Category: Blog

Gray’s Harbor Shorebird Festival Field Trip Today

A smippet of the shorebirds at Bottle Beach Today
Today Bruce LaBar and I led a trip for the Gray’s Harbor Shorebird Festival to the Bottle Beach, Tokeland and Westport area. Hear more about Bruce LaBar on The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #3. Gray’s Harbor is one of the 4 most important shorebird refueling stopovers on their northward spring migration from their southern wintering grounds to their arctic breeding locations.
Western Sandpiper was probably the shorebird we saw in the highest numbers today.

Every year large percentages of the west coast Western Sandpipers, Short-billed Dowichers, Dunlin, Red Knots, and other species stop over at Gray’s Harbor, and especially in Bowerman Basin, to rest and feed to fatten up for their next leg of the migratory journey.

In the spring it is always good to have one shorebird that is unmistakable. The Dunlin, with its black belly and red back is tough to screw up ID in our area.

Their next stop in many cases is the Copper River Delta, and then on to the arctic. On the east coast the analogous areas are the Delaware Bay and Bay of Fundy. Today did not disappoint as we saw 15 species of shorebirds and thousands of individuals. There were about 34 birders loaded onto a school bus to get around, and we made 5 stops.

Whimbrel were at Tokeland in good numbers, and not seen again all day.

This year the high tide was about 3 PM, so we headed straight for Tokeland to look for birds there at low tide, hoping to catch the spectacle of Bottle Beach on an incoming tide in the early afternoon. At Tokeland, besides Nelson Crab House, where at least one birder had a crab cocktail before 9 AM, we saw 3 common species, Least Sandpiper, Western Sandpiper, Short-billed Dowitcher and Dunlin, and saw our only Whimbrel of the trip.

This Least Sandpiper with a Dungeoness Crab shell was the first close-look shorebird of the day at Tokeland.

In addition we saw and heard Purple Martins, and saw Common Loons in both basic and alternate (breeding) plumage. One breeding plumage Red-necked Grebe, Caspian Tern, a single distant Eurasian Wigeon, and a Peregrine Falcon on a channel marker were highlights. We totaled 31 species at this stop. `Here is the eBird link. https://ebird.org/pnw/view/checklist/S55869326

Barn Swallows were present at nearly every stop today.

A stop at Graveyard Spit added our first Red Knots and Ruddy Turnstones of the day, as well as a Greater Yellowlegs. The tide was quite low, and birds there were distant. Bruce and I tried to assure birders that we would have much closer looks at these birds at Bottle Beach, and we kept moving. Ebird list for this stop: https://ebird.org/pnw/view/checklist/S55869336

We saw Common Loons in both basic winter plumage, and like this one in Alternate breeding plumage.

From here we headed for Grayland Beach. Bruce had noted that the 2-day prior trip to the same areas had seen Snowy Plover at Grayland Beach, so we were hopeful to do likewise. This is at the very northern edge of its range, and Snowy Plovers struggle because they like to breed in the same areas people like to play with their dogs, their SUVs and hence breeding can be problematic for a species that builds a nest in the dry sand up on the beach. Still, we managed to see 3 Snowy Plover, along with spring Baird’s Sandpiper and a Red-necked Phalarope, both unexpected bonus birds for the trip. eBird list: https://ebird.org/pnw/view/checklist/S55869367

I like this Snowy Plover photo, not because it’s a good close-up, but because it shows how darn hard it is to see these little guys.

The primary reason this feastival works is because of the topography of Gray’s Harbor. It is a vast mudflat at low tide, that at high tide has very limited places for shorebirds to feed, congregating the birds into predictable areas for viewing. The best place used to be near the airport in Hoquiam, but as the sands have shifted, now Bottle Beach, across the harbor near Westport is much better.

More of the spectacle.

Yesterday I saw an estimated 6-7000 shorebirds there, and today there were less birds, but still a good show. We estimated over 1500 shorebirds, with close looks at all species seen as the tide pushed the birds in close to us for viewing. We estimated 80 Black-bellied Plover, 20 Semi-palmated Plover, 1 Marbled Godwit, 8 Ruddy Turnstone, 20 Red Knot (I had over 175 yesterday at the same location), 40 Sanderling, 250 Dunlin, 800 Western Sandpiper, 250 Shirt-billed Dowitcher, 25 Greater Yellowlegs, and 31 total species. eBird list: https://ebird.org/pnw/view/checklist/S55869287

Red Knots in the spring are a beautiful red. In the fall they resemble their European Name, Gray Knots, as they are a uniform gray-color. We are lucky to see them in Gray’s Harbor in their red outfits at this time of year.

We had time after Bottle Beach to retrace our track to the Westport Marina area where a Wandering Tattler was almost immediately found by Bruce on the rocks beside the viewing platform, another Red-necked Phalarope was seen by a couple birders, all 3 species of cormorant, Common Loons, and a very close and cooperative breeding plumage Rhinoceros Aucklet were the stars.

Wandering Tattler

Rhinoceros Aucklet, with its Rhino Horn from which it gets its name.

We got back to the Hoquiam Middle School by 4 PM with a trip list of 69 species. Everyone seemed to have a good time, Bruce shared some local history on the bus rides between stops, and I managed to stay awake all the way home. (jet lag still is kicking my butt)

Western Gulls
Baird’s Sandpiper, an uncommon spring adult.
Caspian Tern
Pigeon Guillemots
A distant Peregrine Falcon. Falcons enjoy the shorebirds in a different way.
Semi-palmated Plover

Find Black-bellied Plover, Red Knot, Short-billed Dowicher, Ruddy Turnstone here.

Overall a great day. Good birding. Good day!

Birding Near Ifrane, Morocco Today

Barbary Macaque today near Ifrane.

Today was a really pleasant day of birding in Morocco. After an open air breakfast on the roof of the inn, we headed to a park with a lake and woodlands called Dayet Aoua, where almost immediately we found good numbers of Hawfinch, lifers for many thought I’d seen Hawfinch in England in 2006 on a Rotary Friendship Exchange trip.

Hawfinch

We found lots of first birds for Morocco, including Eared Grebe (here called Black-necked Grebe) and a great look at a Great Spotted Woodpecker excavating a nest cavity. I got a good video of this species and posted it to my Facebook and Instagram pages, so not added here as a video. Here are a couple of still shots.

Great Spotted Woodpecker

The rest of the day was spent at other woodland areas, where we added Atlas Flycatcher with incredible ease. This can be a tough bird to find, and Mohammad had one before we got out of the bus

Our last trip bird today was a very distant scope look at a Northern Shoveler at a lake. We earlier got brief looks at Iberian Chifchaff.

Off to bed now.

Eurasian Sparrowhawk.
White Stork
Long-legged Buzzard.

Good Birding. Good Day!

Last Day on the Edge of the Sahara Desert Birding

We looked long and hard, but finally found two Desert Sparrows at a desert camel safari place.

Today we wrapped up the birding on the edge of the Sahara Desert by looking for and finding Desert Sparrow and Fulvous Chatterer. Both took more effort than expected, but we had great looks at the Sparrow, and brief in-flight looks at the Chatterer. Tomorrow we leave for a 6 hour drive to Ifrane, with birding stops along the way. I’ll simply put up some photos from today to show the day:
Here are both the male and female Desert Sparrow.

Camels at the sparrow place.
This is the color of Sahara Desert Sand.
This fellow was a tough to see bird, Western Orphinean Warbler.
European Kestrel, a bird we had seen every day until yeasterday. Today we started a new streak.
After a good lunch stop we again visited the lake near Merzouga. The rest of the photos are from there.
Marcus counted 4000+ Greater Flamingos.
Across the lake the sand dunes were impressive.

Good birding. Good day!

Birding the Sahara Desert Today

One of many “dunes view” spots we saw today.

How nice today to have a day with lots of birding, less driving and what driving we did was in 4 wheel drive SUV in the desert, and finishing early for a swim. We are at a hotel in Merzouga, right on the edge of the Sahara. It is a place people come to play in the desert, and we did just that, American birder style.

A lunch spot in the shade under a bridge over a ‘”wadi” or a wash.

After a late breakfast at 7:30 we hopped into 4 SUVs, just Bruce, myself and our driver in ours, as for our group of 11 someone had an empty seat, and as Bruce and I had 2 of the 3 spotting scopes on the trip we got the spare seat.
Greater Flamingos at Dayet Srij.

First stop was at a beautiful shallow lake near town where some years there is water. Lots this year, and an estimated 1500+ Greater Flamingos distracted us from seeing all the other cool shorebirds. We tore our eyes free to see lots though, including good looks, but no photos of Spotted Sandgrouse flying by and stopping on the shore. Sharing scopes prevented either of us from getting digiscope shots of them standing, and my inability to get on them with the camera in flight precluded flight shots. Still, really cool to see these lifers. Ruddy Shelducks and Mottled Teal with babies were great to see, and Ruff, Common Redshank and Greenshanks, Common and Kentish Plovers, Black and Gull-billed Terns, Little Stints, Black-winged Stilts, and much more gave quite a show. Still a common North American gull, Franklin’s Gull, rare in Morocco was the “hot” bird of the stop, found by Stephan Schlick and his tour group earlier this month.

Franklin’s Gull

After that we drove through the desert and saw Desert Warblers, Cream-colored Coursers, a Pharaoh Eagle Owl, and just enjoyed the desert. Highlight for me though was seeing Egyptian Nightjar. Mohammad, our in-country guide, along with the drivers have a network of local Bedouin shepherd families and they know birders want to see this species. They keep their eyes open, and after a few calls we raced to a remote family residence where a local woman pointed us right at the nightjars.
The group got good looks and then I snuck in for photos.

Desert Warbler
Greater Hoopoe Lark
Trumpeter Finch
Cream-colored Courser

We finished the day driving to a sandstone cliff area, Escarpment au sud-ouest Tinegherass, where a Pharoah Eagle Owl nest was known to be, and we got great looks at this owl.

Pharoah Eagle Owl
Bedouin Home

Then back by 4:45 PM, a nice swim and a beer, and now off to dinner.
Good birding. Good Day!

Morocco Days 4 & 5: Mohamed Takes us to the Mountain and the Desert

Mohammed on the Mountain

On Day 4 our guide Mohammed and Michael took us to the high Atlas Mountains, to the Vallée d’Oukaïmeden Ski Area and the surrounding mountainside. The elevation when we got off the bus was 8547′ and we walked mostly uphill from there. Over the course of the day we walked 7.02 miles per the eBird tracker, and battled fog and cold most of the day. Despite the really tough weather viewing conditions we managed several good species of birds.

Red-biilled Chough.

Both Chough species, Red-billed and Yellow-billed were all over the place. They are almost crow sized black birds with colored decurved bills.
Rufous-tailed Rock-Thrush

A Rufous-tailed Rock-Thrush gave close up views. A female Blue Rock-Thrush was seen by all, and a male by a few. Black Redstarts were commmon. Rock Finch, or Rock Petronia before its name change, were abundant, with one flock of over 200 birds.

An old rock-built village

After an hour or so the fog really settled in and we battled, but heard a couple of flocks of Crimson-winged Finches flying about just overhead but invisible in the fog.
On the drive down the mountain two stops in steady rain yielded Eurasian Firecrest, European Treecreeper, Euripean Jay, and Coal Tit.

We stayed another night at Maharrech and again had great meals for dinner and breakfast at the Art Place. Up early to head for the coast on Day 5.

Northern Bald Ibis

Day 5 birding was in coastal scrub habitat. Not really desert, but pretty close, with dry sandy soil and scrub-thorn type vegitation. The birding was spectacular. We made our first stop for a potty about 9 AM after leaving about 7 AM and Jay, one of the people on the tour found a Rufous-tailed Scrub-robin in the adjacent vacant lot. At least 6 were zipping about and posing for photos.

Rufous-tailed Scrub-Robin

Next stop was at a fishing port called Port dÉssaouria, where the primary goal was to see Eleanor’s Falcon, a Peregrine look-alike that breeds on an island nearby and we saw 3 seeming to hunt in a line, chasing Rock Pigeons. We also saw the Moroccan race of Great Cormorant, lots of Yellow-legged Gulls and then walked out to a nearby river mouth. There we saw the European race of Sandwich Tern. No yellow tip on the bill of this race.

Ruddy Shelduck

Funny line, Heather Ballash, one of the Tacoma contingent on the trip, remembers this species as having mustard on the tip of its bill, a memory aide to the sandwich name. Does not work here. We also saw a Moussiere’s Redstart.
Next was another river mouth for Ruddy Shelduck, Audouin’s Gull, and the Moroccan race of White Wagtail.

Northern Bald Ibis

Next a spectacular roadside stop to see Northern Bald Ibis. This species was nearly extinct when a local preserve was set up and it is recovering
We finished with a seawatch at Cap Rhir where we all saw Balearoic Shearwater at a distance, and Bruce found a Great Skua.

Closer look at Ruddy Shelduck.

Staying at a nice hotel in Agadir, and headed out locally tomorrow.

Day 1, 2 & 3 Morocco Trip

Marsh Owl flushed from a field with tall grass.

Day 1 of the Legacy Tours Morocco Birding Trip was great. We left the Hotel Toubkal in Casablanca at 6:30 AM and headed north toward Rabat. Along the way we stopped at several places along the coast looking for shorebirds, gulls, and migrants headed toward Europe. The first stop was right along the highwa

Mediterranean Gull
y at a large wetland area beside the road, where we had our first Collared Pratincole. These are a strange shorebird that hunts aerially, catching insects in flight. They are really cool looking, and call constantly a somewhat Killdeer calls.

Collared Pratincole

We had a nice variety of gulls here too, including a Mediterranean Gull, a black-headed gull with a red bill that stood out from the many Black-headed Gulls also there. We also had both species of Redshank, Spotted and Common. The Spotted Redshank has longer legs and a thicker shorter bill, and was a lifer for most of us on the trip.Curlew Sandpipers and Dunlin were together for nice comparisons, and we also added Little Stint, Common Ring-necked Plover, and a few passerines.

African Blue Tit

We pulled off at a sewer treatment facility by a McDonalds where we saw Lesser Kestrel and the recently split African Blue Tit. This is much like the Blue Tit of Europe, but has a larger white area on the head.

Red-shielded Coot with young.

We took our longest walk of the day at Oued Cherrat, a coastal river (Oued means river in Arabic) where over 60 Collared Pratincoles were constantly flying overhead, we added Pied Avocet to the much more common Black-winged Stilts, 12 Kentish Plover and one Little Ringed Plover were seen, and 3 Great Gray Shrike and a single Woodchat Shrike perched for us. Crested Larks were in the fields, and Willow Warblers and Common Chiffchaf were in the riverside brush. Western Yellow Wagtail and White Wagtails were near the water.

Crested Lark

Our last stop of the day was at Side Boughaba Lake, a park where we added lots of waterfowl, including White-headed Duck, a stiff-tailed duck related to our Ruddy Duck, but even more colorful with its large sky-blue bill. Great Crested Grebe and Little Grebe, both Red-crested and Common Pochard and Ferruginous Ducks gave great looks, and a Red-shielded Coot came very close for photos.
We ended the day’s list with a House Bunting that seems to be nesting on a light fixture in the outdoor restaurant where we had dinner.

White Stork

A great start with 85 species and 26 lifers so far on the trip,

You can best hear about Day 1 & 2 on my second mini-podcast episode on The Bird Banter Podcast.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-bird-banter-podcast-morocco-trip-days-1-2/id1450449001?i=1000435303247

On Day 2 we made a number of stops in the areas around Rabat. We started by going inland from the coast trying for migrant and resident passerines as well as more water-related species. Our first major stop was at a road into a small wetlands where we checked the wetlands, and then took a nice walk along a riparian type ditch during intermittent showers. Common Cuckoos were calling and flying about, whie Corn Buntings seemed to be singing from every post of grassy knoll. Crested Larks were also very numerous.

Common Cuckoo

Two Cirl Buntings, both females, gave good looks.

A Booted Eagle flew overhead.

Booted Eagle

We totaled 31 species at this stop.

Next we went to a woodland park called Réserve Royale de Chasse. There we heard, and Heather and our guide Mohammed saw Double-spurred Frankolin. Common Nightingales sang incessantly from hidden perches. We left there with plans to return on Day 3 (the next day) early to have better chances for the Frankolin and other species.

On the ride back to the hotel we saw a flock of migrating Euroean Bee Eaters and stopped for nice looks.

European Bee Eater with a bee in its bill.

We stayed our second night at Hotel Ambassy. Dinner both nights was fine, I had vegetable tagine on night two, spaghetti on day 1.

Day 3 was mostly driving, but in the early AM we went back to the preserve from the day prior, getting there about 7:45 AM and as soon as we got out of the van it started to rain. The whole time there it rained variably hard, at times a drenching downpour. Despite the rain, the birding was quite good. We all saw the Double-spurred Frankolins several times in flight, and some saw it running, though nobody really had great looks.

Best other birds were Tree Pipit

Tree Pipit

Spotted Flycatcher, European Pied Flycatcher, and Eurasian Blackcap.

From there we took a long drive to another protected area where we got distant but pretty good looks at Barburry Partridge, and a fly-by look at a Great Spotted Cuckoo.

Our stay for the next couple of nights is at a snazzy hotel in Marrakech, the Art Place Marrakech. which is right on the Medina, or city center mall.

Tomorrow we head into the mountains for a whole new avifauna of birds, many more specific to Morocco.

Good birding. Good day!

