Seward, Alaska
Sunrise 6:32 am, sunset 9:23 pm for a total day length of 14 hours and 51 minutes. Tomorrow will be 5 minutes and 24 seconds longer.
As expected, it did not snow as forecast, but rain and snow are predicted for Sunday and Wednesday with over an inch of rain on Thursday. April showers?
I checked out the Mile 1 Nash Road wetlands yesterday. To my delight, seven adult Swans were very close to the road. Another 5 were in the back under the watchful eyes of two adult Bald Eagles. A dozen Swans!
In between the noise of traffic whizzing by, it was so quiet I could hear their bills smacking the water as they slurped up the recently thawed vegetation soup. All were feeding ravenously, except for one. That one, in classic Swan yoga-style, napped with head tucked under wing while standing on one leg.
As I admired the Swans, I began to look more closely. One had a bit of yellow on the bill! A TUNDRA SWAN! I checked the other five; another had even more yellow on the bill! Then, the napping Swan unfurled its head and revealed even larger yellow patches shaped like mirror-image lightning bolts. Three of the seven were Tundra Swans!
For these wild Tundras to hang out with Trumpeters was surprising to me. For one, there’s a good chance the Trumpeters are residents and have become habituated to cars over the years. Then, to have Tundras who never spent much time at this wetlands ever, to also tolerate traffic and the presence of the larger Trumpeters… Just amazing.
Today, the Swans were farther back, and the Tundras were still there with the Trumpeters.
Yesterday, 25 FOS CACKLING GEESE landed in the intertidal zone. Though they were far away, some showed the white neck ring of the Aleutian subspecies. Several were napping, doing Goose yoga. One Goose stood much taller, possibly a CANADA GOOSE.
Though the Cackling Geese did not linger, I spotted 11 wary SNOW GOOSE heads peeking above the grass from a swale like white periscopes. I did not see them today. Moving on!
At 10 pm, a SAW-WHET OWL beeped from Little Bear Mountain in the dusk. The stars are already vanishing like the Cheshire Cat’s grin, another sign of Spring.
Happy Birding!
Carol Griswold
Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter