Tag: birdathon

Birdathon and Pierce County Big Day May 7, 2020

What a treat to get out birding with a group of birders yesterday for my Tahoma Audubon Birdathon and for a Pierce County Big day. I knew I missed the fellowship and camaraderie of birding with friends, but the reality of the lack of sharing the excitement and energy of finding birds with a great group of fellow birders really dawned on me as I headed out with Bruce LaBar, Will Brooks and Peter Wimberger on a Pierce Big Day yesterday May 7th. Birdathon is the primary fundraiser for the Tahoma Audubon Society each year, and interested readers can contribute on the TAS Birdathon Donate Page Here.

Peter (back to camera), Bruce and Will at a makeshift roadside Puget Sound overlook near Steilacoom.

We made an effort at social distancing, driving 2 cars instead of 1, Bruce and I in his Corolla and Peter and Will in Peter’s Forester. We met at 4 AM at Puget Park, and saved about 13 of the allotted 15 minutes when a pair of Barred Owls called immediately and flew to us hooting and calling right overhead when I played a recording for about 5 seconds. From there we took a very different route than we have used in past May Pierce big day efforts.

In the past we have started the day in the Purdy/Fox Island area at the crack of dawn to look for seabirds. By this time in May most of the waterfowl, looks, and winter gulls have departed the south Puget Sound for their breeding areas. This year it seemed to us that they have departed a bit early and on scouting we had really struggled to find these species. That combined with great success in the last week in the foothills of Mt. Rainier near Greenwater prompted us to start there instead, hopefully adding more mountain species there than we might miss by skipping the early AM Fox Island bridge and DeMolay Spit stop. A nice side benefit was that it sounded like a lot more fun.

The mountains did not disappoint, driving up in a and the extraordinary birding skills of Will were at the leading edge there as they were all day. At the first stop on the bridge over the White River on FR 73 Will and I heard an American Dipper singing in the dark on a very quick stop. Moments later Bruce and I saw a Hermit Thrush on the road in the headlights, and the race to find species was on.

We made stops at the Elk Compound off FR 73 with highlights being a distant Pygmy Owl tooting, fly-over Red Crossbills and generally the dawn chorus. ON the way out we all got looks at the dipper by the bridge in daylight. The next stop was two clearcuts and a horse ranch on the Crystal River Ranch Road. We wracked up on woodpeckers, which can be challenging on a big day including Downy, Hairy, Pileated, Red-breasted Nuthatch, N. Flicker all seen easily, as well as swallows, flycatchers, several Townsend’s Solitaires, and just a nice variety of singing passerines. On at least two spots the more palpable than audible drumming of Ruffed Grouse were heard, and later on FR 70 more solitaires and a very distant booming Sooty Grouse interrupted the many MacGilvary’s Warblers and Townsend’s and Black-throated Gray Warbler songs.

We then raced back down Hwy 410, quickly listing Bank Swallows at the known sandpits just across the county line in Buckley. Stakeout birds generally cooperated. Will heard Lesser Goldfinch before we parked on Riverside Drive in Sumner, and we all got looks at several after stopping. Will also pointed out a Bullock’s Oriole that flew over giving most of us a brief glimpse of bright orange.

We missed Green Heron at the expected stop at Levy Pond in Fife, even taking time to walk all around the pond, but three flew across the Puyallup River and back while we were stopped at the traffic light there for a quick recovery of that tough to find species.

The storm water ponds on 56th Street in Puyallup largely disappointed, but we managed to add American Coots there, and then the flooded fields off Frank Albert in Fife came through nicely, adding Western, Spotted, and Solitary Sandpipers, Long-billed Dowicher, Cooper’s Hawk, Cinnamon Teal (a species that though usually difficult to find in Pierce County seemed everywhere on this date- with a high count of 7 later at the Mountain View Cemetery in Lakewood), Green-winged Teal, N. Shoveler, Gadwall, another singing oriole and three Lazuli Buntings singing and hiding in a small tree at the end of the hedge row. The Gog-li-hi-ti Mitigated Marsh didn’t add much on a quick stop. We missed the Tacoma Peregrine by the nest box downtown, and began our largely frustrating search for seabirds at the mouth of the Puyallup River, Thea Park, Ruston, Titlow, and later Steilacoom and McNeil Trail Overlook in Dupont. For all these stops we settled for Pigeon Guillemot, Marbled Murrelet and Rhinoceros Auklets all at Titlow, Western Grebes, a single very distant Pacific Loon seen only by Will in Steilacoom, along with Caspian Tern, Ring-billed Gull and little more.

A Great-horned Owl chick in a known nest on Chamber’s Creek Trail.

A stop at the Mountain View Cemetery added Lesser Scaup, Mourning Dove, and maybe the surprise of the day a Sora doing its whinny call near the back of the marsh while we scoped for ducks.

We finished the day on JBLM by really finding almost everything we targeted and more. A distant singing Vesper Sparrow was seen and heard off Story Road as an estimated 200 Vaux’s Swifts flew behind us overhead, Western Bluebirds flitted all around, and our only American Kestrel of the day looked on. Last stops on the fort yielded a spontaneously calling Northern Bobwhite at Muck Creek, a Western Kingbird conveniently perched on a roadside building that Bruce and I drove by but Will and Peter stopped and called us back to see, a Hooded Merganser at a hidden pond beside a cutoff road that Bruce knew about, and Ringed-neck Ducks and were found at Chamber’s Lake. Bruce and I called it a day there, but Will and Peter managed the energy to go back to the far end of Chamber’s Lake and add their species #133 for the day, Western Wood-Pewee.

Overall this was a really spectacular day in many ways. The #133 species tied for 2nd in Bruce’s history of most species in a Pierce County Big Day. He has been doing them for about 3 decades. Only one day with 137 species by an all-star group years ago topped this total.

The what-if’s had us all thinking as the day ended. What if we had better luck on the sound. No Common Loon, Surf Scoter, Red-necked or Horned Grebe. Few alcids, few gulls… Maybe doing this route a week earlier would have added a few more migrants, got a few more lingering seabirds but missed only a few later arriving songbirds.

These are the thoughts that only a true birding fanatic can savor.

Anyway, I want to offer many thanks to all of you who donate to TAS in support of this effort. Stay safe, but find a way to get out birding.

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

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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) — — — — — —