A Day in Casablanca to Recover

Eurasian Thick-knee

My trip to Morocco is off to a fine start, with new experiences and new species. The flight from Seatac the Seattle-Tacoma, WA airport to Charles DeGaulle Airport in Paris was long but uneventful. Delta did a good job of providing vegan meals for me, and we got in at about 8 AM after a 10 ½ hour flight “losing” 9 hours enroute due to time-zone changes. Bruce and I wandered around the airport and tried to rest until or flight to Casablanca left about 12:40, arriving about 2:50, going one time zone back. Customs was an endurance effort, with a 2+ hour cramped line with masses of people, and we saw the customs employees need to exercise great patience as angry parents shouted and pushed and shoved while a trio of young attractive women tried to cut in line, and we all inched our way forward.
After getting our luggage, getting a SIM card for our phones, and buying data and voice time we caught a cab to the Best Western Hotel Toubkal in downtown. We had dinner and managed to stay awake until maybe 8:45 PM and slept well in our twin beds until jet-lagged morning arrived about 3-4 AM and we waited for daylight. This AM we had a good breakfast at the hotel, and went to Par Sindbad near the coastline where a large overgrown abandoned parking lot and entertainment park recommended by Michael Carmody provided an introduction to common Moroccan birds.

A Glossy Ibis, the species of ibis seen in the eastern U.S. flew directly overhead.

Shortly after arriving a pair of Eurasian Thick-knees flew in, a species Bruce had seen in Lesvos, Greece but were a lifer for me. They were a very exotic shorebird to find on our own. We added about 28 more species not including another 2 or 3 left unidentified. Here are a few photos I like best.

Spottles Starlings *Sturnus unicolor* here are very similar in appearance and behavior to the European Starlings that were introduced to the U.S.
I love seeing different doves and pigeons, and this Eurasian Turtle Dove *Streptopelia turtur* was a lifer for me this morning.
Blackbirds *Turdus merula* are common species throughout Europe, as well as in Morocco, and this male and female gave a good comparison showing the sexual dimorphism.
We saw several Sardinian Warblers *Sylvia melanocephala* this morning.

Stay tuned for more Moroccan birding adventures over coming days. Good birding. Good day!

Notes Related to The Bird Banter Podcast #12 with Michael Carmody


In The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #12 host Ed Pullen and Legacy Tours owner and guide talk about Michael’s career as a bird guide in Mexico, his “”patch” as well as around the world. Michael leads several trips a year to Mexico, specializing in showing birders the endemic species of Mexico, as well as trips to other parts of the world.
We spend a good part of the episode talking about the upcoming trip to Morocco that Ed as well as Bruce Labar from TBBP Episode #3 are taking with Michael as the guide. Here is a map of the route we will be taking. Morocco Route

This is going to be what Michael calls a “B” type trip. This means it will be primarily a focused birding trip, but we will have some time in various places to enjoy the local culture and sights. Sounds like fun to me.

Here is a link to Legacy Birding Web Site.

I am hoping to make recordings for TBBP while in Morocco and if I can find decent WiFi publish periodic updates on the podcast.

Good Birding. Good day.

Notes Related to TBBP Episode #11 with the Birdchick.


The promised You Tube video of the Dusky Grouse we discuss in the episode.

Sharon Stitler goes by her birding moniker “Birdchick” and her Birdchick Podcast was the first podcast of any type I listened to ever! It was a real treat for me to have her as my guest on The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #11. She is knowledgible, eloquent yet casual and doesn’t take herself too seriously. A great guest and I think you’ll love hearing her story.

Check out the Birdchick website. You can even watch her bathtub episode there!

I learned the difference betweek standup comedy and improv theater. She does improv.

Here is a link to the phone-skope adapter store for the one she uses.

Please leave comments with any suggestions for future guests on the podcast, or things you’d like to hear about.

Good birding! Good day!

Highlights of an Early Spring E. WA Trip

I found Mountain Bluebirds pretty much everywhere in proper habitat this week. They are one of my favorite birds.

Last week I spent at Lake Chelan in Eastern WA, and got out enough to pick up most of the FOY specialties best seen at this time of year east of the Cascades. I talk about this trip briefly in the intro to The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #10 with John Sterling. Here are photos from the trip managed to capture.

This Loggerhead Shrike who posed on this roadside sign was the only LOSH I saw all week.
This male Dusky Grouse was very hormonally possessed, preening, calling and attacking my car and even pecking at my shoes!
Once I found good sage habitat a bit south of Chelan, this on the Moses Coulee Road, Sage Thrashers seemed to be singing everywhere.
Sagebrush Sparrow was tougher to find, but this one finally popped up.
Say’s Phoebes were essentially everywhere it seemed.
TV
Vesper Sparrow

A good week and good birds.