’m able to snap photos of.

Common Tern - click twice for full resolution I usually leave unaltered so non birders can have perspective

Common Tern – click twice for full resolution I usually leave unaltered so non birders can have perspective

The entire park was filled with the songs of Yellow and also Black and White Warblers.  On the way out I tried to see if I might find some other warblers and instead I found a pair of Crossbills .  At first I thought they were Red Crossbills, but now I think White- Winged and would like some ID help please.  Again photos un-cropped, please click twice for full resolution as my blogs are more of a diary than a race for the best photos.

Update : oops not Crossbills at all they are female Pine Grosbeaks thank you Maxine Quinton – I had crossbills on the brain as I expect later I will see them at Terra Nova Park 

Is this a female White-Winged Crossbill?

female Pine Grosbeak thanks Maxine Quinton  🙂

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female Pine Grosbeak

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female Pine Grosbeak

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female Pine Grosbeaks

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female Pine Grosbeaks

Continuing up the coast, the beautiful fjords of Western Pond in Gros Morne caught my eye and I stopped on the side of the road to have a look where Canada Geese just happened to have some goslings.  Goslings are always cute but in front of the fjords they are a thing from heaven.

Canada Geese in front of the Western Brook Pond fjords

Canada Geese in front of the Western Brook Pond fjords

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There was a Yellow Warbler on every stop I made.  There is not an inch of road on the West Coast that is not singing with Warblers including Black Throated Green Warblers, who I did not snap but heard in abundance.  The Yellows are always nosey and easy to snap like this one at Hawke’s Bay.  There were also large amounts of Barn Swallows (potentially Bank Swallows which Heather Quinn calls Sand Martins LOL) in pockets in the stretch from Gros Morne to Saint Anthony.

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pair of Ring-Necked Ducks splashing about

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Yellow Warbler

There were a few non-birding stops of course.  One to the Arches, and one to Bellburns Brook.

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ummm doesn’t this look like a man with bushy eyebrows to you?at Bellburns Brook lookoff the unofficial one

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The Arches provincial park in Portland Creek NL

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The Arches provincial park in Portland Creek NL

Realizing my drive to Saint Anthony was now going to be a full 12 hour excursion I stopped noodling around and kept straight on.

The warning signs for Moose crossings increased with frequency as the town approached so I was watching the side of the road more closely than ever, which landed me another lifer, a Wilson’s Snipe.  I did see a Moose as well but thought it foolish to stop and photograph it as it ran along the side of the highway eyeing my car  😉

Wilson's Snipe just inside Saint Anthony town limits

Wilson’s Snipe just inside Saint Anthony town limits

Not too long after this sighting I checked into my motel and had an hour left for birding in Saint Anthony so made the short drive up to Fishing Point.

This was worth the entire drive up to this wondrous, Labrador like Northern tip of Newfoundland as it’s not every day that you are photographing sparrows and a whale appears in the background which is exactly what happened to me.  Probably a Minke or Pilot Whale definitely not a Humpback but the most serendipitous moment I could have possibly hoped for.  Mother Nature continues to humble me time and again.

NL-west-coast-st-anthony-june-20 361 NL-west-coast-st-anthony-june-20 381The locals call the White-Crowned Sparrows, Tom Tits the lady at the motel tells me.  Ebird said they were uncommon here at this time but she said they are always abundant and I sure saw lots of them as well as our little Yellow Warbler friends, and a Savannah Sparrow.

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Savannah Sparrow having a bite to eat on top of the Great Viking Feast dinner theater sod-covered building

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White-Crowned Sparrows aplenty at Fishing Point the locals call them “tom tits”

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and so many Yellow Warblers

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And no trip of mine is complete without some other type of wildlife, there is a little 3 legged fox who was caught in a trap who visits the locals for a little TLC.

the 3 legged fox poor feller people are so mean sometimes leghold trapping sucks!

the 3 legged fox poor feller people are so mean sometimes leghold trapping sucks!

The day wouldn’t be complete without some iceberg sightings, it is Saint Anthony after all.

