Seward, Alaska
Sunrise 6:38 am, sunset 9:18 pm, for a total day length of 14 hours and 40 minutes. Tomorrow will be 5 minutes and 25 seconds longer.
Temps slightly warmer with a low of 30 and a high of 35.
Though snow was in the forecast, the gray blanket covering the sky only delivered light sprinkles, a southerly whisper of wind, and new spring migrants.
On Monday, a FOS SHORT-EARED OWL shot out of the grasses about 20 feet ahead of me. The AMERICAN CROWS and RAVENS soon found him/her and escorted poor owl out of sight.
Yesterday, FOS flock of SANDHILL CRANES was reported flying over town at 7 am. Later, while watching the clouds of screaming Gulls at the beach, I heard the exciting “chip! RRRRRZZZZZZ!” of a FOS ARCTIC TERN and found the single buoyant flyer high in the sky heading over the bay.
Four GREATER YELLOWLEGS dashed after prey in the creeks and intertidal puddles, their numbers slowly increasing.
This afternoon,17 FOS SNOW GEESE landed in the soggy sedges of the estuary accompanied by a lone FOS GREATER WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE! The aptly named Snow Geese looked like snow drifts against the brown vegetation as they eagerly devoured the goodness hidden in the plant roots.
Ice still covers area ponds, lakes, and the Lagoon, but leads are widening and the softening ice is blue-gray. With the gentle but persistent light rain and warming temperatures, the ice is doomed.
Keep your eyes and ears to the sky for the oncoming waves of Cranes, Geese, and Swans. Spring is!
Happy Birding!
Carol Griswold
Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter