Category: Ed’s Birding Notes

This is where I post my personal birding notes.

Taking a Break from Yard Work Yields Lazuli Bunting and Western Kingbird

Today I had a short window between yard work and covering SDC so the PAs could go to their quarterly meeting, and when Bruce texted about not just the usual Lazuli Bunting but Western Kingbird in Orting, where to go was clear.  I had only an hour to bird after dashing down the hill to the Orting Valley and getting to the 178th Street hotspot, but it was enough. I checked the powerline and fenceline on the way down 178th but couldn’t find the WEKI.  Lazuli buntings were on station and singing all over the place in the field past the bend in the road, in the Scotch Broom as Bruce described.  I had at least 4 birds, two males singing and posing near the gravel trail, and another two singing farther away at the same time. I think there were a minimum of 6 birds singing, but reported 4 on eBird.

I made it a quick stop in this area to have time for another look for the kingbird, and just before giving up on the way back I spotted the WEKI on the wire from the utility pole just in front of and to the left of the cell tower.  I managed a digiscope ID quality photo.  In the photo I can see the white outer tail feathers, and in the scope clearly saw the gray overall color with yellow belly.  These birds seem to frequently stop at this location in migration at this time of year.  last year Bruce and I had them in the same field 2 days earlier in May.

Western Kingbird in Orting
Western Kingbird in Orting

Two good FOY Pierce County birds.  Thanks Bruce.

Birdathon Report: April 30, 2016

IMG_5073
On the last day of April 2016 I headed out on my annual Tahoma Audubon Society fundraising project the Birdathon with the help of 4 strong birders. Kay, Ken Brown, Laurel Parshall and Eric Dudley met me at the park-and-ride and we squeezed into my Subaru to head out. We started immediately with 4 species in the McDonald’s parking lot: American Crow, House Sparrow, Glaucous-winged gull and a singing White-crowned sparrow at 6 AM. This was the first of 17 e-bird lists I’d record today. You can still contribute by clicking here.
We had a lot of things going for us to accumulate a good list of species. Excellent birders, great weather, a long spring day of daylight, but against us was the calendar. I usually do this “big day” type of outing about May 7-12th. By then the neotropical migrants have arrived and small remnants of the winter visitors remain, maximizing the species available. This year, my first year in retirement, I’m just having too much fun traveling to pick a date in that time frame so April 30th was the best available date.
We started our day at Spanaway Marsh where the dawn chorus started with Chipping sparrow in the parking area, and had us finding 6 species of warblers including first-of-year county MacGilvery’s and Yellow warblers along with Black-throated gray, Wilson’s, Orange-crowned warblers and Common yellowthroat. We missed Hutton’s vireo where is “always” sings there and never recovered one all day. List at 39 as we headed for JBLM for 4 stops.
After talking with Bruce Labar about his day out on JBLM this week with the resident expert Nathaniel Swecker (Check out his web site on JBLM Birding) we made stops at both ends of Johnson Marsh and get some great birds including Hermit warbler, Cassin’s vireo, House wren, and Virginia Rail. Crossing the East Gate Road onto the Chamber’s lake area we saw a crazy number of Chipping sparrows, one Western Bluebird male was near the next box I get mine first sighting at each spring, we heard a Purple martin calling overhead, flushed one California quail, and headed across Hwy 507 about 10 AM to try for Western Meadowlark and Vesper sparrow, Yes on the WEME, no on the VESP.
About 10:30 we headed back toward’s Puyallup where we dropped Kay off at home, made a quick drive through of Wildwood park hoping for kinglets or woodpeckers (not today) and headed for the Lesser Goldfinch spot near the Sumner Riverside Disc Golf course. There we located Bruce Labar and his WOS group, but not the LEGO.
The 56th Street Stormwater Pond’s were kind, giving us our only shorebirds of the day, one lonely Lesser Sandpiper, a hard to see Wilson’s snipe lurking in the weeds, Killdeer, along with Cackling goose a Lesser Scaup, and a variety of ducks. We headed for Tacoma with our list at 72 species.
Our first stop was the Gog-li-hi-ti mitigated marsh where the winter gulls were gone, and we added no new species. At the Dick Gilmur turnout on Marine View Drive we did better. Our first salt water of the day added nice looks at 4 Marbled Murrelets in their breeding “marbled” plumage, not the black-and-white we more often see in winter, along with Brandt’s cormorant, Bonaparte’s gull, Belted kingfisher, and Pigeon Guillemot. At Brown’s point lighthouse we had an Osprey flying over the bay, spotted by Dr. Anthony Chen who joined us for the afternoon along with a first cycle Ring-billed gull spotted by who else but Ken Brown, our mentor and gull expert.

