Category: Field Trip

Grand Park Trail on a Sunny Day

Bruce Labar and I hiked the Grand Park trail again yesterday with a few differences from our last trip.  By far the biggest difference was that yesterday was a sunny, warm and clear fall day, unlike the overcast and drizzly day we chose last week.  Second was that we had no need to get back early, so had plenty of time to get to the “park” itself.

Our primary goal again was to look for the American Three-toed and Black-backed woodpeckers that had been previously reported from this area.  We started up the trail and shortly after entering Mt. Rainier National Park, maybe 1/3 mile from the trailhead I heard a woodpecker tapping.  We looked for some time and I managed only a very brief look at a woodpecker that I think was black-backed, but the look was so unsatisfactory that I just couldn’t list it as such.  We also had a N. Pygmi owl far away tooting.

Later, well past the lake, we had a woodpecker drilling off to the right of the trail, and we were able after a bit of searching to locate an American Three-toed woodpecker very close and only about 20 feet up a tree.  As we watched the bird and tried to get photos and a video, a second bird joined it and they squabbled and chased each other around for several minutes.  We rejoiced and continued up the hill.  Both of these birds we took as juveniles, lacking any yellow in the head.  A bit farther up the hill we located an adult make ATTW, with yellow on the back of the head.  It had feeding and tapping behavior as expected with some bark peeling noted.

A bit farther yet we heard a much louder and more emphatic tapping, in the same area we had identified a drumming BBWO on our last hike on this trail.   We located an adult female Black-Backed woodpecker working up a tree just beside the trail.  We had great views and felt confirmed in our prior ID, and blessed with such good fortune.

From here we continued up the trail, finding the Grand Park meadow itself, with great Mt. Rainier views and lots of Mountain Bluebirds.  It was really fun to see several Rufous-type females, as neither Bruce nor I were familiar with this color morph.  We spent nearly 2 hours relaxing there, primarily on a raptor watch. It paid off with distant looks at two eagles, an adult Bald and an adult Golden eagle.  The tail and head differences were the primary way we IDed the GOEA.  Bruce’s great eyes found a soaring Prairie falcon and a fast-passing Merlin, in addition to a Red-tailed hawk.

We almost danced down the trail after such a terrific morning of birding Pierce County.  Here are a few phone photos from the trip:

 

Puyallup TAS Trip

Today I met 18 local birders at Bradley Lake where after a brief orientation we headed off to DeCoursey Park, starting there because Bradley Lake was frozen completely over with zero waterfowl present. At DeCoursey we started at the playground area where we got oriented to several species of waterfowl including Bufflehead, American Wigeon, Gadwall, Hooded Merganser, Mallard, Canada Goose, Lesser Scaup and Ring-billed Duck. New birders were surprised at the species diversity so close to town in a city park. We also had nice looks at the hyperkinetic Ruby-crowned kinglet along with Black-capped Chickadees and a Yellow-rumped warbler. As we rounded the back of the lake we saw an introduced/escapee Muscovy Duck looking far out of place at abut 32 degrees F. Jerry Broadus, TAS President and excellent birder, was along on the trip and very helpful, spotting a Cooper’s Hawk as it flashed across the lake. It continued to tease us until it was finally located perched across the street overlooking Clark’s Creek. After crossing the creek we managed to find two individual males of the species Dennis Paulson calls our “most common rare bird,” Eurasian Wigeon. This was very close to where Joe Schneider pointed out a “white heron” that we quickly identified as the locally uncommon Great Egret that has been a Pierce County target for local birders in late 2016 and into 2017. Further along the walk we found several Red-breasted Sapsuckers, on on a nicely drilled sapsucker tree, Bewick’s wrens, Pacific Wrens, Brown Creepers, Golden-crowned Kinglets and Chestnut-backed Chickadees.
From here we headed back to Bradley Lake, unfortunately still frozen over, where we ended the trip with sightings of a Bald Eagle just as we arrived and reversing the route of a flock of American Wigeon. Best bird of the fairly brief stop at Bradley Lake was what one participant called the “Halloween” bird, a perched Varied Thrush.
Thanks to all the participants, and to The News Tribune for their article promoting the trip.
Here is a list of the birds seen on the trip from our DeCoursey and Bradley Lake eBird lists:

Canada Goose 19
(1) — — — — — —
Gadwall 6
(1) — — — — — —
Eurasian Wigeon 2
(1) — — — — — —
American Wigeon 142
(2) — — — — — —
Mallard 40
(1) — — — — — —
Northern Pintail 4
(1) — — — — — —
Green-winged Teal 2
(1) — — — — — —
Ring-necked Duck 10
(1) — — — — — —
Lesser Scaup 2
(1) — — — — — —
Bufflehead 20
(1) — — — — — —
Hooded Merganser 10
(1) — — — — — —
Great Blue Heron 8
(1) — — — — — —
Great Egret 1
(1) — — — — — —
Cooper’s Hawk 1
(1) — — — — — —
Red-tailed Hawk 1
(1) — — — — — —
Glaucous-winged Gull 10
(2) — — — — — —
Belted Kingfisher 6
(2) — — — — — —
Red-breasted Sapsucker 3
(1) — — — — — —
Northern Flicker 10
(2) — — — — — —
Steller’s Jay 7
(2) — — — — — —
American Crow 12
(2) — — — — — —
Black-capped Chickadee 26
(2) — — — — — —
Chestnut-backed Chickadee 4
(2) — — — — — —
Red-breasted Nuthatch 1
(1) — — — — — —
Brown Creeper 3
(2) — — — — — —
Pacific Wren 2
(1) — — — — — —
Bewick’s Wren 4
(2) — — — — — —
Golden-crowned Kinglet 18
(2) — — — — — —
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 12
(2) — — — — — —
American Robin 3
(2) — — — — — —
European Starling 2
(1) — — — — — —
Yellow-rumped Warbler 2
(1) — — — — — —
Fox Sparrow 1
(1) — — — — — —
Dark-eyed Junco 12
(2) — — — — — —
White-crowned Sparrow 2
(1) — — — — — —
Song Sparrow 8
(2) — — — — — —
Spotted Towhee 3
(2) — — — — — —
Pine Siskin 20
(1) — — — — — —
American Goldfinch 8
(1) — — — — — —

TAS Trip Today

Today I led a trip of 12 TAS birders, mostly ABC grads, to see what we could find in Pierce County on a spectacularly beautiful sunny day. After finding very little except the Queen Eider on the sound over the last 3 days I decided we’d try for fresh water and land birds. We met at the Hwy 512-I5 park and ride we headed for the Mountain View Cemetery marsh and oak woodlands. The best birds of the early morning were raptors. Two Peregrine Falcons spotted right off by Richard Smethurst and later Red-tailed hawk, Cooper’s hawk were added. The second Cooper’s cooperatively sat at close range while we enjoyed great views.
Next were two stops at American Lake. First at he Camp Murray Boat Launch site and relocated the Canvasbacks that I had seen yesterday along with large numbers of Common Goldeneye mixed with other usual ducks and grebes. Over at Harry Todd Park there were no Boneparte’s gulls to sort thru, but we got nice comparison looks at Mew, California and Ring-billed gulls. Having most of the gulls be adults makes it easy. the gulls are adults.
Next we headed for Mount’s Road in hopes of a Swamp sparrow, but nothing happening on the sparrow front. A Greater Yellowlegs was the best find. We finally had some luck not including sunshine on the last stop of the morning. The sun armed everyone up including the sparrows, and we sorted through a nice flock of Golden-crowned sparrows and before long got great looks at a White-throated sparrow. Here is a photo by Kathleen Miller.
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We also had great looks at Fox Sparrow, some even singing.
We quit about 1:20 PM. Great weather, an experienced group of birders, and finding the WTSP as my Pierce #212 for 2015 made it a great morning. On the way home I picked up a vegan chocolate cake for Kay’s party tonight, and now the Huskies are crushing the Beavers. A great day. Going to the movies tonight with Peter W to see Bridge of Spies while the wives get together.

ABC Birding Trip to JBLM

Ft_Lewis_Training_AreasSaturday Nathanael Swecker led a trip of 11  ABC birding club members to check out new areas and to  learn to navigate part of his Joint Base Lewis McChord (JBLM) e-Bird patch. Nathanael has been very prominent in the Pierce County birding scene over the last couple of years with several posts most weeks from various areas of JBLM.  Nathanael often finding birds the rest of us had no idea were available on the military post.  He has focused his birding in the 3+ years since he became an avid birder on the JBLM ranges, and has decided to undertake studying and documenting on e-Bird the JBLM avifauna.
Ten ABC birders met Nathanael at 6AM at the Roy “Y” park-and-ride, where he showed us excellent topographic maps of the JBLM area, complete with range map borders, and gave us our agenda for the day. This is a link to the Range brochure with a simple map. To be allowed onto the JBLM ranges to bird it is first necessary to obtain a no-charge range pass from the JBLM Range Control Office. In order to know what areas are open birders need to check on the range control website to see what ranges are open.

Many of us have birded the Spanaway Marsh, but our first stop today was a look at this area from a completely different direction. Most birders access the marsh from the turn-around at the south end of 176th Street near the intersection with Pacific Ave.  We instead  went to the back of Training area 9.  We took a right-hand turn just beyond the railroad crossing after the Roy Gate Road entrance to Chambers Lake. We entered there, then took one more right turn onto Transmission Line Road.  This accessed the rear side of the marsh. This approach allows excellent places to view much bigger areas of open water on the marsh than are visible from the 176th St. approach., We saw Wood Ducks,  barn swallows, and a good mix of autumn passerines.
Our next stop was at Chambers Lake.  I learned that tis area is really just the area very close to the lake, and that many areas I had thought were all part of the Chambers Lake area are considered parts of other Training Areas that often are not open when Chambers Lake is listed as open.  We took a nice walk on the road on the back side of the lake.  This is found by taking a left off the main road past the water level control bridge, and after a short distance parking to walk the road right beside the lake. Like the back approach to Spanaway Marsh we had much better unobstructed water visibility than we could have from the front side of the lake.  A minimum of 80 wood ducks, an unexpected flock of 8 Blue-winged teal, various other waterfowl,  three Red-breasted sapsuckers, and a variety of other usual birds were seen here.

The third stop of the day was JBLM Area 15. This is a part of the larger area known as the 13th Division Prairie. Nathanael explained to us that the 13th Division Prairie covers much of 3 JBLM training areas.  Typically area 14 is almost never open to visitors, and the access is often limited to only area 15 and sometimes area 13.  Area 14 is the large open prairie area where JBLM biologists monitor the endangered Streaked subspecies of Horned Lark and limit access. In area 15 we found bluebirds, a Peregrine falcon hunted over area 14 visible from the road, and we found both Sharp-shinned and Cooper’s hawks. We learned about ways to visit the Muck Creek riparian corridor from a vantage new to most of us.

We are grateful to Nathanael for showing us how he birds  how his “patch” on JBLM  I look forward to his promise to start a website on JBLM birding soon

You can see the e-bird lists for the trip.  We totaled 58 species.

Spanaway Marsh

Chamber’s Lake

JBLM Training Area 15