Thursday, April 25, 2013

Super Migration Fallout

Yesterday and today, the Texas Ornithological List is full of stories of birds, hundreds to thousands of them at every place one looks all up and down the Texas coast.

Natalie dragged me off to Lafitte Cove, a wooded hot spot in Galveston last evening. The skies were dark and a thunderstorm was still within hearing, but off the coast. But we were spellbound by the birds. Hundreds of indigo buntings, scores of painted buntings, lots of blue and red-breasted grosbeaks.  In one 4 X 4 foot patch, we saw two oven birds, two brown thrashers,  a Swainson's thrush and a wood thrush.And we saw several species of warblers, including long looks at yellow warblers, and a Blackburnian that was hanging out with a flock of dickcissel. And did I mention the Baltimore orioles?  There were hundreds of them and scores of orchard orioles.

One of scores of ovenbirds we saw at every location

But wait....... there's more. There were many summer tanagers and even more scarlet tanagers. And we got a good look at a sora and enjoyed the leftover ducks - blue-winged teal, mottled ducks, black-bellied whistling ducks, and some red-heads. Black-necked stilts also fed and squabbled.

Summer tanager
We had to go back out this morning. We drove over to the Texas A&M Wetlands and again found hundreds of indigo buntings and  at least one painted bunting. There were hundreds of orioles, a Nashville warbler, a Swainson's warbler, lots of summer and scarlet tanagers, and also some interesting local birds, including black-necked stilts, lesser yellowlegs in summer plumage, another sora, roseate spoonbills, and brown pelicans as well as lots of laughing gulls. I saw a little peewee and told Natalie, "I wish it was closer."  Immediately he flew towards me and landed about 5 feet in front of me at eye level.  I didn't have my camera because the light was so dim. But he definitely looked more like a Western peewee- much darker and with no eye ring. But without a picture, I couldn't call the species.

One of at least one hundred rose-breasted grosbeaks
We came home in time for Natalie to go to an appointment. There we found her yard full of Baltimore orioles.  I put out  oranges, then added grape jelly. Soon we had up to a dozen orioles, which remained until dark. I took a few pictures through the storm shutters and screens.  We were tired of watching all the action.  Soon we had rose-breasted grosbeaks, a pine warbler who darted in to steal some orange, some catbirds, and then a pair of orchid orioles. A summer tanager also showed up and checked out the grape jelly. This evening Natalie spied a Tennessee warbler.

Baltimore orioles on back taken through storm shutters and screen. This was a fighting pose, just before on of them jumped the other.
After lunch, we decided we needed to keep looking at this amazing sight, so went back to Lafitte's cove. This time I took my camera. We found the Blackburnian warbler still in the same empty lot as he was yesterday. Oven birds were everywhere. The numbers of indigo buntings were way down and I only saw one painted bunting and my camera didn't focus correctly on him. But there were still enough birds to wow the birders. One of the birds I missed was the golden-winged warbler, which would have been a life bird for me. I also got a good look yesterday at a Philadelphia vireo but didn't get his picture this afternoon.There were also lots of tanagers around, although not in as many numbers as yesterday.

Blackburnian warbler feeding on the little forbs, just above ground level

This Acadian flycatcher was new at Lafitte's Cove today

Swainson's Thrush at a water drip
Scarlet tanager - sometimes we saw several at once

Rose-breasted grosbeak eating a mulberry
Northern waterthrush
Black-throated green warbler
After a few hours, we went to Corp Woods so I could show Natalie it's location.  There we found most of the same birds in good numbers,  as well as a couple of new ones. The main new one was a Magnolia warbler. There were a few of them there.  But the place was covered in catbirds.  As we were leaving, we were seeing up to twenty birds in the path ahead of us.  There were hooded warblers, I think a Kentucky warbler, about twelve catbirds, several ovenbirds, a few thrushes, and a very tame female scarlet tanager, all feeding on or along the trail. It was very hard to get ourselves back home so I could get supper ready in time for Natalie to leave for her dog agility class.

Hooded warbler that fed along the path at Corp Woods

Magnolia Warbler

One of hundreds of catbirds in town
 We arrived home to find the  feeding frenzy  still going on in the back yard. We replenished the oranges and grape jelly and put out more seeds on a low table. We enjoyed the yard birds until dark.

8 comments:

  1. Down here on South Padre, the same thing is happening. I have pictures on my blog, but they are not as good as your pictures and I don't know what some of the birds are. I didn't know anything about "bird fall outs" until yesterday.

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    1. Yes, it was, from at least Padre Island to High Island on the upper Texas coast. I haven't heard if it also happened in Louisiana. And there are always lots of people around in our hot spots to help with ID. And taking pictures is the best way to remember those birds you are learning. So glad you got to see this. I've been waiting to see a fallout since 1990 and this was by far the largest one I've ever seen.

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  2. WOW! Yours is the second blog I've read about the Texas fall out. Teri's was the fist. Great pictures Marilyn. I sure wish I was in Texas for this. Also wish I knew how to find out about fall outs in case there are any where I am. Although if you've been waiting to see a fall out for 23 years I guess there isn't much hope for me.

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  3. You have to be near a coast, to get a great enough number of birds to be aware of them. Then you have to have birds crossing the Gulf and a strong north weather system meeting them. Lots of birds died and the rest, dropped down on the first land they found, exhausted. And the insectivores are in real bad trouble because the cold weather makes the bugs disappear. So it's a very bad thing for the birds albeit a wonderful thing for us. But stay anywhere along the Texas coast in April to the first week in May, and you'll have a shot at it.

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  4. Amazing Marilyn. I had just a few oddities here. One poor oven bird hit the windows.

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  5. John Arvin says it is the largest fallout since 1981. Hope you aren't flooded. Took me three hours to get from Dairy Ashford/Westheimer to Galveston. Got caught in flooding at Westpark.

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  6. Marilyn, Those poor Orioles haven't stopped having problems. They summer here in North Dakota and Sunday early morning there was a big lightning and thunder storm and I have been feeding orioles, grosbeaks, siskins, yellow rumped warblers and Ruby-throats since then. Rainy cold and wet here. So far I have gone through 16 pounds of grape jelly. I must buy more oranges tomorrow.
    Nancy in Clifford North Dakota

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    1. Thanks for your coment. I fed grape jelly, oranges,and sugar water all summer last year at Malheur NWR in Oregon. I was surprised that the western tanagers loved grape jelly. And the Belding's ground squirels would climb the trees the reach the oranges.

      You are probably saving lots of birds. Did you have nesting bluebirds? You can save the babies by putting out mealy worms.

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