Sunday, May 12, 2024 Hummer in the snow, more migrants

Seward, Alaska

 

Sunrise 5:26 am, sunset 10:24 pm, for a total day length of 15 hours and 58 minutes. Tomorrow will be 4 minutes and 48 seconds longer.

 

Chilly, windy, and rainy spring weather continued this past week with actual snow on the ground on Wednesday. Overnight temperatures hovered around freezing and daytime highs barely scraped 40. Showers mixed with sunshine today for a welcome change. Slightly warmer daytime temps in the forecast, still in the 40s.

 

Migratory birds can’t wait for balmy weather. On May 6, I saw my first female RUFOUS HUMMINGBIRD at Ava’s, first VIOLET-GREEN SWALLOWS (2) in town, and first BLACK OYSTERCATCHER at Spring Creek.

 

I heard my FOS YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER on May 7, and saw my breath that evening before it snowed. The next morning, “my” male Rufous Hummingbird fed ravenously in the snowstorm, then sat on a handy driftwood perch nearby, quietly watching the giant flakes fall all around. Tough little guy!

 

May 8, my first SURFBIRDS, 6, first spotted by Robin C yesterday at Spring Creek. ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLERS flitted through bare but budding alders. Just offshore, a nice raft of about 20 SURFSCOTERS, 3 WHITE-WINGED SCOTERS, and 20 HARLEQUIN DUCKS. 


I heard a COMMON LOON calling as it flew. At least 40 BARROW’S GOLDENEYES dotted the plugged and flooded wetland pond, perhaps staging for nesting. A BELTED KINGFISH rattled across the pond.

 

May 10, first DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS, some sporting flouncy white eyebrows. 

 

May 11, a mixed winter-spring feeding frenzy in my yard: RED CROSSBILLS, 1WHITE-WINGED CROSSBILL on suet, PINE SISKINS, GOLDEN-CROWNED SPARROWS, CHESTNUT-BACKED and BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEES, RED-BREASTED NUTHATCHES, and the female RUFOUS HUMMINGBIRD. 


Aggressive Pine Siskins landed on the hummer feeder and chased her away. A PACIFIC WREN sang in the rain at Two Lakes Park; skunk cabbage brightened wet areas with their yellow candles. 

 

Today at the tidelands, I saw my first SEMIPALMATED PLOVERS, so dapper, another PECTORAL SANDPIPER, more WESTERN, LEAST, and SEMIPALMATED SANDPIPERS, DUNLINS, lingering HUDSONIAN GODWITS and SHORT-BILLED DOWITCHERS, WHIMBRELS, and CACKLING and GREATER WHITE-FRONTED GEESE, GADWALL, MALLARDS, AMERICAN WIGEON, NORTHERN SHOVELERS, and GREEN-WINGED TEAL, nesting ARCTIC TERNS and SHORT-BILLED GULLS, and marauding RAVENS and BALD EAGLES. WILSON’S SNIPE winnowed high in the sky.

 

Birding by bike along Exit Glacier Road in showers and sunshine this afternoon, I heard or saw RUBY-CROWNED KINGLETS, FOX SPARROWS, GOLDEN-CROWNED SPARROWS, COMMON REDPOLLS, VARIED THRUSHES, HERMIT THRUSHES, ROBINS, 2 BLACK-BILLED MAGPIES, YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLERS, ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLERS, and a TOWNSEND’S WARBLER. 

 

The gate remains closed at Box Canyon which makes walking and biking a pleasure for at least a few more days. The road is plowed all the way to the Nature Center and parking lot, with several feet of snow still blanketing the ground. Trees are leafless and stark, contrasting with the blooming willows. Exit Glacier gleamed under a fresh coat of snow; it was wonderful to see it again after a long winter.

 

Happy Spring Birding!

Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter

















Saturday, May 4, 2024 Western and Least Sandpipers, Dunlin, and Whimbrels study

 






















Thursday, May 2, 2024 Godwits, Dowitchers, Pectoral Sandpiper, etc!


Seward, Alaska

 

Sunrise 5:51 am, sunset 10:00 pm, for a total day length of 16 hours and 8 minutes. Tomorrow will be 5 minutes and 10 seconds longer.

 

Light rain most of the day with an overnight low of 33 and a high of 41, mostly calm. More rain/showers in the forecast through Sunday and temps dipping below freezing next week with a chance of snow. Sheesh! Cold spring!

 

Nonetheless, it’s an exciting time to watch the return of breeding residents, and the influx of migratory birds, perhaps influenced by the squally weather to feed here rather than push north. 

 

Flocks of CACKLING GEESE and GREATER WHITE-FRONTED GEESE gobbled sedges and grit, rising in noisy protest when riled by BALD EAGLES. Tasha reported 8 Tule, a larger, darker GWFG subspecies. 


NORTHERN SHOVELERS, GADWALL, AMERICAN WIGEON, MALLARDS, NORTHERN PINTAILS, GREEN-WINGED TEAL covered the pond.

 

At least 15 HUDSONIAN GODWITS plunged their long bills into the shallows of the estuary pond, surrounded by dozens of SHORT-BILLED DOWITCHERS. Long-billed dowitchers were also reported and 8 Bar-tailed Godwits. I found a single PECTORAL SANDPIPER working in the shallows.

 

A shimmer of LEAST and WESTERN SANDPIPERS flashed around the area, landing briefly to forage then zipped away. A flock of about 20 DUNLIN flew between the pond and tidelands, black bellies now prominent. 

 

Five BLACK-BELLIED PLOVERS, not quite in breeding plumage, worked the tidelands.

 

13 GREATER YELLOWLEGS called stridently and circled the pond. One Lesser Yellowlegs was reported. Yesterday, 37 WHIMBRELS flew overhead, creating a pattern reminiscent of a MC Escher tessellation. 

 

WILSON’S SNIPE winnowed high in the sky. A female NORTHERN HARRIER hunted from the upper fields to the beach, circling the area.


Courting ARCTIC TERNS paraded around with tiny fish for their ladies. Two BONAPARTE’S GULLS growled. SHORT-BILLED GULLS defended their nesting sites from pesky RAVENS. 

 

RUBY-CROWNED KINGLETS and a single FOX SPARROW sang from the adjacent woods.

 

Exciting and challenging times indeed, trying to identify these beautiful transient visitors. 

 

Happy Birding!

Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter