Sunday, April 29, 2012

A Weekend of Birds

I've driven over 200 miles this weekend, just doing my job as wandering docent. That mostly means, I drive around slowly and take lots of pictures.

New birds are pouring into the refuge, with lots of reports of warblers.  I saw my first Malheur yellow warbler and common yellowthroat yesterday and was able to tell some other visitors how to find them. And today I saw my first California gull and Wilson's phaloropes at this refuge.

I took time to take the burrowing owl's picture.  The good news is that I could walk up to the fence and shoot in the spaces. The bad news is that the gnats were having a great feed on my face while I waited for the owl to stand up fully. He pops into his burrow when he feels threatened and then comes back up in a couple of minutes. However I was too late to get the picture of the great horned owl which is nesting under the bridge at the Narrows. I need to be there about 6:30 P.M. to get light on the nest and it was 7:30 when I finished birding Ruh- Red Road. There I had to tell a man that Fish and Wildlife does not rescue animals. He wanted us to rescue a pelican with a broken wing. But we have around 500 healthy pelicans on the refuge now. 

I "worked" about twenty-two hours this weekend and now have another hour's of work to enter my bird counts into ebird.  If you don't do this when you go birding, I hope you'll consider it.  The more of us that enter our data, the more scientists can figure out what is happening to birds. And it is a great way to confirm the birds you may not be sure of. If you enter a bird that is unusual for the area, you will get an automatic filter questioning you.  Then a real person will review the data and question you.  Sometimes, they will even be able to tell you which bird you actually saw, especially if you send pictures.


Least sandpipers are just starting to move through here

Eared grebes breed here and are paired up

First California gull I've identified here

We are overrun with yellow-headed blackbirds. The females came in today.

Long-billed curlews breed here

As do avocets

White-faced ibis are here by the hundreds and come to Malheur Lake to roost by the hundreds

This is the burrowing owl I send everyone to see.  If they are lucky, they get two owls sharing this burrow
Barn and tree sparrows posed for me yesterday and today

The sound of the bittern is much more common than a view of him.


Tree swallows are fighting over these houses. I get to watch them in my yard and along the auto tour I saw the female go inside this house. 


7 comments:

  1. Fabulous birds!! It's a tough job but someone's got to do it. Glad it can be you!

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  2. No technical skill required - just dumb luck. Happy Travels.

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  3. What a wonderful "job" you have Marilyn. Makes me want to go "back to work". :-) Thanks for the pictures, I've never seen a burrowing owl. Would love to do that in person.

    Sherry
    www.directionofourdreams.blogspot.com

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  4. I'll be leading tours in May to celebrate Migration. I'm going to be doing evening tours so hopefully, we can see the short-eared owls hunting around sunset and also see the great horned owl that has chicks in an old raven's nest under the Narrows bridge. And hundreds of white-faced ibis coming in to roost and also hundreds of Am. white pelicans and many other species of water birds, warblers, etc. This will be on Friday and Saturdays - I havn't been given my schedule yet but I'll be doing one or more tours every weekend.

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  5. Good karma on yellow-headed blackbirds. Just saw one on Kevin's back porch railing at lunch. Even waited for me to go back in my house and get binos to make sure. My first sighting ever. Natalie

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