Thursday, September 30, 2021

September Sessions (10-18Sep2021)

Back home the birding has been gettin better, but we still have not had a great day.  


Red-eyed Vireo at Burnt Mill Creek.


Traill's Flycatcher - probably Willow


Presumed Willow eating a Blue Dasher




Yellow-breasted Chat


A Nashville Warbler way up at the top of a tree at BMC.



Another Chat at a different spot along the creek on another day.


This wasp was HUGE!  iNat identified it as a Large Four-spotted Scoliid Wasp.



Yellow Warbler at Fort Fisher


This Spotted Orbweaver at BMC had been present in the same spot for weeks, carefully taking down its web in the mornings.




Initially I pegged this little guy as a Hooded Warbler but I see now its a Wilson's, found at BMC.


Note the petite bill and the supercilium which flares behind the eye.



Here is a Hooded photographed the next day in the same spot with a heavier bill and less of a flaring supercilum behind the eye.




The same Spotted Orbweaver several days later.


American Avocet at Fort Fisher spit.


Some sort of Grasshopper I am still waiting on ID for.


Red Knot




Caspian Tern


Blue Grosbeak at BMC


RE Vireo


Acadian Flycatcher


The resident deer at Belvue Cemetery


Sometimes a Common Yellowthroat can look like another more interesting warbler like a Nashville or a Connecticut. Its these times where subtle differences in structure needs to be scrutinized or sometimes you can get a vibe or gestalt that quickly leads you in the right direction.  This bird immediately screamed Common Yellowthroat.


American Redstart


99% of Redstarts we get on the coast are female or immature "yellowstarts" so its nice to get an adult male.

More pics coming soon!




Monday, September 27, 2021

The Best Month of the Year (01-05Sep2021)

September is hands down the best month of the year.  The weather starts cooling down, the waves start to pump and the warblers are pouring all over the place.  It's all kind of overwhelming to be honest.

I started my September this year looking on the beaches for Franklin's Gulls and other rarities.


The Laughing Gulls are all molting and changing into basic plumage and trying to trick me.


Caspian Terns are making their croaking calls up and down the beach.


Some of the Laughing Gulls are sporting hoods that are dead ringers for Franklin's.



This Laughing Gull must have touched down in some toxic sludge or maybe someone's spilled Slushee.


Red-Eyed Vireo - Meanwhile Burnt Mill Creek was starting to have some migrants coming through. 


American Redstart doing its best Nashville impression.



Someone has to band this bird!  Every year now for 3-4 years running we get a Traill's type Flycatcher at the little pond north of Chestnut St and I have my suspicion that its the same bird.
 

On the 4th I decided to swing by Greensboro on the way to the OBX for a pelagic.  It was only several hours out of the way. =)


It took a while to find where the Baird's Sandpiper was hanging out and it was super far out on a sandbar.  A couple guys let me use their scope to get great looks but my camera shots were horrid.


Least Sandpiper on left and Baird's on right. 


I also stopped at Vandemark Sod Farms but came up short for an Upland SP.  I was starting to get really worried because Uppies migrate early and its hard to get them into late Sept.  So I decided to head to Manteo Airport....


Bingo!  Upland Sandpiper - the Lochness Monster of the grasslands.


Not sure why they decided to skip ILM this year.


The 5th of Sept dawned with a beautiful sunrise off the back of the boat in Hatteras.  I was promising to be a truly epic weather pelagic with light winds and sunny skies.


Once we got out the Gulf Stream we started to pick up oceanic terns with mostly Sooty Terns like this juvenile.


Adult Sooty Tern



Great Shearwater


Sooty Tern




Cory's Type Shearwater


Bridled Terns can frequently be found on flotsam.


Cory's Type.



Black-capped Petrels are always welcome.



Great


BCPE


Cory's


Long-tailed Jaeger!


There were at least two at the same time.




Great SW


Audubon's SW




Sooty Tern



Atlantic Spotted Dolphin!  Fun fact, these dolphins don't get proper spots until 8-9 years of age.  As juveniles they don't have any spots and then they gradually over time add spots so individuals can be aged based on the amount of spots.  This one here looks older.



The one in the foreground is a young one with no spots.



Young ones love to play.


I continue my streak of no rarities on pelagics....

I may give it one more go before the end of the year.