Pied-billed grebe on nest at Mountain View Cemetery Marsh
Pied-billed grebe on nest at Mountain View Cemetery Marsh

We wound up the day with stops at the Mountain View Cemetery Marsh, Chamber’s Creek, Sunnyside Beach, and finished strong with 5 new species at Ft. Steilacom Park. On the bay we tried for expected easy birds like Surf Scoter and Common Loon without any luck, but at Ft Steilacom we added the expected Cliff swallows and lingering Ruddy Duck, but also had both Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers on trees on opposite sides of the trail. Both were males with the bright red head patch, and it was really cool to see the size difference.
A pair of bushtits closed the day, and we ended up with 92 species total.
Side by side Greater and Lesser Scaup males at Ft. Steilacom
Side by side Greater and Lesser Scaup males at Ft. Steilacom

IMG_5092
Thanks to all participants for a fine day, to all contributors for their support of Tahoma Audubon and their educational and conservation work. and to the leaders at TAS for the work of organizing this event.
You can still contribute to TAS by by clicking here.
Thanks.

Good birding

Ed Pullen
Here is the species list: The number below the species name is the number of eBird checklists the species was note at, and the number to the right of the species is the total number of individual birds of the species reported to eBird. Ignore the May 1-6 columns.

Species Name Apr 30 May 1 May 2 May 3 May 4 May 5 May 6
Cackling Goose 46
(1) — — — — — —
Canada Goose 52
(5) — — — — — —
Wood Duck 5
(2) — — — — — —
Gadwall 18
(3) — — — — — —
American Wigeon 8
(3) — — — — — —
Mallard 44
(10) — — — — — —
Northern Shoveler 2
(2) — — — — — —
Green-winged Teal 6
(1) — — — — — —
Ring-necked Duck 4
(1) — — — — — —
Greater Scaup 4
(1) — — — — — —
Lesser Scaup 5
(2) — — — — — —
Bufflehead 80
(6) — — — — — —
Common Goldeneye 16
(3) — — — — — —
Barrow’s Goldeneye 1
(1) — — — — — —
Common Merganser 35
(5) — — — — — —
California Quail 1
(1) — — — — — —
Pied-billed Grebe 11
(5) — — — — — —
Horned Grebe 2
(2) — — — — — —
Brandt’s Cormorant 13
(1) — — — — — —
Double-crested Cormorant 26
(3) — — — — — —
cormorant sp. 9
(2) — — — — — —
Great Blue Heron 12
(4) — — — — — —
Osprey 1
(1) — — — — — —
Bald Eagle 7
(5) — — — — — —
Red-tailed Hawk 5
(4) — — — — — —
Virginia Rail 1
(1) — — — — — —
American Coot 5
(2) — — — — — —
Killdeer 21
(6) — — — — — —
Least Sandpiper 16
(2) — — — — — —
Wilson’s Snipe 1
(1) — — — — — —
Pigeon Guillemot 7
(3) — — — — — —
Marbled Murrelet 4
(1) — — — — — —
Bonaparte’s Gull 16
(3) — — — — — —
Ring-billed Gull 1
(1) — — — — — —
Glaucous-winged Gull 76
(8) — — — — — —
Western x Glaucous-winged Gull (hybrid) 1
(1) — — — — — —
Rock Pigeon 11
(4) — — — — — —
Band-tailed Pigeon 4
(2) — — — — — —
Eurasian Collared-Dove 5
(1) — — — — — —
Mourning Dove 27
(3) — — — — — —
Anna’s Hummingbird 3
(2) — — — — — —
Rufous Hummingbird 2
(2) — — — — — —
Belted Kingfisher 3
(2) — — — — — —
Red-breasted Sapsucker 4
(3) — — — — — —
Downy Woodpecker 1
(1) — — — — — —
Hairy Woodpecker 1
(1) — — — — — —
Northern Flicker 7
(5) — — — — — —
American Kestrel 1
(1) — — — — — —
Pacific-slope Flycatcher 6
(4) — — — — — —
Cassin’s Vireo 2
(1) — — — — — —
Steller’s Jay 3
(3) — — — — — —
Western Scrub-Jay 6
(3) — — — — — —
American Crow 66
(11) — — — — — —
American/Northwestern Crow 2
(1) — — — — — —
Common Raven 1
(1) — — — — — —
Northern Rough-winged Swallow 1
(1) — — — — — —
Purple Martin 2
(1) — — — — — —
Tree Swallow 61
(9) — — — — — —
Violet-green Swallow 69
(7) — — — — — —
Barn Swallow 13
(2) — — — — — —
Cliff Swallow 20
(1) — — — — — —
swallow sp. 2
(1) — — — — — —
Black-capped Chickadee 8
(4) — — — — — —
Chestnut-backed Chickadee 8
(5) — — — — — —
Bushtit 2
(1) — — — — — —
Red-breasted Nuthatch 1
(1) — — — — — —
Brown Creeper 2
(1) — — — — — —
House Wren 7
(5) — — — — — —
Pacific Wren 5
(3) — — — — — —
Marsh Wren 31
(5) — — — — — —
Bewick’s Wren 3
(2) — — — — — —
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2
(1) — — — — — —
Western Bluebird 1
(1) — — — — — —
American Robin 47
(13) — — — — — —
European Starling 50
(10) — — — — — —
Orange-crowned Warbler 12
(6) — — — — — —
MacGillivray’s Warbler 2
(1) — — — — — —
Common Yellowthroat 29
(7) — — — — — —
Yellow Warbler 16
(4) — — — — — —
Yellow-rumped Warbler 23
(7) — — — — — —
Black-throated Gray Warbler 7
(3) — — — — — —
Hermit Warbler 2
(1) — — — — — —
Wilson’s Warbler 7
(5) — — — — — —
warbler sp. (Parulidae sp.) 1
(1) — — — — — —
Chipping Sparrow 33
(3) — — — — — —
Dark-eyed Junco 18
(7) — — — — — —
White-crowned Sparrow 42
(13) — — — — — —
Savannah Sparrow 8
(3) — — — — — —
Song Sparrow 25
(11) — — — — — —
Spotted Towhee 7
(5) — — — — — —
Red-winged Blackbird 16
(3) — — — — — —
Western Meadowlark 1
(1) — — — — — —
Brown-headed Cowbird 9
(3) — — — — — —
House Finch 18
(7) — — — — — —
Purple Finch 12
(4) — — — — — —
American Goldfinch 9
(3) — — — — — —
House Sparrow 9
(4) — — — — — —

Birdathon Scouting/Preview

Today I got out in Pierce county to try out a possible route for a birdathon (TAS fundraiser) I’m leading Saturday. Overall not a terribly exciting day. I’m glad I got out to scout in a mock of a possible route. I learned that the place I had planned to start early, the Mountain View Cemetery Marsh is closed early, and I couldn’t get in. Route modified and I went there after first going to Chamber’s Creek, Sunnyside Beach, Ft. Steilacom, then the cemetery. Really uncommonly quiet for birds. Best bird was the House Wren at the expected place at the cemetery marsh. Ducks were tough to find. Missed Cinnamon Teal where I expected one at the marsh. No rails of any type. Wilson’s warblers are back, and I found Hammond’s flycatcher at Chamber’s creek. Not many other good passerines.
Shorebirds tough to come by, with only one Least sandpiper at the 56th St Ponds in Puyallup. I tried for Lesser Goldfinch at the place in Sumner that it’s been seen, and am pretty sure I heard one calling, but couldn’t sight it. Nothing early (LABU, REVI, BUOR, WAVI) at 178th off Orting Hwy, so will not go there Saturday.
I did Tacoma at low tide in the PM, and no shorebirds except Killdeer, no Purple Martins seen on Marine View boxes, but did find 2 Harlequin ducks at Dick Gilmur area along with 2 Rhinoceros auklets, and 2 Caspian Terns far out at Brown’s point lighthouse.
I think if the areas are open Sat I’ll change route and start at Spanaway Marsh and Chamber’s Lake.

A Morning at Upper Swan Creek

Today Kay and I took Dan and Patty Anderson to the upper Swan Creek area to see some of the early arriving passerines.  It was cool but dry and as is often the case at this location birding by ear was great.  Purple finches, Pacific wrens, Spotted towhees, and RB Nuthatches were incessant, and we were able to pick out lots more.  I heard my FOY Cassin’s vireo singing by the canyon wall, lots of Pacific-slope flycatchers, and FOY Black-throated gray warblers were very vocal.  This one came right down to show off for us.

Chipping sparrows were in the area of the burn.

We made quick stops at the 56th St Stormwater ponds (locked again), Levy Pond and then walked around the mitigation by the RR tracks off 70th in Fife.

Owling Pierce County

I got out this morning owling in known owl haunts in the Tacoma area.  Started about 5 AM at the Fife Hylebos waterway spot at the curve on 8th St.  It does not look like the screech owl has been seen there this year and I did not hear one today.  I played recordings for the Barn Owl that is usually there and was just about to give up when I heard its tinkle call from the hillside. It repeated several times, I listened to the “tinkle call” on the Sibley App and confirmed it as nearly identical.  First time I’ve heard that call, and a FOY bird.

Peter W. pulled in with his daughter on their way back from Seatac and I told them about the owl, and he gave me info on how to find the Puget Park Barred Owl.  I dashed over there but no luck at all.  The entrance is just across from Katie Downs Pizza place on Ruston Way.

Next stop at Chamber’s Creek for Great Horned Owl.  I got there just before dawn, and all was quiet.  No response to recorded calls, so after dawn I walked up the hill a ways, and just after sunrise I heard a single GHOW call fairly far up the creek on the hill side.  I birded the area for a while, and a bit later two GHOWs started hooting regularly, likely a male and a female, one higher pitch, one lower pitch.

I spent the next couple of hours stopping at the mouth or Chamber’s creek, FOY Pierce Osprey on the next on the draw bridge, at Sunnyside Beach, nothing special, and then at Ft. Steilacom Park.  At the park I heard several FOY Purple Finch singing, heard many of the variations of YRWA singing and saw lots, heard at least 2 CAQU calling on the hillside behind the lake, and enjoyed a cool early morning sunny walk.

 

Purple Martin

Today after seeing a really excellent movie, Eye in the Sky at the Grand Kay and I stopped at Ruston Way to see the early Purple Martins in box 4 off Dickman Mill Park.  It was cool to see the female peeking out of the box hole with her gray forehead.  After a while the female walked back into the box, and then both a male and a female took a flight.  Hope to get out owling in the AM.

Local Pierce County Wetlands.

Today after church a quick rounds of the Fife and Puyallup wetlands, Levy Pond, Sha-Dax, wet area off 70th, 56th Street Stormwater Ponds, and Gay Road Mitigation.  Really very little unexpected to be seen.  The 56th St. Stormwater area was still locked up, so tough to see much.  Sha Dax is getting overgrown, as is the area by the RR tracks off 70th, and midday birding was overall quiet.  Best sighting for me was flushing 3 Wilson’s snipe in the grass off the the left of the entry at the 70th St area and 7 Greater Yellowlegs flying overhead calling loudly.  Still as my first time out in Pierce after a month in CA I managed to get 7 FOY county species, and two FOY WA species, Savannah sparrow and Common Yellowthroat. Savannah Sparrows were singing at nearly every stop, as well as heard on a bike ride on the Orting Trail this afternoon.

Tables of # WA Species by Abundance Code Categories

For fun I’ve compiled a series of tables comparing the species of birds seen in various Washington counties sorted by various criteria.  Abundance codes are assigned to species of birds based on likelihood of being seen, code 1 birds common, code 2 uncommon, code 3 usually seen every year, code 4 seen several times over the years but usually not annually, code 5 only 1-5 records.  The first table is just the total ABA and Data from Washington Birder  and the ABA checklist. Scroll down to see tables of ABA species, WA species alphabetically, and WA species by various groupings of codes.

ABA and WA Summary Table

Area Code 1 Code 2 Code 3 Code 4 Code 5 Total
ABA 490 181 83 95 129 978
Washington 236 61 56 70 89 514

Washington State Counties Alphabetically- with columns for each Code Category and Various Groupings of Code Categories.  Scroll down to see counties ranked by various code category groups.  

County Total Code1 Code 2 Code 3 Code 4 Code 5 Colds 1 & 2 Codes 1-3 Codes 1-4
Adams

300

62

46

86

39

67

108

194

233

Asotin

290

99

44

42

43

62

143

185

228

Benton

311

32

81

71

52

75

113

184

236

Chelan

309

90

21

84

50

64

111

195

245

Clallam

311

89

64

49

47

62

153

202

249

Clark

319

114

35

47

50

73

149

196

246

Columbia

254

56

56

82

57

59

112

138

195

Cowlitz

268

90

47

119

48

54

137

166

214

Douglas

311

89

64

49

47

62

153

202

249

Ferry

258

85

56

22

43

52

141

163

206

Franklin

288

40

57

56

65

70

97

153

218

Garfield

244

63

50

33

37

61

113

146

183

Grant

329

82

77

54

48

68

159

213

261

Grays Harbor

391

125

67

36

62

101

192

228

290

Island

308

103

59

30

43

73

162

192

235

Jefferson

281

90

74

36

39

42

164

200

239

King

381

89

80

56

61

95

169

225

286

Kitsap

322

77

70

52

44

79

147

199

243

Kittitas

315

103

65

46

38

63

168

214

252

Klickitat

301

108

67

30

45

51

175

205

250

Lewis

254

88

42

36

46

42

130

166

212

Lincoln

308

91

78

37

52

50

169

206

258

Mason

271

91

50

33

33

64

141

174

207

Okanogan

315

105

86

40

27

57

191

231

258

Pacific

353

92

54

63

51

57

146

209

260

Pend Oreille

277

59

71

49

42

56

130

179

221

Pierce

349

86

79

47

43

94

165

212

255

San Juan

354

92

54

63

51

93

146

209

260

Skagit

361

118

58

53

59

73

176

229

288

Skamania

279

101

21

39

45

73

122

161

206

Snohomish

360

107

70

33

49

101

177

210

259

Spokane

304

90

69

47

46

52

159

206

252

Stevens

281

85

56

38

59

43

141

179

238

Thurston

323

69

83

42

48

81

152

194

242

Wahkiakum

252

91

28

43

34

56

119

162

196

Walla Walla

338

90

81

54

34

79

171

225

259

Whatcom

350

97

69

57

49

78

166

223

272

Whitman

296

64

72

46

50

64

136

182

232

Yakima

320

111

81

43

23

62

192

235

258

Washington Counties by Total Species, Codes 1 & 2, Codes 1-3, and Codes 1-4

County Total County Colds 1 & 2 County Codes 1-3 County Codes 1-4
Grays Harbor

391

Yakima

192

Yakima

235

Grays Harbor

290

King

381

Grays Harbor

192

Okanogan

231

Skagit

288

Skagit

361

Okanogan

191

Skagit

229

King

286

Snohomish

360

Snohomish

177

Grays Harbor

228

Whatcom

272

San Juan

354

Skagit

176

King

225

Grant

261

Pacific

353

Klickitat

381

Walla Walla

225

San Juan

260

Whatcom

350

Walla Walla

171

Whatcom

223

Pacific

260

Pierce

349

King

169

Kittitas

214

Walla Walla

259

Walla Walla

338

Lincoln

169

Grant

213

Snohomish

259

Grant

329

Kittitas

168

Pierce

212

Yakima

258

Thurston

323

Whatcom

166

Snohomish

210

Okanogan

258

Kitsap

322

Pierce

165

San Juan

209

Lincoln

258

Yakima

320

Jefferson

164

Pacific

209

Pierce

255

Clark

319

Island

162

Lincoln

206

Kittitas

252

Okanogan

315

Grant

159

Spokane

206

Spokane

252

Kittitas

315

Spokane

159

Klickitat

205

Klickitat

250

Clallam

311

Clallam

153

Clallam

202

Clallam

249

Douglas

311

Douglas

153

Douglas

202

Douglas

249

Benton

311

Thurston

152

Jefferson

200

Clark

246

Chelan

309

Clark

149

Kitsap

199

Chelan

245

Island

308

Kitsap

147

Clark

196

Kitsap

243

Lincoln

308

San Juan

146

Chelan

195

Thurston

242

Spokane

304

Pacific

146

Thurston

194

Jefferson

239

Klickitat

301

Asotin

143

Adams

194

Stevens

238

Adams

300

Stevens

141

Island

192

Benton

236

Whitman

296

Mason

141

Asotin

185

Island

235

Asotin

290

Ferry

141

Benton

184

Adams

233

Franklin

288

Cowlitz

137

Whitman

182

Whitman

232

Jefferson

281

Whitman

136

Stevens

179

Asotin

228

Stevens

281

Pend Oreille

130

Pend Oreille

179

Pend Oreille

221

Skamania

279

Lewis

130

Mason

174

Franklin

218

Pend Oreille

277

Skamania

122

Cowlitz

166

Cowlitz

214

Mason

271

Wahkiakum

119

Lewis

166

Lewis

212

Cowlitz

268

Benton

113

Ferry

163

Mason

207

Ferry

258

Garfield

113

Wahkiakum

162

Ferry

206

Lewis

254

Columbia

112

Skamania

161

Skamania

206

Columbia

254

Chelan

111

Franklin

153

Wahkiakum

196

Wahkiakum

252

Adams

108

Garfield

146

Columbia

195

Garfield

244

Franklin

97

Columbia

138

Garfield

183

 

 

 

Out of the Sick Bed- Barely

I’ve been laid low since Monday night with a flu-like illness, and today finally felt good enough to feel like some fresh air might help. I drove to Spanaway Marsh and took a pitifully slow stroll around looking for Pierce County FOY birds, found just 2, Wood Duck and Hutton’s Vireo, but not finding the hoped for Purple Finch, Red Crossbill, Virginia Rail or Band-tailed Pigeon. Overall just nice to pretend to feel well enough to go birding.

A Day in Thurston and Pierce: Black Phoebe and Eurasian Green-winged Teal

Today Ken was finally feeling well enough to get out birding, and we met at 7AM at the I-5 / HWY 512 Park and Ride to try to track down some local eBird rarities and fill out our state and Pierce County year lists.
First stop was the American Lake Camp Murray Boat Launch where we saw three Canvasback that were WA FOY for Ken. Also had at least 120 Tree Swallows streaming across the water. Could not make any other species of swallows.
Next stop was Easterday Road trying for WTSP, not to be. Next was the Mount’s Road Tribal Turnout area where I located a Northern Shrike, we had a FOY Pierce County Sharp-shinned hawk for me, and we headed for Nisqually to look for the wintering RSHA.
No luck there with the hawk, but we did meet Brian Pendleton, and it was nice to see him again and bird there together. I got a FOY Red-breasted Sapsucker just before we headed back for the car, but no RSHA despite nearly 2 hours of searching.
From here we continued south a couple of miles to the Hawk’s Prairie Settling Ponds where a Black phoebe was calling loudly enough that we got on it immediately and spent a bit of time birding that area.
We spent so much time at Nisqually that we decided against treking to Longview to look for the NOMO there, and instead headed for Gog-li-hi-ti to look for the SBGU wintering there. On the way we detoured to Orting where we got Ken the wintering Trumpeter Swans (FOY for him) and made a quick stop at the Fife Levy Pone on the way to Gog-li-hi-ti.
At G-T-H-T and the 11th street bridge Gull bathing spot we had no luck looking for the SBGU, but we did find the Eurasian Green-winged teal that was located there over the weekend.
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Last stop of the day was at Ruston Way where I was able to drive us straight to the location I had recently seen the immature Snow Goose and Ken added it to his year list.
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We also saw a close in Pelagic Cormorant that was starting to get it’s breeding red face.
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I got two WA FOY birds (RBSA and BLPH), one ABA FOY Bird (RBSA) and 8 Pierce FOY birds, DOWO, BUSH, YRWA, WEME, SSHA, BEWR, PISI, and TRSW. Ken added several FOY WA birds too.
Sunshine, birding with a great friend, and a day of total leisure. Life is good.