Friday, April 22, 2016

Avocets and Bittern




Two more pictures of the American Avocets that are at the Wastewater.

I birded Lane's Landing from 7:10 pm till 8:10 pm and had an American Bittern calling all the time I was there.

After Lane's I went back to the Wastewater to check on the avocets and they were still there at 8:40 pm. I counted 36.

- Charlie DeWitt

Thanks, Charlie.  I hope that bittern sticks around for our Big Day Count.  We missed you on the Upper Mac Field Trip.  We didn't find anything as exotic as an avocet, but did record 45 bird species on a beautiful spring walk.  - Ric

American Avocets at the Wastewater Today


Friday Morning Email:

Hi Ric,

Not sure if this has already been reported, but I just counted 37 American Avocets out at the Wastewater site.  Same location as last year.  (Brad's photo below.)

Thanks,
Brad Heath


Friday Afternoon Email:

Right now there are 32 American Avocets at the Wastewater in the small drawn down cell.

- Charlie DeWitt  / Sent from my iPhone

Injured Snowy Owl Re-habbing


On Sunday Bob Kingsbury called to report an injured Snowy Owl at the Wastewater.  Sue Stamy from the Braveheart Raptor Rehabilitation Center in Twin Lake got the bird, washed a bunch of gunk from it, and reported on Wednesday that the owl was recovering nicely at the center.  Carol Cooper confirmed at the MCNC meeting last night that the recovery is going well.



Yesterday Bob sent an email with the photos above.  He thought I had contacted Sue, but someone else did.  We will give Sue contact information for Bob in case she wants to take him up on the Whitefish Point offer.  - Ric

Hi Ric

I am attaching some of my pictures of the injured Snowy Owl.  You can see that the wings and tail look dirty and the edges of the feathers are not fringed nicely, but rather appear clumped together like frayed rope.  It also looks like the wings are not raising up together.  One is always lower than the other.  

I am very grateful for your help and for the help of the rehabbers.  I would volunteer to drive it up to Whitefish Point for its release if that would help.  : )

Bob

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Monday Hawks, Kinglets and Gnatcatcher


Trying unsuccessfully to locate the Red-shouldered Hawks calling east of our house yesterday, I found two Ruby-crowned Kinglets and a Broad-winged Hawk.  Meanwhile Casey Irwin had a Blue-gray Gnatcatcher in his yard.

- Ric

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Groggy Woodpecker



As I stepped out the door this morning, a Downy Woodpecker burst from our porch bench to the tulip tree.  There he hung upside-down without moving a muscle for over ten minutes before "waking up".  He must have hit our front windows.  I've read that birds don't fare well after such collisions.  Hopefully this one will be okay.

- Ric

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Saturday at the Wastewater


 Savannah Sparrow
Photo by Charlie DeWitt

 Greater Yellowlegs
Photo by Carol DeWitt

Great Blue Heron
Photo by Carol DeWitt

Eared Grebe
Photo by Carol DeWitt

Carol and I took a quick spin around the Wastewater today and I added four new birds to my two-county list (Muskegon / Ottawa) that brings me up to 109.

- Charlie DeWitt

Beautiful Morning at the State Park


I birded Muskegon State Park this morning from Snug Harbor out to Lost Lake, my first beautifully comfortable bird walk of the year.  Most of the 34 bird species were the usual suspects.  For awhile I had the company of Larry and Kay Kotzian and their friends, human and canine.


Winter Wrens are my nemesis, but this morning two were singing along the Lost Lake Trail and one popped up for a photograph.  Hermit Thrushes were moving through the park in small groups; Kay and I also saw a non-hermie thrush (Gray-cheeked or Swainson's).  Northern Flickers were plentiful and noisy as was a pair of Pileated Woodpeckers.


This Pied-billed Grebe dove when I arrived at Lost Lake, then stayed on the far side until I left.  Other species around there included Red-shouldered Hawk, Chipping Sparrow, Sandhill Crane and Belted Kingfisher.

- Ric

Friday, April 15, 2016

Nature Preserve Rail: First Michigan Report




April 14 Email:

While doing some projects at the Muskegon Lake Nature Preserve I heard this bird, and finally found it.  Sorry it's only a cell phone picture.  Virginia Rail !

 - Carol Cooper

Any picture of a rail in Muskegon on April 14 is a good one!  As of this morning there are no eBird reports of a Virginia Rail in Michigan yet this year.  I'm glad you finally found it!  - Ric 

Saturday, April 9, 2016

Dozens of Ducks / Crows Strafing Raven


Participants at Nik Kalejs' DNR field trip found 33 bird species on the Wastewater properties this morning including a dozen ducks: Gadwall, American Wigeon, Mallard, Blue-winged Teal, Northern Shoveler, Canvasback, Redhead, Ring-necked, Greater Scaup, Lesser Scaup, Bufflehead and Ruddy).

David and Missy Foran and I watched two American Crows harrassing a Common Raven over the Lost Lake Trail at Snug Harbor this afternoon.

- Ric

Friday, April 8, 2016

Black-billed Magpie Near Montague Thursday!


April 7 to Mich-Listers:

Birders,

Early this afternoon I received an email from Dick Smith about a Black-billed Magpie that was seen and photographed on his Oceana County/Muskegon County line farm for at least an hour (ca. 11:15am - 12:15 pm). The bird was in a fenced pasture north of the house, and perched on a post before foraging on the muddy pasture. It finally flew off to the south. Mark Wloch, his wife Kelly, and I drove down about an hour later from Ludington and met with Dick and Cheryl (the photographer), who showed us the location where the bird was seen. Afterwards, the three of us drove/birded to the west, the south, and east of the Smith farm a couple miles each direction. We did not explore northward as the winds were strong out of the north. After 1.5 hours of exploring through open farmlands and sparsely treed habitats, we returned home without any luck. 

Directions: The Smith farm house is red and occurs on the north side of Skeels Road, while a green-roofed barn is on the south (opposite) side of the road. Skeels Road dead ends 1/2 mile to the west, and all of the houses/buildings are owned by the Smith's. Though I forgot to get the address, it is easy to find. From the north (as we came), take the Fruitvale exit on southbound US 31 and proceed west four miles on Fruitvale Road to Chase Road. Turn right onto Chase Road and proceed north two miles until it bears to the left and becomes the countyline road (Skeels Road). The Smith's red farm house is a short distance to the west on the right.

I have attached two cropped photos of the BBMA.

Good Luck !

Dave Dister
Ludington



photos by Cheryl Smith

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers and Purple Finch


Today we I saw a pair of Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers behind our house in the tree they occupy a few days each spring, plus a female Purple Finch at our back feeder.

- Ric & Carol

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

32 Species at Hemlock Crossing This Morning


I met Robert Vanderkamp, the president of Holland Audubon, at Hemlock Crossing this morning to discuss program ideas and other stuff.  We also birded the feeders at the Visitor Center and the trail going west along the north bank of Pigeon Creek.

He missed Wood Duck and a gull species; I missed Northern Flicker.  The 29 species that we both recorded included Belted Kingfisher, Red-bellied Woodpecker ...


... Hairy Woodpecker, Eastern Phoebe, Tree Swallow, Brown Creeper, Golden-crowned Kinglet, American Tree Sparrow, Fox Sparrow and Eastern Towhee.

We both missed our target bird: Winter Wren.

- Ric

Monday, April 4, 2016

53 Muskegon Bird Species on Saturday


Liz Kibbey with a group of birders from Grand Rapids (including James Fyfe and Steve Minard) found 53 bird species in 7+ hours in Muskegon County on Saturday despite sometimes snowy conditions. 

Waterbirds crowded "Nugent Lake", there were Common Loon and two Horned Grebes at the Pere Marquette Park / Muskegon Channel areas, a Peregrine Falcon flying over Muskegon Lake, swallows and a Vesper Sparrow at the Wastewater, and a Greater White-fronted Goose on a flooded field near Moorland Road on their return trip to Grand Rapids.

No Fooling


Carol Cooper took these photos of a male Blue-winged Teal and a Horned Lark on Friday, April 1st.



Saturday, April 2, 2016

Pileated Woodpecker


Mike VanderStelt sends this video of a Pileated Woodpecker woodworking near Mike's house.