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beautiful Saint Anthony Harbour

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on the Fishing Point walk

A day like this is life changing in the best of ways indeed, although no grey jays or Puffins maybe today…

PS Thank you Sandra and Rick at the Hotel North for your hospitality and knowledge.

PPS Rick you can find my things online at www.houndsaroundtown.com or www.thebarkinglot.ca in Atlantic Canada and in person at Plaza Pets in Cornerbrook.

Accidental birds in Portland, Maine and some birding outside of Wiscasset

Birds, Travel, United States

I spent last night in a little beach tourist town called Ogunquit (just outside of Wells).  I prefer to get out of the big cities for the night when I’m on the road so I can reboot, and birding has certainly upped that game. This morning I was off to Portland.  I stopped at a pet store in down town Portland and in the parking lot I looked up and there was Black-crowned Night Heron in a tree,

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Black-crowned Night Heron

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Black-crowned Night Heron downtown Portland, Maine

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Black-crowned Night Heron who just figured out I was photographing him uh yeah I’ll stop now dude

Off I drove to the other end of town to see another pet store and in the back of the store I was greeted by a House Sparrow (my bird familiar perhaps?) and a few Savannah Sparrows.  The birds, they are everywhere when you start looking for them. squire-taxbox-inn-may-6 070

Savannah Sparrows

Savannah Sparrows

male House Sparrow

male House Sparrow

Then off to Wiscasset for the night.   On the way down I stopped in the country to try to snag a shot of a large group of Barn Swallows who were, you guessed it, living in a barn, but didn’t have a lot of luck.  They were super fun to watch and listen to though.  If you click twice on the photos to zoom in you will see they are actually Barn Swallows, not blackflies  😉

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Barn Swallow

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Barn Swallows never stay still unless they are in the barn I guess

My final destination, The Squire Tarbox Inn, is a haven for birds and a heaven for people.  I’ve given a view of the outside of my room both looking in and looking out.  Hands down one of the nicest places I’ve ever stayed.  Although I do remember the Lodge at the Old Dorm on Bowen Island, Vancouver was amazing as well.  The owners at the Squire Tarbox Inn are wonderful and serve food that is farmed by their son down the road and prepared by an executive chef.  Best salad greens ever!  I can’t wait for my “farm to table” breakfast in the morning and to hear the songbirds who are all over the property.

view of the outside of my room at the Squire Tarbox Inn looking in

view of the outside of my room at the Squire Tarbox Inn looking in

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view of the outside of my room at the Squire Tarbox Inn looking out

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Chipping Sparrow

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Chipping Sparrow

some type of flycatcher? lovely find

Chipping Sparrow (thanks for the ID help)

Roni, the owner of the Squire Tarbox Inn told me of a little wildlife preserve I could get to in the area so I took a little drive to see the local scenery and a walkabout on the trail.  First thing I saw at the trail head though was evidence of a bird massacre…oh dear!  What kind of bird I wonder?   Once on the trail, I was completely surrounded by songbirds the entire time but the trees were dense and very tall so I did not see many although I do think I finally got my Hermit Thrush?  I could use some ID verification with my photos, but I swear by that Hermit Thrush song.  Joel Plaskett knows a thing or two about songs I always say…

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uh oh someone got nailed! what kind of feathers are these?

Bonyun Westport Island

Bonyun Westport Island

 

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Hermit Thrush? looks warm toned like a Veery but there songs are completely different

Hermit Thrush?

Hermit Thrush

The trail was nice and I walked to the end but didn’t see much more.  I think if the river had been filled up with water there would have been lots of birds but it was pretty much just mud.  But as usual my birding adventure ended with a surprise as I noticed a Ruffed Grouse on the way out.   Boothbay Harbour and Rockland in the morning and then up the coast to New Brunswick for another night at the palace they call the Algonquin Resort before visiting some stores in Saint John and heading back to Nova Scotia.   Birding sure makes my business travel feel like a vacation.

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The Wells Reserve at Laudholm National Estuarine Research Reserve

Birds, Travel, United States

First I must credit the Nova Scotia Bird Society‘s Facebook page and many knowledgeable members for making it possible to identify these birds more easily.  I don’t have a field guide yet but recognize many of the birds I see from other people’s photos and from ID help from some serious birders who are good enough to share their knowledge with us newbies.  PS if someone could check my IDs here that would be great too  🙂

I drove across the border into Maine early this morning (May 5th).  I’m here to visit pet stores and that is my first priority but when I crossed the border I realized that the time was earlier and that I had an extra hour I didn’t plan to have so spent it birding this morning before my first scheduled visit.

There was a small wildlife preserve just outside the border in Maine so I stopped but didn’t see anything.  Just around the bend I stopped to get a pic of a Belted Kingfisher though.

male Belted Kingfisher

male Belted Kingfisher

Then a minute or two later I stopped on the side of the road because a Heron like bird was on the side of the road.  A woman saw me stop and she stopped too on the other side of the road.  Susan, if you read this let me know if you think that might have been a Green Heron or an American Bittern we saw.  The stripe on the eye seems to be the giveaway.  Of course, no photo before he flew off into the woods.  Memory is rarely accurate but I feel it was one of those two.

I have this thing when I go birding that I never see what I went to see and often spot birds I never thought I would see instead.  Of course if you go to a nature reserve all bets are off you just see everything.  What a spectacular place the Wells Reserve is!  Many of the same birds that are in our marshes and conservation areas in Nova Scotia are here too of course.  Anyway, in a place like this even the Crows look extra special.

The Wells Reserve at Laudholm

The Wells Reserve at Laudholm

The Wells Reserve at Laudholm

The Wells Reserve at Laudholm

The Wells Reserve at Laudholm

The Wells Reserve at Laudholm

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The Wells Reserve at Laudholm where even the Crows look better

The Wells Reserve at Laudholm

The Wells Reserve at Laudholm

As soon as I walked onto the property I was great by two Eastern Phoebes who were chasing each other around and making their scratchy Fee-Bee calls.  I didn’t even have my camera out so of course they posed on the park bench and I didn’t get the photo.  But off to a great start I thought anyway.  I vowed to be ready for the next bird though.

And I got my Eastern Towhee finally, who turned out to be a female.  The photo is dreadful but I didn’t bother to crop it because you can just click on it twice to enlarge it.  I think there were tons of Towhees there scratching in the bushes but they stay in the brush for the most part so I only got this one bad shot.  But still happy to have discovered a Towhee in it’s natural habit when I did not expect to.  Birding serendipity, my favorite!

female Eastern Towhee

female Eastern Towhee

There weren’t many Robins around, and not a Bluejay to be found (uncommon here apparently) but I did find a Porcupine and a Ground Hog.  Go figure.

Porcupine

Porcupine

Groundhog

Groundhog

Next up was a real treat as when I looked up high to see what birds were making the new to me noise, it was a pair of Brown Headed Cowbirds.

male and female Brown Headed Cowbirds

male and female Brown Headed Cowbirds

male and female Brown Headed Cowbirds

male and female Brown Headed Cowbirds

male Brown Headed Cowbird

male Brown Headed Cowbird

female Brown Headed Cowbird

female Brown Headed Cowbird

female Brown Headed Cowbird

female Brown Headed Cowbird

I even found a Northern Mockingbird!

Northern Mockingbird

Northern Mockingbird

There were 4 male Red Winged Blackbirds staking out their territory in the marsh.

male Red Winged Blackbird

male Red Winged Blackbird

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male Red Winged Blackbird

male Red Winged Blackbird

And if all that weren’t enough in one day I grabbed a couple more lifers on the way out.  Mixed in with the Song Sparrows on the grass were a group of White Throated Sparrows, and I believe at least one White Crowned Sparrow (orange beak).  My apologies as I ran out of light for the Sparrow shots but I think they are good enough for IDs.  And to that a good night.

White Throated Sparrows ?

White Throated Sparrows

American Tree Sparrow ?

White Throated Sparrow  – thank you for the ID help this one confused me

White Crowned Sparrow ?

White Crowned Sparrow – thank you for the ID help