Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Burr Pond State Park - Torrington, CT - November 23, 2014

Woodpecker Holes
More Woodpecker Holes
Once again, life determines when one birds since it was awhile since I did any serious birding or blogged.  C'est la vie.


So I decided I would walk the trail (Blue Trail) around Burr Pond at Burr Pond State Park.  I've been to the beach area once before but that was all.
 Ice

More Ice
Even More Ice
Knowing I was going to start birding at noon
 and that is was near the end of November, I wasn't expecting to see much in the way of birds so I figured I would just see what Burr Pond had to offer. 


Black-capped Chickadee
Spotted Wintergreen
After walking the trail, I have a feeling that this may be a good place to find warblers, vireos, towhees, etc. in the spring/summer due to the varied habitats I saw - areas with low shrubs, a power-line right-of-way, running water, and of course the pond to name a few.

Hairy Woodpecker
Club Moss with Fruiting Body
What really surprised me was all the ice I saw!  So I decided to take pictures of any bird I could, plants, ice, and whatever interested me.

DATA:  12:09 - 2:26 pm; 57F; occasional slight breeze; variable sky (overcast/mostly cloudy/mostly sunny)


White-breasted Nuthatch
Christmas Fern
SPECIES:  Hooded Mergansers (m/f); Downy Woodpecker; Hairy Woodpecker; Blue Jay; American Crow; White-Breasted Nuthatch; Black-Capped Chickadee (3); Dark-Eyed Junco (6)

Nest



















Wednesday, July 23, 2014

My First Bird

Years ago, a beer company used the slogan "You always remember your first girl" to advertise their beer.

Well, do you remember your first bird?

Now, I don't mean when you were a baby and some adult said to you, "See the birdie?"

Or, if you were in a park, and a parent said, "Look, there's a robin!"


I'm talking about the first bird that you identified on your own by using a field guide (for us older birders) or an app (for you newer birders).

For me, my first bird is the White-breasted Nuthatch.

It was Friday July 13, 1979 and I was working as the Nature Specialist at the Holiday Hill Day Camp in Prospect, Connecticut.  I had just graduated from the University of Bridgeport, CT and had recently taken a bird identification course so I was a newbie birder.  And one day, near the tennis courts, I noticed this smallish, cigarish-shaped, black-gray-white bird walking head first DOWN a tree!


Here's the description of the bird that I wrote in my field notebook that day:  "looked like a small blue jay; walked down white ash tree." Looking back now, the only thing a white-breasted nuthatch and a blue jay have in common are some of their colors - black and white - but where the blue jay has vivid blue, the nuthatch is a duller blue-gray.
Not knowing where to begin, I took my Peterson Guide to North American Birds: Eastern United State, and skipping the sections on shore birds, looked at every page until I found a match!  At that time, I had no idea to look under the Passerine (perching birds) section.

The white-breasted nuthatch also has a distinctive call - a nasally 'hank, hank', as some have described it.  To hear its call (and to find out more about birds), go to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology  at http://www.birds.cornell.edu/Page.aspx?pid=1478

Red-breasted nuthatch
As an aside, a close relative to the white-breasted is the red-breasted nuthatch.  As the name implies, the red-breasted has a buff/brownish/rust colored breast and is much smaller.  Found mainly north of Connecticut, there has been irruptions of them in the winter when northern food supplies are low.

So, what is your first bird?



Tuesday, July 8, 2014

"Come here, Norman. Hurry up. The loons! The loons! They're welcoming us back."



You may recognize that quote from  the 1981 film "On Golden Pond" starring Katherine Hepburn, Henry Fonda, and Jane Fonda.
So it was my self-appointed quest to not only hear loons but also to photograph them on my recent trip to the Bangor area of Maine.

I heard the loons on the second night on the pond by the cabin we were staying in and I immediately thought of the loons from the movie.  It was a big pond and some would say it was a lake, but lakes have an inflow as well as an outlet and this body of water is fed from an underground spring and not from a river - hence it is a pond and not a lake.

Common Merganser
The next day, the loons came in closer to the cabin and I had my camera ready for them!  I'm not sure if there is another more stately looking bird - it's high contrasting black and white coloration, it's sleek low profile, and it's mournful cry - all just seem to say "Here I am; Look at me!"
Bald Eagle
Blue-Headed Vireo
 I was also lucky to observe the loons as they swam underwater looking for fish.

In addition to the common loons, I also observed: a matured bald eagle, a female common merganser with 10 chicks, a few robins, and blue-headed vireo (a life bird for me!).

  

NOTE:  This is another evolutionary step in my blog about birds.  My other bird blogs are: