Friday, October 31, 2014 Red-breasted Sapsucker in Seward

Seward, Alaska

Sunrise 9:18 am, sunset 6:03 pm for a total day length of 8 hours and 44 minutes. Tomorrow will be 5 minutes and 13 seconds shorter. Don’t forget to set your clock behind one hour on Saturday night!

The wind died away and the forecasted snow finally arrived, dusting the green grass with less than an inch of short-lived white and a taste of winter. With the temperature rising to the low 40s, it looks like rain and sn’rain for the next week.

For a change, I drove out to Lowell Point this noon. I stopped along the roadside for a COMMON MURRE in winter plumage, diving in water as gray as the sky. I haven’t seen this normally common seabird in a long time, and it was odd to only see one.

While waiting for the murre to surface, I enjoyed the melodic sweet song of a KENAI SONG SPARROW, standing on a barnacle-encrusted rock at mid-tide. Soon, another songster replied, and then another. In a short time, I saw four song sparrows along the rocks. It was fun to watch them poking in the barnacles, often prying off a delicacy of escargot a la periwinkle, just the right size for a gourmet sparrow. It was hard to tell if they were also eating the surrounding barnacles, but it’s possible. Lots of protein stuck to those intertidal rocks.

I heard the rhythmic breathing of a sea mammal and looked up to find a Steller Sea Lion swimming my way. It paused and took several deep inhalations, then dove and disappeared, leaving nothing but a watery footprint. What a pleasure to hear and see this powerful sea mammal!

A flicker of white and a flash of a black-tipped tail dashed along the rocks. I looked hard for the little weasel/ermine, but it remained elusive. There’s not quite enough snow yet to match its peerless coat.

A person could see a lot of interesting wildlife along this road if one just lingered a bit.

Out at Lowell Point Beach, I heard the scolding of a PACIFIC WREN from the shelter of the spruce boughs. A BELTED KINGFISHER rattled off and away from its perch overhanging the water, and a BALD EAGLE chittered from a branch higher up. Two more Steller sea lions quietly surfaced and cruised past. It was very peaceful, calm, and gray except for the colorful wheel-spoked jellies lined up along the recent high tide rows of wrack.

A few hours later, I received the welcome news that the RED-BREASTED SAPSUCKER was back, tending his sap wells in a large old Mt Ash tree down the alley. This bird, if it’s the same one, has not been seen since his unfortunate crash into a window on October 19th. I’m glad he survived!

I rushed over and enjoyed watching this beauty methodically carve out new sap wells in the Mt Ash. I counted over 20 along one side, very shallow, and not nearly as destructive as a single swipe of a moose. He tended to other sap wells on the other side of the tree, flew up to investigate possible insects in an adjacent alder with a male DOWNY WOODPECKER, then flew back to the main tree. The suet blocks were periodically enjoyed by the Downy, but the Red-breasted Sapsucker ignored them. If the tree is producing any sap, this bird should be easy to find, tending his sap wells. Several Seward birders also enjoyed watching him.

DARK-EYED JUNCOS, CHESTNUT-BACKED CHICKADEES, and STELLER JAYS flitted through the neighboring trees.

Almost at sunset, I took the good dogs for a walk around Two Lakes Park. First Lake has a thin layer of ice in the middle, and Second Lake is frozen all the way across. Thanks to that guy’s video of the “singing lake”, there’s a boatload of rocks on Second Lake. I guess the ice sang! Hopefully, this will all melt and drop the rocks before ice skating starts.

Another PACIFIC WREN scolded from the spruce at the edge of the lake. GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLETS seeped and sighed high in the treetops. As I approached First Lake, the cheerful, contented song of a DIPPER merged gently into the dusk.

As I drove home, a flock of about 10 ROBINS flew overhead, heading for their night-time roost somewhere in the heart of a dense spruce. Another great day for birds and wildlife!

Happy Birding!
Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter









Wednesday, October 29, 2014 Steller’s Eider and company

Seward, Alaska

The young male STELLER’S EIDER is all dolled up in quite a spectacular outfit that now more closely resembles the pictures in the bird books: white head, black eye patch, black chin, greenish head patches, and peachy body. The head is not quite all white, and the wings lack the artistic black brush marks of the full male breeding plumage, but he’s getting close.

The past several days, the standout eider has been spotted with his adopted companions, the slightly smaller HARLEQUIN DUCKS, at Spring Creek Beach at Mile 5 Nash Road, north of the boat basin, and at Fourth of July Beach. Fourth of July Beach is accessed at Mile 5 Nash Road by driving around the Seward Marine Industrial Center boat yard and drydock. Turn left on Jellison Avenue, right on Delphin Street, then another right at the T; continue straight all the way to the small parking lot at the beach. Bring a scope and move slowly as they are very sensitive to disturbance.

Also spotted today at the beach, two brown sea ducks with white face patches: a single female SURF SCOTER with a female HARLEQUIN DUCK. Small numbers of MEW GULLS and GLAUCOUS-WINGED GULLS scrambled after surface fish; 7 HORNED GREBES dove nearby on the same school. COMMON MERGANSERS really know how to scurry after those little fish, planing along in a frenzy of wings, feet, and splashing before plunging underwater to snap them up.

BARROW’S GOLDENEYE numbers are on the upswing. During a recent very high tide, a beautiful flock of 50 paddled right along the water’s edge, almost to the beach ryegrass, where normally one would walk. They were very wary, so the only way to enjoy the sight was to peek from behind the grasses.

On October 23rd, I flushed a single female LAPLAND LONGSPUR feeding on fallen beach ryegrass seeds.

Watch for Steller sea lions, harbor seals, sea otters, BALD EAGLES, and the rattling BELTED KINGFISHER that whizzes through very now and then.

Happy Birding!
Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter











Wednesday, October 29, 2014 Silver Salmon Show

Seward, Alaska

Sunrise 9:13 am, sunset 6:08 pm, for a total day length of 8 hours and 54 minutes. Tomorrow will be 5 minutes and 16 seconds shorter. The week of clear, cold weather seems to be changing to warmer with precip of some sort.

The recent appearance of thin ice on local ponds, wetlands, and the Lagoon has locked waterfowl out of their usual pantries, concentrating them in the moving waters at the inlets and outlets, or pushed them to the ocean.

Silver salmon, which returned in near record numbers this fall, continue to school up in the Lagoon and migrate up freshwater streams. Their colorful corpses and scattered eggs provide welcome nutrition to a host of birds including BALD EAGLES, RAVENS, NORTHWESTERN CROWS, MAGPIES, KINGFISHER, DIPPERS, STELLER’S JAYS, MALLARDS, COMMON GOLDENEYES, BARROW’S GOLDENEYES, and perhaps HARLEQUIN DUCKS and GREAT BLUE HERONS.

The Lagoon beach by Benny Benson Park off Dairy Hill Lane, and the beach in front of Scheffler Creek, south of the harbor uplands are good places to spot salmon and their feathered predators.

Happy Birding!
Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter







Tuesday, October 28, 2014 Ghoulish Activity!

Seward, Alaska

How would you like to find a large headless bird plopped in your driveway in a pool of fresh, red blood with scattered blood splatters leading to it? This was not a Halloween trick and my friend was mystified.

We inspected the evidence, a large plump body with short wings and strong feet reminiscent of a chicken’s, with feathers. The black and white breast feathers looked like an artist painstakingly painted each one; the dark tail was tipped with a complementary chestnut brown. This was a bird of the dim and shadowy forest, perfectly camouflaged for sitting on a spruce branch. All in all, a remarkably lovely bird despite the gruesome circumstances and pencil-sized hole under one wing.

Even without the head, I recognized the species and gender. Do you? Answer revealed at the end!

Noting that this forest bird was not a strong flier nor a migratory species, one way it ended up splat on her driveway could be that a raptor of some sort grabbed it in the nearby forested mountain slopes, its sharp talons piercing the body. After ripping off the head (ew!) the predator must have been disturbed, perhaps by another hungry bird, and flew off with the prize. Perhaps there was an aerial altercation and the hapless, headless bird was dropped just before the two antagonists hit her house.

Before they could compose themselves and grab the tasty meal, here comes the homeowner in her car, about to receive a shocking surprise.

While I know the prey, I don’t know the predator. I wonder if perhaps a NORTHERN GOSHAWK is in the ‘hood. They would be more likely to hunt down this forest bird than the often seen BALD EAGLES. I have not seen any goshawks, but am now on the alert, as it is very possible.

So, the answer to the riddle: it is a male SPRUCE GROUSE.

Happy Birding!
Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter