Tuesday, June 18, 2013

I'll have a White Pelican, on the rocks...

The American White Pelican was resighted this morning (6/18), so we drove over to Niskayuna and parked by the Aqueduct Rowing Club just west of Balltown Rd. About 200 yards down a grassy trail from the parking lot, there was an opening in the tree line and the pelican could be seen sitting on a rocky outcrop.


 stretching the "pouch" (click to enlarge)


 iPhone-through-scope images, they get better later (click to enlarge)


 iPhone-through-scope images, they get better later (click to enlarge)


 iPhone-through-scope image (click to enlarge)


  iPhone-through-scope image (click to enlarge)



 iPhone-through-scope video (click to begin)


A Bald Eagle was interested in the pelican, too. After he made a few close passes, the pelican took flight and was last seen headed south...


Bald Eagle eyeing the pelican (click to enlarge)


TW

Monday, June 17, 2013

The Brief Pelican

On June 9th, a report of an American White Pelican near Poughkeepsie was circulated in local birding communities. Subsequent reports from Rockland County, and then Westchester County over the next couple of days suggested the bird was heading south down the Hudson River towards coastal areas.

An infrequent visitor to our region, the American White Pelican breeds from the western Great Lakes states across the northern half of the Plains states into southern Canada. Some non-breeding birds remain throughout the summer in wintering areas along the Gulf coast and up to the Carolinas. From western New York down to the mid-Atlantic states, strays, usually individuals, are sighted passing through, mostly in May and June.

Last evening, June 16th, another report of an American White Pelican was received, this one seen settling in for the night on an "island' just west of the Rexford Bridge near Alplaus. I headed there early this morning, hoping for a chance sighting. Nothing was apparent from the north or south sides of the Mohawk River west of the bridge. I decided to head downriver, stopping at every opportunity along the way to check out the river, especially islands, buoys, and structures. From Niskayuna to Latham to Crescent and finally Cohoes, where the water level was very high, and a remarkable volume of water was passing over Cohoes Falls. Oh, and no pelican. But I did get a close up view of the falls:


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 Northern Rough-winged Swallow blurs through the view  (click to enlarge)


 Northern Rough-winged Swallow perched, some fed on the ground, too  (click to enlarge)


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TW

Sunday, June 9, 2013

The Great Vly


At the Great Vly near Saugerties, NY, a King Rail has been present for a couple of weeks. It frequently crosses the road from one side of the marsh to the other. It has a loud, distinctive call "kek-kek-kek-kek..." that is repeated often.


 King Rail at Great Vly (click to enlarge)


King Rail at Great Vly (click to enlarge)

 
King Rail at Great Vly (click to enlarge)


Other species seen and heard were Least Bittern, Common Gallinule, Green Heron, and several species of swallows. A Black-billed Cuckoo perched for a while, too.


Black-billed Cuckoo, Great Vly (click to enlarge)


Black-billed Cuckoo, Great Vly (click to enlarge)


TW

Saturday, June 8, 2013

NYPA Nature Trail, Schoharie County

The New York Power Authority runs the Blenheim-Gilboa Power Project near North Blenheim in Schoharie County, NY. Their visitor center is very educational concerning power generation in New York State, but it also has a wildlife education room and observation area as well. A nature trail ("bluebird trail") runs south from the center to Mine Kill State Park.


Visitor Center at Blenheim-Gilboa (click to enlarge)


 solar panel array at Blenheim-Gilboa (click to enlarge)


cedars and arborvitae wrapped in wire to discourage browsing deer (click to enlarge)


 marsh in front of visitor center (click to enlarge)


marsh in front of visitor center (click to enlarge)


 marsh in front of visitor center (click to enlarge)


 nature trail at Blenheim-Gilboa, part of the Long Path (click to enlarge)


 Prairie Warbler perched up singing (click to enlarge)


 Prairie Warbler (click to enlarge)


 Prairie Warbler (click to enlarge)

 
open, shrubby habitat at Blenheim-Gilboa (click to enlarge)


TW

Friday, May 31, 2013

A lot can happen in a week...


The Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club conducted an overnight field trip to Perch River WMA near Watertown, NY on Sat., May 25th- Sun., May 26th. We escaped rainy, windy, very cool weather in the Capital District, but the conditions were only marginally better at our destination. At least there was no rain. Some of the participants stopped at Tug Hill WMA southwest of Lowville in Lewis County on the way up Saturday, then moved up to Chaumont Barrens Preserve early in the afternoon.

It was windy and cool at Tug Hill WMA. We were hoping to see some of the woodland songbirds and warblers that breed on the plateau, but the birds had other ideas. Chestnut-sided Warbler put in an appearance, but only a few other species could be heard in the distance. Mourning Warbler, our target species, which usually can be easily observed there, was absent. We decided to leave early and devote more time at our other two Day One stops.


65 acre impoundment at Tug Hill Wildlife Management Area (click to enlarge)


 active Osprey nest on Morris Tract Rd., Chaumont (click to enlarge)


Chaumont Barrens Preserve is one of the last and finest examples of alvar grasslands in the world, and is a link in the chain of North American alvars forming an arc from Jefferson County through Ontario, and all the way to northern Michigan.


Chaumont Barrens Preserve, protected by The Nature Conservancy (click to enlarge)


The soil layer is very thin, covering limestone underneath, which is exposed in places. Many of the plants are unique to this habitat, and others are stunted versions of species seen elsewhere, especially the evergreens.


trail at Chaumont Barrens (click to enlarge)


It was early afternoon, so things were fairly quiet at the Barrens, but we saw singing Great Crested Flycatchers, Field Sparrow, an Eastern Kingbird, a Brown Thrasher, and a handsome Black-and-white Warbler. We could also hear our target species, Golden-winged Warbler, in two different places, but they remained out of sight range.

We met the other members of our group at Perch River WMA, which is located about eight miles to the northwest of Watertown. It is some 8,000 acres of high quality wetlands bordered by deciduous forest, shrubland, and open agricultural fields.


 main parking area at Perch River WMA along Rt. 12 (click to enlarge)


 Caspian Tern flyby (click to enlarge)


We birded Perch River for two hours Saturday afternoon, and for three hours the next morning. Highlights included three American Bitterns in the grassy field below the observation tower near the Stone Mills Pool, Black-crowned Night-Herons, Pied-billed Grebes, many Osprey, a Wilson's Snipe, Caspian Terns, and many Black Terns flying back and forth between the Upper and Lower Pools.



 Perch River map, including the refuge areas (click to enlarge)


 view of the Upper Pool, Perch River WMA (click to enlarge)


 view of the Lower Pool at Perch River WMA (click to enlarge)


 Marsh Wren foraging just above the water (click to enlarge)


 Black Tern soaring above the Lower Pool (click to enlarge)


On Sunday afternoon, a few of the participants returned to Chaumont Barrens to attempt to visually observe the Golden-winged Warblers. After ninety minutes of moving back-and-forth, to-and-fro, here-to-there-and-back, we finally nabbed the little bugger. Getting a good visual can be important with winged-warblers, as the two species can interbreed and produce variably plumaged and voiced offspring.






 information kiosk at Chaumont Barrens (click to enlarge)


 limestone fissure, watch your step (click to enlarge)


cephalopod fossil in limestone (click to enlarge)


 Alvar landscape (click to enlarge)


 Prairie Smoke and grasses (click to enlarge)


 Chaumont Barrens (click to enlarge)


 Golden-winged Warbler behind branch (click to enlarge)


Golden-winged Warbler behind pine needles, center (click to enlarge)



Field of Prairie Smoke at Chaumont Barrens Preserve (click to enlarge)



TW