Seward, Alaska
Sunrise 4:51 am, sunset 11:17 pm for a total day length of 18 hours and 25 minutes. Tomorrow will be 3 minutes and 3 seconds shorter.
Weather remained mostly cloudy and cool with lows in the mid-40s and highs in the 50s. Green is the color of rain and there are dozens of hues, shades, tints, and tones for the solar panel leaves to choose from, with floral accessories.
The frenetic Seward Fourth of July celebration caused in a gap in my birding and posting though I was always listening and looking.
A ROBIN serenaded the whole neighborhood from the top of my spruce tree for several evenings; his sweet notes soothed my soul even while declaring his territory. Not to be outdone, a HERMIT THRUSH played his woodland flute from the mountainside.
Remarkably, at 12:30 am after the July 3 fireworks, the lonesome SAW-WHET OWL was reported beeping from the forest of Mt Marathon. I confirmed that on July 8 at 12:15 am. He seemed to be waiting for the duskiness of a Seward night, limited though it was.
On June 29, thanks to a tip from Robin C, I photographed a COMMON MURRE, possibly a first-year bird, actively preening just offshore of the Waterfront. A closer look revealed a deformed bill with the upper mandible severely crossed over the lower. He was able to preen and seemed alert and healthy so maybe the deformity has not interfered with catching fish.
It’s baby time! The young Corvids, RAVENS, BLACK-BILLED MAGPIES, and STELLER’S JAYS are almost full-sized and already adept at flying. Like teenagers, they like their independence but still beg insistently and loudly for handouts.
I surprised a momma GADWALL with 6 ducklings on June 29. One veered off as the others scurried to safety with mom and huddled, still as a stone. I hope they were reunited after I hustled away.
I am sure now that the large ARCTIC TERN colony has collapsed, leaving only six adults. One Tern chick was reported last week, but I haven’t seen it. Their neighboring SHORT-BILLED GULLS were very protective of a single tiny gull puff wandering away from the nest site. There may be more, but I don’t want to disturb them to check.
The SPOTTED SANDPIPER babies have recently fledged. How funny to see that they dip and bob when fresh into the world, just like the adults.
On June 30, a WESTERN SANDPIPER adult fed with a loose flock of 20 LEAST SANDPIPERS. I expect many of the Least Sandpipers nested locally, but was surprised to see the Western.
Judging from a SAVANNAH SPARROW’s beakful of insects, their babies have hatched. I watched an adult walking around on top of a dense growth of Beach Greens, nimbly catching flies and other insects.
In early July, Six DOWITCHERS returned to feed in the shallow estuary pond as if they’d never left.
Robin C reported a KILLDEER on July 6 in the Harbor Uplands, an unusual and brief summer sighting.
The young TRUMPETER SWAN cygnet continues to flourish under the watchful eyes of its magnificent parents, though they are often on the far side of the wetlands and hard to see.
Coming and going and growing. It’s summer!
Happy Birding!
Carol Griswold
Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter